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Bible Study Notes | CH. 4

Atomic Habits by James Clear

February 3, 2021 • Pastor Arthur Jackson III

ATOMIC HABITS
JAMES CLEAR
CHAPTER 4

BEHAVIORAL CHANGES – MAKING IT OBVIOUS

REVIEW:
HAVING SOMETHING VS. BECOMING SOMEONE

 DECIDING WHO YOU WANT TO BE IS CRITICAL.

 A lot of people will say, “I want to be successful” but they really can’t say what they want to be successful at.

 Decide the type person you want to become and then began developing habits that shape that particular identity. Keeping in mind Meaningful Change Does Not Require Radical Change!

The process of building habits is really the evolution of self!

• Habits are the pathway of shaping your identity

THE HABIT LOOP

 CUE – Triggers the brain to initiate a behavior

 CRAVING – The motivation force behind the habit. Without carving a change there is no need to act

 RESPONSE – It is the actual habit you perform which can take the form of a thought or an action.

 REWARD – It is the end game of every habit. The purpose of rewards is to satisfy your craving.

4 LAWS OF BEHAVIORAL CHANGE

When you want to create a good habit

o Cue – Make it obvious
o Craving – Make it attractive
o Response – Make it simple
o Reward – Make it satisfying

When you want to break a habit

o Cue – Make it invisible
o Craving – Make it unattractive
o Response – Make it difficult
o Reward – Make it unsatisfying

MAKING IT OBVIOUS

As habits form, our actions come under the direction of our automatic and non-conscious mind. We fall into old patterns before we realize what happening.

 Over time the cues that spark our habits become so common that they are essentially invisible:

Therefore Before We Can Build New Habits We Need To Be Cognizant Of Our Current Ones

 This can be challenging because once a habit is firmly rooted in your life, it is mostly non-conscious and automatic. If a habit remains mindless you can’t expect to improve it.

 “Until You Make Unconscious Conscious, It Will Direct Your Life And You Will Call It Fate.” – Carl Jung

What Are You Daily Habits?

 Make A List.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Now, ask yourself, “Is this a good habit, a bad habit or neutral?

How do I rate whether or not this daily habit is good or bad? Well ask yourself, “Does this behavior help me become the type of person I wish to be? Does this habit cast a vote for or against my desired identity?

 Habits that reinforce your desired identity are usually good and habits that conflict your desired identity are usually bad.

The goal (initially) is NOT to change the habit…it is simply to identity the habit.

Practice Announcing Bad Habits!

 Most times we want to keep our bad habit secret! However hearing our bad habits spoken aloud makes the consequences seem more real. It adds weight to the action rather than letting yourself mindlessly slip into an old routine.

The process of behavior changes ALWAYS start with awareness.