Book/Media Club
NovusDies
Posts: 8,940 Member
I think it is important that we always push ourselves to learn and grow (or shrink). I believe, for me, it has been one of the major differences in what I have done this time that has worked (so far) and what I did not do before. I have been educating myself.
In light of that I would like to see if anyone is interested. We will discuss books and other forms of media both written and visual (like youtube videos). We will discuss things that we should learn and things that we should recognize as problems.
I am currently listening to Atomic Habits by James Clear. If anyone is interested in reading it or picking up an audible copy I would love to have a group discussion. This book has really grabbed my attention because I have intuitively implemented some of the core concepts so I want to see if the author can provide more ideas to help me move further down a path I feel like I am already on.
In light of that I would like to see if anyone is interested. We will discuss books and other forms of media both written and visual (like youtube videos). We will discuss things that we should learn and things that we should recognize as problems.
I am currently listening to Atomic Habits by James Clear. If anyone is interested in reading it or picking up an audible copy I would love to have a group discussion. This book has really grabbed my attention because I have intuitively implemented some of the core concepts so I want to see if the author can provide more ideas to help me move further down a path I feel like I am already on.
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I love this idea! I am definitely interested! I will get Atomic Habits, ASAP.....thank you for thinking of this!1
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While reading or viewing I do think we should approach everything with at least some skepticism. Even with this book I am enjoying I am constantly asking how is what he is suggesting wrong or at least wrong for me? I think that helps me identify the parts that are right for me faster. I view it as a list of potential ideas not a recipe I want to blindly follow.0
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This is not really the kind of book you can spoil so...
I am trying one thing from the book to see how easy it is to apply. I have identified a problem... when I do not make my bed each day with every night I sleep in it it gets more unmade. Eventually the state of the bed interferes with my ability to easily sleep and I am forced to tear it down and remake it.
Using "Habit Stacking" I am making my bed before I let the dog out of the crate. I have done it for 2 days we will see if I am still making my bed in 2 months.
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I ordered “Atomic Habits” and should have it Weds. before 8:00....couldn’t bring myself to pay that much for the Kindle edition...smh. I am excited to begin discussing!1
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I used an audible credit on it so I am not aware of how much it cost... sorry.
I am listening to it while I drive and when I have some free moments at night so I am only a little over halfway through it currently.
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No worries....I am always open to learn something new! Thank you for getting this started....hopefully, I will catch up by end of week.0
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No worries....I am always open to learn something new! Thank you for getting this started....hopefully, I will catch up by end of week.
You probably will. When the discussion begins I may have to go back and re-listen to a few portions anyway.
So far it seems mostly sensible and it is about making small sustainable changes so it fits our group philosophy pretty well. I also like that it is a book on generic habit changes not a book on weight loss or exercise specifically.0 -
@NovusDies I'm in, will figure out by what method to absorb the book (audio? Kindle? library? oh the choices!). Are you working towards a specific date to start the conversation?1
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hansep0012 wrote: »@NovusDies I'm in, will figure out by what method to absorb the book (audio? Kindle? library? oh the choices!). Are you working towards a specific date to start the conversation?
Not really. It is not the kind of book that can be spoiled and within a few chapters you can be commenting on what you learned or what you think does not apply to you.
What seems right on starting?
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hansep0012 wrote: »@NovusDies I'm in, will figure out by what method to absorb the book (audio? Kindle? library? oh the choices!). Are you working towards a specific date to start the conversation?
Not really. It is not the kind of book that can be spoiled and within a few chapters you can be commenting on what you learned or what you think does not apply to you.
What seems right on starting?
@NovusDies Perhaps a chapter by chapter discussion? I like to have a completion or due date, maybe the thread could have chapter 1 go for a week (or other time frame) and then open a discussion on the next, and then the next?
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hansep0012 wrote: »hansep0012 wrote: »@NovusDies I'm in, will figure out by what method to absorb the book (audio? Kindle? library? oh the choices!). Are you working towards a specific date to start the conversation?
Not really. It is not the kind of book that can be spoiled and within a few chapters you can be commenting on what you learned or what you think does not apply to you.
What seems right on starting?
@NovusDies Perhaps a chapter by chapter discussion? I like to have a completion or due date, maybe the thread could have chapter 1 go for a week (or other time frame) and then open a discussion on the next, and then the next?
Let me review the structure of the actual book because it may make more sense to discuss a small number of chapters at a time.
I have decided on two things so far to try and implement as habits and I am trying to decide on a third. Learning about it is one thing but trying to put some of it into practice should be more enlightening. I would encourage the people participating not to pick anything that affects a major portion of their life like work, weight loss, health, relationships, etc. if they also want to do some trial work.
My 2 so far:
1) Make my bed each day
2) Finally learn to play the Uke that has been in my closet for 2 years.
Both will improve or enrich my life but neither will have a negative impact if I fail.
I do want to apply the things I learn to other areas of my life but not until I figure out if or how the "formula" has to be altered to work for me as an individual. I have learned to frame everything in that light now. I am not learning someone's ideas on habits as much as learning how I work.3 -
I have received my book and started reading, I will await additional information on how the discussion will proceed...
In the meantime, I have identified 3 habits that I will begin to implement:
1). Get dressed each day (i.e. not sleepwear)
2). Put on shoes each day (i.e. not flip flops)
3). Learn to meditate (utilize one of the Great Courses through Audible)
I know my first 2 goals are very basic, but I am starting where I am....I know that no one here will judge.....I appreciate all of you.4 -
I think I will get this book, too....some days we just have to put one foot in front of the other one so we don’t get swept backward!2
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I have received my book and started reading, I will await additional information on how the discussion will proceed...
In the meantime, I have identified 3 habits that I will begin to implement:
1). Get dressed each day (i.e. not sleepwear)
2). Put on shoes each day (i.e. not flip flops)
3). Learn to meditate (utilize one of the Great Courses through Audible)
I know my first 2 goals are very basic, but I am starting where I am....I know that no one here will judge.....I appreciate all of you.
If those first two habits make your life better then they are great. All three are exactly the kinds of things I think will make for good test cases.1 -
My results so far:
Bed made 5 days in a row. On 3 days it happened exactly when it was intended. On 2 days I forgot and went back to do it later. I guess I would view that as mixed results.
Uke practice has been 2 to 5 minutes per day for 3 days straight. I am enjoying this method because I am not allowing myself to try to jump into playing a song and being disappointed that I cannot do it well.1 -
I have reviewed the early chapter list and while some chapters may be discussed in groups chapter 1 is fairly foundational so it needs to be discussed by itself.
Chapter 1: The Surprising Power of Tiny Habits
Starts: 11/18
Let's keep this one open for at least a week so anyone who wants to join in doesn't fall behind waiting for their book to arrive and get it read. After that we will move more quickly.2 -
So what I got from Chapter 1 - Your actions(tiny habits of continuous small improvement) are what really matters. Learn to love and/or enjoy the process(system or group of actions), not the result(goal). Your actions create your results over time.
Quote “You do not rise to the level of your goals, you fall to the level of your systems.”2 -
Satisfiedwithbetter wrote: »So what I got from Chapter 1 - Your actions(tiny habits of continuous small improvement) are what really matters. Learn to love and/or enjoy the process(system or group of actions), not the result(goal). Your actions create your results over time.
Quote “You do not rise to the level of your goals, you fall to the level of your systems.”
You might have started a little early but you know we are not very formal here.
He says systems I have always referred to it in my weight loss as processes or my routine. I have said often I think of myself as process-driven not results-driven now. That is one of the reasons the book jumped out at me.
I just finished the book so I think I am going to listen to it again in segments as we discuss it. It was a lot of material to absorb so a second pass seems like a good idea. I will make sure I get chapter 1 done again before Monday.1 -
Yes, his terminology seems a bit different from ours, but the meanings seem similar. Not sure if nuances show up later that make a difference or not. Sounds like you got a jump on us all. I have read and listened to so many others, it seems many of the concepts are so similar.1
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For any of you speed readers chapter 17 has an example of a "contract" that is weight and fitness oriented. I am not knocking it if it helped bring about success but I do not think that is an example to follow. It is too rigid. It penalized any mistake. Some people can get away with demanding perfection routine but don't think it fits the rest of the book very well. We will discuss it more when that chapter is up.0
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This is interesting, I have requested it via my library system for either print or kindle (there are waiting lists for both so I'll take whichever opens up first). I hope it is sooner rather than later.
I did read 'The Secret Art of Not Giving a F*(&' and it was very underwhelming if anyone was considering it I'd give it a hard pass.
I enjoyed Marshall Goldsmith's 'Triggers' (he is an executive coach but not the totally full of crap kind (looking at you Blanchard), I'm not a huge fan of most of that stuff - Goldsmith is the exception for me). This specific book was about creating behaviors. My take away was that not making a decision IS making a decision...you are deciding to not change. It is not a new concept but that plus the rest of the book was compelling and can be applied beyond work. I read it when it came out (got a free download) but would read it again if anyone wanted me to do so.0 -
Chapter 1 Discussion (yes I am a few hours early)
When I was much younger I did summer work on a nearby ranch. One of the things I learned is that a job being done was fairly meaningless. No matter how much you got done by the end of the day there was that much and more waiting for the next. The more time you spent being overwhelmed by how much work there was to be done was time not getting things done. You couldn't worry about it. You just kept working until you could barely move and prayed that the night would restore you enough to go again the next day.
The only goal I ever had was what was right in front of me. The big important projects were done by people older and with more skill. I was a grunt.
I have never forgotten what the lesson was and I have applied it to many areas of my life. Just not to all and certainly not to weight loss until about 20 months ago.
Clear says that we should concentrate on systems (aka processes) and only consider goals as a directional heading and not be goal oriented. I think it is a matter of how you view it. I start most days with the goal of being happy, staying in a deficit, and increasing my level of fitness. So my goal is the process. I do not start each day worrying about my bigger goals. I try not to think about them much until they are in view.
In my 2 test cases the goals have different flavors.
In my uke practicing the goal is to play music. Based on what I have learned in my weight loss and the book now I am concentrating on just doing the basics each day and adding proficiency instead of worrying about playing a song at all. Not a lot of improvement in the short time and the short practices but there is some improvement.
In my bed making the goal is to improve my sleep and keep the house neater. Improving my sleep though is not immediate because the bedding didn't have an impact every night it only had an impact after a week or more of not making the bed. Keeping the house neater happens immediately after the bed is made.
That was long-winded enough. I could go on but I would rather others start giving their thoughts first.1 -
Although, I consider myself a very process/system minded person; Clear’s description was very enlightening for me. The idea of viewing this life changing journey (weight loss and maintenance) as a system really resonated with me....this is my life now....or as NovusDies would say my new normal. The systems that I am implementing to achieve this new and healthier life will carry me through the remainder of my life!
In my test cases I have been on target. The first 2–getting dressed and putting on shoes have occurred for the past 8 days. I have tweaked it to include completing these 2 tasks before 10:00am. The reason for the tweak was I caught myself on the second day waiting until almost noon. Even though, getting dressed at noon was still a win for me, I wanted to do better.
My other test case is to start meditating. I am using one of the Meditation courses from Audible. I am working on the course every other day. Hopefully, something will “click” for me and I will begin to look forward to it....so far, it has not happened. I have taken many of the Great Courses offered through Audible and have learned and enjoy all.....so, I’m hoping it will happen with this Meditation also!2 -
Building habits is like a chain...every link added makes it stronger...could be compared to a faithful marriage....every year you add a link...if you cheat, you still have a chain but it is broken and weaker...you have to start building that chain again...the same with a healthy/ normal lifestyle....every day you are at or below goal you are putting links in a chain....each day you add another link or you break it and start over....breaking that chain isn’t the end of the world but you have to start over every damn time!....sometimes it’s easier to keep adding the links!....I guess the important thing is to not give up...if you break the chain you have to make sure it was worth it and then start building it again making sure it is stronger and better each time!1
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conniewilkins56 wrote: »Building habits is like a chain...every link added makes it stronger...could be compared to a faithful marriage....every year you add a link...if you cheat, you still have a chain but it is broken and weaker...you have to start building that chain again...the same with a healthy/ normal lifestyle....every day you are at or below goal you are putting links in a chain....each day you add another link or you break it and start over....breaking that chain isn’t the end of the world but you have to start over every damn time!....sometimes it’s easier to keep adding the links!....I guess the important thing is to not give up...if you break the chain you have to make sure it was worth it and then start building it again making sure it is stronger and better each time!
I can't really compare cheating on a relationship with eating over goal one day even if not intentional. The first breaks a trust between you and another person. The second is a day where less or no progress was made.
What I consider to be normal and what I am hoping to make normal for the rest of my life is adhering to my calorie goal for loss or maintaining most of the time. Some of the time will be days in which I intend to eat more because it is a special occasion. Some days will end high because I made a mistake or it was not completely in my control. So for me eating too much in a day is fine as long as it does not happen very often.0 -
I didn’t want to equate a cheating spouse to an off day on a healthy eating plan...I only used it as an example for building a strong chain...the more you repeat doing anything good or bad, the more it becomes a norm....( although if I do slip up it breaks a promise I made to myself )( whether it was a wise promise or not)
I have to say that mentally I still think of eating too much or going off plan as something bad akin almost to a sin....guilt and shame!....especially after an uncontrollable binge when I actually make myself sick from eating...... I beat myself up so bad mentally....I was raised Catholic, what can I say?...I am working on this!2 -
conniewilkins56 wrote: »I didn’t want to equate a cheating spouse to an off day on a healthy eating plan...I only used it as an example for building a strong chain...the more you repeat doing anything good or bad, the more it becomes a norm....( although if I do slip up it breaks a promise I made to myself )( whether it was a wise promise or not)
I have to say that mentally I still think of eating too much or going off plan as something bad akin almost to a sin....guilt and shame!....especially after an uncontrollable binge when I actually make myself sick from eating...... I beat myself up so bad mentally....I was raised Catholic, what can I say?...I am working on this!
I have been guilty of feeling too much guilt over eating in the past. It can be a hard thing to shake. I had to keep telling myself that I need food to live and that my plan IS to go over on some days and to allow mistakes.2 -
Probably should have started this after Thanksgiving because even I am not posting as much right now...
Let's open up the discussion for chapters 1-4 and we will leave it there for a couple of weeks.
Chapter 2: How Your Habits Shape Your Identity (and Vice Versa)
Chapter 3: How to Build Better Habits in 4 Simple Steps
Chapter 4: The Man Who Didn’t Look Right
Chapter 1 grabbed my interest because other than a few terminology differences I realized this was my plan already.
Chapter 2 is the one that started making me think about changes. I started thinking about how I view myself. Am I an former sedentary person trying to be active or should I just be an active person? Am I a formerly super ridiculously morbid obese person or a healthy weight person trying to chip away at the fat that doesn't belong?
With weight loss I have not really perfected how I should see myself now. Identity change probably takes a little time to determine what new labels feel comfortable. I see the merit in changing it just won't be immediate and it doesn't have to be.
I find it easier to call myself an active person now though. Even though that label is not 100 percent true yet I don't find the mental resistance like I do with weight loss.
I have always tried to be a neat person but making my bed seems to help me identify with calling myself a neat person now. It has snowballed into other new habits like taking my shoes off in the garage now instead of the kitchen and hanging my coat up on the hook each time I take it off. I am tidying things up a little quicker and more often than I once did. I think it is because I start the day with an act of 'neatness' it is helping me be that person. My wife is not complaining.
However, I find it hard to call myself a musician when I can barely play 3 songs and not very well. I know the purpose is not to lie to myself but encourage musical thinking but it feels like a lie.
I guess my real world results are mixed with assuming an identity change and then engaging in habits that support the change. If I am mentally rejecting a new label that can't work so I think the solution there is to try to determine an interim label that feels more comfortable. Maybe instead of calling myself a musician I can be a beginner musician. I don't know. It is all a work in progress.
I won't jump into my thoughts on 3 or 4 yet.0 -
I completed reading the book this weekend.
The identity you choose as your future self is made up of many actions, small habits, routines and processes that are repeated time and time again, slowly shaping you into the results you desire, your future self. Learning to make your plan, your processes, your routines, your small habits, enjoyable, realistic and sustainable, and continually looking for ways to improve upon them is an important part of being your future self today. Another important part is just trying something, knowing full well it may or may not work. Don’t ruminate. Failure is way more valuable than rumination.
Three songs is better than two. Trying is better than not. Jimmy Page was pretty much self taught. You too can aspire to such heights, assuming your desire and associated actions are in alignment. Keep asking yourself, from your “future self,” the accomplished musician or whatever you what do be, “What actions did I take to get here?” You may not have all the answers to get there today, but the gap will eventually be filled, just by continually asking yourself the questions, trying, and taking the actions you know you can today.
Be your amazing future self today!1