CHAPTER 10 — How to Find and Fix the Causes of Your Bad Habits

If a habit feels like a high-friction project, you’ll postpone it until “later,” which often means never. The practical question is: how can you make the right action easier?
Reduce steps. Prepare in advance. Put tools where you use them. Create a start-up routine that lowers the barrier to entry. The difference between “I should” and “I did” is often a door you don’t want to open.
Small frictions matter because habits run on repetition. A two-minute hassle, repeated daily, becomes a reason to quit. Conversely, a two-minute shortcut, repeated daily, becomes momentum. Your goal is not to do the hard thing perfectly. Your goal is to make the first step so simple that you begin. Make the path smooth, and behavior follows the path. Most people don’t lack motivation—they face too much friction.