Tiny Habits: The Small Changes That Change Everything
M**S
This is the book that explains EVERYTHING about habits
This book is VERY good. One of the best nonfiction books I've ever read (I’ve lost count, probably over 1,000 books).It doesn't change the fact that there are some pros and cons. I'll share both sides of the coin.First, a fewPROS1. Fogg Behavior ModelThis is a brilliant concept, and it deserves to be taught in primary school. In the first grade of primary school.It's simple. It's intuitive. It isn't an academic theory, but it describes reality because it is based on observations more than on ruminations.The chart of the model and several sentences explaining how it works are worth the price of the book, and the typo (see below in the CONS section) be damned.2. Covers All the AnglesTiny Habits tells the whole story of habits, from underlying principles of repeating the behavior to breaking bad habits and group cooperation in developing new habits.This is the MOST complete book about habits I've read, and I read them all.Read this book and you will learn how people actually change their behavior, why it makes tremendous sense to start small rather than big, how to grow your tiny habits into massive action, and how those small activities will result in huge results in the end.I love this book! It says all I've been trying to convey to the public for years. It also says it very well. The explanations are easy to grasp. Tiny Habits is very well written. Which is the next pro...3. StoriesI was totally impressed by the way BJ has woven stories of his students into the principles he teaches. I barely can tell where teaching ends and a story starts.And all the stories are amazingly powerful. BJ has taught tens of thousands of people how to develop habits; he could cherry-pick some that make your head spin and your heart rate climb.Powerful. Encouraging. Hope-giving. Authentic.BJ Fogg has done something extraordinary in this book. He’s connected miniscule daily actions with big life transformations. What we mostly see in media are the stories of great deeds: losing 100 pounds in three months, creating a six-figure company in less than six months, etc. Tiny daily activities simply don't connote with enormous transformations.Until you read Tiny Habits. Utilizing the stories is at the master level here.4. RepetitiveRepetition is the mother of learning.Repetition is the mother of learning.Repetition is the mother of learning.BJ Fogg seems to know this very well. There is a lot of iterative repetitions of everything he teaches in the book.Yet, it's not annoying at all. I noticed the repetition often, especially in the charts and images illustrating the process, but it didn't bother me one bit. I'm impressed.CONS1. The FlawThe main con of the book is a piece of dubious info that simply doesn't fit this awesome book. One of the chapters is titled "Emotions Build Habits."In the very same chapter there is a sentence:"For too long people have believed the old myth that repetition creates habits."BJ Fogg champions the idea that your attitude is more important than consistency. And he does it in an ugly style, which is another con.I know where he comes from. Millions of people have forced themselves to follow some diet for a month or a quarter-year, and then they abandoned it and never came back. Repetitions alone don't create a habit. But tens of millions of people have felt very excited about changing their habits, didn't force themselves, weren't consistent, and ended up without a habit in the exact same way.Repetitions alone aren't a silver bullet. Emotions alone aren't a silver bullet either.I found an ideal sentence describing what the author meant, the one which I agree 101% with:"Emotions make behavior more automatic."This is the main focus of this chapter, and deriding repetitions, tracking, and streaks was a huge mistake and throwing the baby out with the bathwater.2. ZealotryI don't think any author is free of this. BJ Fogg’s ideas are truly brilliant, but stating some utterances like they are dogma tickles me in a bad way.I noticed it only once in the book, but it left a foul taste. It was in the fragment about repetitions:"Some of today's popular habit bloggers still talk about repetition or frequency as the key. Just know this: They are recycling old ideas. They have not done groundbreaking research."Throwing the baby out with the bathwater and pretending it's a good thing to commit.First, this paragraph was totally unnecessary. Second, in my ears "groundbreaking research" equals inerrancy and people who haven't done such research are inferior. How come?Those “popular bloggers” don't just spill their words on the internet. They write from experience. I’ve coached over 100 people in habit formation, and I did it according to BJ Fogg's model. Repetition works. Period.Then you can add some qualifiers: that it doesn't work alone or that if your emotions are working against you it's very hard to create a habit despite repetitions.But in general, repetitions work.Don't get me wrong. You may think after this con that the author is some kind of self-righteous monster. That's far from the truth. BJ Fogg is an awesome guy. I've been following him for years.His accomplishments are undeniable.He has great bragging rights.I simply say belittling others is not his style and it doesn't fit this awesome book. The same with fighting timeless concepts that have been proven to work in practice countless times.3. CelebrationThis is my biggest takeaway from the whole book. I bought "Tiny Habits" to repay BJ Fogg for his awesome job.I've already studied the concept of tiny habits. I went through his free course with success. I've been writing about his concepts for several years. Apart from very interesting stories about the author and his clients and students, there was nothing new in the book for me.Except for celebration, that is.I mean, when I did the Tiny Habits course a few years ago, I read about celebration and I discounted it. I never truly implemented this element into my habit development or my coaching. Big mistake.Why did I put it as a con? Because it's articulated in the book only halfway into it!!What is more, the author is clearly aware of the importance of featuring this tip:"I would train you in celebrations before teaching you about the Fogg Behavior Model, or the power of simplicity, or Anchors, or recipes for Tiny Habits."So, why the heck didn't he?!?!BJ Fogg knows it's important. For a habit expert like me, it's the biggest takeaway. And he hid this feature in the middle of the book.4. TypoThe last con is on the publisher. English is not my first language. I'm unaware of most grammatical errors. I usually am not annoyed by a few typos here and there. I'm an author, and I know how close to impossible it is to eliminate all typos from a manuscript.That is, until I read "bestto" in a Kindle book for which I paid almost $17! And I know that a poor author won't get even $5 of it because he is robbed by a traditional publisher whose products are so perfect, and so above the "poor quality" self-publishers' books (like 5x above, as their prices are).C'mon! My word processor noticed this typo! Drop the price to a reasonable level, or do the perfect job you are paid for.Rant over! Sorry.==========If you've thought for a moment that the above cons make Tiny Habits hardly readable or the book is not so good, that's a wrong impression.I wrote in such length about cons because I deeply care about this book's success. It is absolutely fantastic. And here are more reasons that make it so, let's go back to PROS:==========5. PersonalI hate the guts of most traditionally published books. They are bland, tailored to speak to a general audience, and...bland.Tiny Habits is not so. The author wasn't castrated out of his voice. BJ Fogg shares in by-the-way matters that he is gay at the very beginning of the book. He shares plenty of smaller stories from his life related to habit building and behavior design. I enjoyed those tidbits a lot.But he also shares the deeply personal story of his nephew’s suicide and his family dynamics.So, a reader can not only learn from practical applications of his model and tiny habit framework from his example, but can relate to him on a personal level.Tiny Habits is a lot of things, but it's not bland.6. Group SettingAnother unique trait of Tiny Habits is that it teaches how to create new habits in a group setting—in a family, company, or team. In the same methodical way in which the author explains how to build individual habits, he also explains how you can help others change.What is more, he describes two paths: the path of a Ringleader and the path of a Ninja. The Ringleader is a person with the authority to lead others (father, CEO, manager, coach, and so on).But when people resist the change despite your formal authority or if you are not a person in power, you can still help others by walking the Ninja path. Which, by the way, I found very helpful. Most people hiss at the sound of the word "change" like a devil at the sight of holy water.SummaryTiny Habits is so good that I cannot properly articulate it. Just ignore the one idiocy that emotions build habits and repetitions don't, and you can absorb the rest with your whole mind and soul.This is the book that explains everything about habits.This is the book that teaches you the simplest system.This is the book that makes your personal changes not only possible, but totally doable.This is the book that inspires you to take bold (but tiny!) action.This is the book that helps you feel successful from day one.This is the book.
J**C
Tiny equals impossible to fail
I love BJ’s book “Tiny Habits “. It is thorough, clear, and full of true principles. It works, as long as you keep tweaking your tiny habit until it’s just right.
C**C
Most Helpful Book to Change Things for Good
I was actually reading another book on habits when I stumbled on BJ Fogg's work. At first it seemed too simplistic, but he offered some free resources for people who pre-ordered his book. The resources were helpful and I used them a little bit in trying to change my morning routine. Since retiring, I hadn't had much routine in my life. Sometimes I got up at 9 and others at noon. Sometimes I went to bed at 11:30 and others at 3 am. I knew that it was throwing off the rest of my routines. Eating -- Sharing activities with friends -- Getting my TO DO list done. In January I received the book and enjoyed reading it. Once again, BJ directed people to his website where I found a lot more resources to make things happen. For the first time in years, I got up every day at 8:30 am. I made my bed. I did my PT exercises. (My PT was amazed at the results!) I spent a few minutes meditating and did a little dance. (An important part of changing things.) The website offered a free five day class in setting up tiny habits - it helped me clarify some other things I wanted to do. I joined a 10 week program BJ offered to orient readers to his approach. It concludes tomorrow and I've gotten a lot out of reviewing each chapter. I was happy. Then, Coronavirus arrived in the US! As someone who has dealt with an anxiety disorder for most of my life -- I could only think about dying and feeling out of control in the world. But, BJ is a "giver." Almost immediately he started a series of sessions on Zoom that helped with various aspects of dealing with all the complications that have come with this pandemic. He has lead some himself and coaches he has trained from all over the world have done others. I stopped feeling alone. I adopted some habits I explored attending the web sessions. Seeing others over Zoom gave me more of a connection. It was a really positive experience. I encourage you to get the book, go to the website and feel happier and more in control. Many of the sessions were recorded and others are still being held. Wonderful experience, wonderful read and wonderful man.
J**D
Best book on habits!
This book has been the best tool to help me build sustainable habits. Definitely a great and thorough read. Not just theory, science to back it all up. Highly recommend
L**N
Very easy to apply to real life
An easy read. After having read only a few pages of this book, I have already made changes and new habits. The guidance makes sense and it is written in a way that is easy to apply to your life today. I look forward to finishing the book and making life long habits.
N**V
Great Book to implement new habits.
It’s basically giving you tips & tricks to navigate the new Habits you want to create in your day to day life. I liked the fact that it’s depending on the things you do in your day to day life which I had not realised that I have so many which are repeated day in day out.
V**L
The best book on Habits I've read so far
The book 'Tiny Habits' is based on the ground-breaking research on Habits by Stanford Prof. BJ Fogg. The book provides an in-depth yet easy-to-read understanding of the science behind habits. It goes on to suggest practical strategies and tools to inculcate any new habit or get rid of an undesirable one. Written in a conversational style with plenty of examples from the author's own life and of several others who adopted the Tiny Habits Method, the book is an interesting read. I'm glad I picked it up.
R**O
Amazing book
The book brings the model and explains how human behavior works and how it can be designed for change. It is a wonderful reference with a variety of guidelines and resources. Thanks, BJ Fogg, for share with us this pearl!
O**A
El libro está bien, pero repite mucho
A veces es muy repetitivo, pero está bueeno
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