How to Create a New Habit ☑️

A simple recipe

The Nudge
5 min readJan 2, 2017

If old habits die hard, then it’s no surprise that New Year’s resolutions die easy. Not anymore.

In Part I of the Livday New Year’s Resolution Guide we’ve crafted 100 life-changing resolutions for you to consider. In Part II we’ve designed a simple recipe you can follow to bring any resolution to life.

We wish you a hopeful new year filled with your own style of adventure, romance and mischief. Cheers!

-The Livday team

1. Take your first step

Your first action should be to take the easiest possible first step. Just taking that first baby step, no matter how small, massively increases your odds of success. For example:

Resolution: Write an article 📝

First step: Buy a blank journal to brainstorm ideas in

Resolution: Learn to Salsa dance 💃🏻

First step: Google “salsa class in [your city]”

Resolution: Spend less time online 📱

First step: Install a web usage-tracking app like RescueTime

2. Build a trigger into your routine

We run on routines, and each action in our routine has a trigger. Consider:

Trigger: Finished brushing teeth > Action: Turn on the shower

Trigger: Sit down on the bus > Action: Check Instagram

Trigger: Notice feeling tired > Action: Walk to the kitchen for coffee

So for your resolution, you’re going to need to build a trigger and action into your routine. Such as:

Resolution: Write an article 📝

Trigger: 6:30AM alarm > Action: Get out of bed and work on your article for 15 minutes

Resolution: Drink more water 💧

Trigger: Sit down at your desk > Action: Refill your water jug

Resolution: Spend more time in nature 🌳

Trigger: Thursday at 5PM (set a calendar reminder) > Action: Email friends about going hiking on the weekend

Bonus tip: Our willpower is a finite resource that gets tapped throughout the day. If you’re serious, set your trigger for the morning while you’re running on a full tank.

3. Create a tracker

If you fall out of your resolution, how will you know? Will you magically wake up in the middle of the night and think “I forgot to start going on daily walks!”? Probably not.

You need to set-up a way to check-in with your resolution. You should do something that works with your style, but a simple approach is to create a weekly calendar reminder. Consider:

Resolution: Write an article 📝

Tracker: Weekly reminder to update how many words you’ve written on your article (e.g., in an Excel sheet)

Resolution: Give back to the community 👋🏻

Tracker: Weekly reminder to make sure you have a volunteering date on the calendar

Resolution: Eat healthy 🌽

Tracker: 9AM reminder to record what you ate yesterday

4. Build your motivation into your routine

You can micromanage your routine as much as you want, but if you don’t care enough you’re going to end up with a bunch of weekly notifications that you simply ignore. Sometimes we need a reminder of why we’re doing these things. Here are some ideas:

Resolution: Write an article 📝

Motivation: Weekly reminder with motivational question

Resolution: Go camping more often ⛺️

Motivation: Order a calendar of John Muir quotes

5. Harness social pressure

Social pressure creates wars, topples empires and has its fingerprints all over our lives. It’s powerful, and if you can harness it for your resolution you will be in great shape. Here are some ideas:

Resolution: Write an article 📝

Social pressure: Find a friend who also wants to write an article, and make a pact to regularly write together and share progress

Resolution: Create a garden 🌼

Social pressure: Post on social media that your resolution is to create a garden, and that you’ll be sharing a photo update every week to stay accountable

Resolution: Visit friends in person more often 👫

Social pressure: Send an email to all the friends you want to see in person more often to let them know about your resolution, and ask them to call you out if you’re MIA

The final checklist

🔲 First step taken

🔲 Trigger built into routine

🔲 Tracker created

🔲 Motivation built into routine

🔲 Social pressure harnessed

Does this feel like a little much? If so, consider how few of us truly change our habits, let alone the direction of our lives. It’s hard work, but it’s good work, and it’s worth it.

Need some inspiration for any of these steps? Let us know in the responses and we’ll do our best. And please let us know how it goes! We’d love to hear your resolution successes and challenges, and they’ll help us improve this guide for next year. Happy New Year!

-The Livday Team

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The Nudge

🙋‍♀️ The Nudge is a lifestyle membership for millennials that texts (nudges) you awesome things to do in and around your city! Nudgetext.com | SF & Seattle