10 Comments
author

I’m going to be working on two this summer 1) Reducing my sugar consumption and 2) Building in more recreational time into my life beyond work and house chores! I could do with some advice on both, but partic reducing sugar!

Expand full comment
Jun 18Liked by Louise Thompson

This is great, Louise. I have been reading this book intermittently since 2023. However, with accountability from this club, I want to not only complete Atomic Habits but also implement the knowledge gained from it...I am working on three 1) I want to be a reader, 2) Journal consistently and 3) Improve my communication skills

Expand full comment
author

Wonderful stuff Zephon, thank you for sharing! From the prompts in the chapter on the Fundamentals, what systems might you need to put in place in order to make and track the small changes consistently? And how will you know it's working? AKA what does success in these goals look like to you?

Expand full comment

Thanks for setting up this book club. I started reading Atomic Habits this week, but will be ready for chapter 1 in a week. Enjoyable read so far. I mostly read ebooks so I can carry a lot of books with me and my highlights and notes are always available to me. I've managed to get a little lazy the last few years when it comes to working out, but I like the concept of small changes that add up over time. Any positive change is better than nothing. Yesterday I created a small spreadsheet to track several health habits. My thoughts for now are to challenge myself for roughly a month with an increased health goal. Here's an example goal: 400+ push-ups per week for July. Breaking that down a little further: that's 100+ push-ups broken up into three sets during the day for four days each week. Then depending on how I feel as I get near the end of the month, kick the number up a notch.

Expand full comment
author

Hi Anthony, thanks for joining! I agree, the idea of small changes, building up over time, is really appealing to me - makes it seem more achievable and crucially for me, more sustainable. That's great fitness habit there - still seems like a lot to me, but you know you! How might you overcome any challenges or "life" getting in the way of those x3 reps a day?

Expand full comment

Each rep (30-35 pushups) takes about 2 minutes to complete. I can find that six minutes a day, plus I only do that 4 days a week. Ah, but time will tell…

Expand full comment
author

I'm here for you!

Expand full comment

Should have said “set” instead of “rep.”

Expand full comment

Law 1: Make it obvious was good. Habit stacking was the concept that appealed the most to me but I also see how changing my environment is rather key to discreetly letting go of bad habits and developing better habits. I do like a lot of the systems thinking/dynamics concepts that are bubbling up. I haven’t read about the two minute rule yet (looks like that is in chapter 13 as part of the 3rd law: Make it easy) but I realize my two minutes sets of push-ups falls right in line with it.

Expand full comment
author

It does! I use the two minute rule a lot to get me started with something (feels way less overwhelming and more achievable) Also a huge fan of adjusting my environment, for example, my probiotic drink is the first thing i see in my fridge in the morning and I have to move it to get to the milk i put in my coffee, so a great reminder and nudge to take that first!

Expand full comment