Laughable Habits

Ryan Reeves
Sep 6, 2018 · 4 min read

“You will never change your life until you change something you do daily.”

— Mike Murdock

Last article, we looked at the difference between process and outcome. To recap, the defining characteristic was the focus on inputs rather than outputs. This is because you have a greater degree of control over the inputs. Rather than worrying about the final result, worry about improving your process. In short, focus on what you can control.

Now that we have that mental model, let’s add onto it to make it more applicable to our daily lives.

Let’s say we have a goal in mind. In one year we want to run a marathon in under 4 hours. A successful outcome would be the completion of that goal. But what would the process look like? Doing some sort of aerobic activity every day? Running a certain number of miles? Eating right?

All processes are made up of habits, things you do on a daily basis. Therefore, in order to achieve a goal, we need to focus on our habits.

The word habit might give off a slightly negative connotation. Maybe you think of bad habits like biting your nails? Even the dictionary defines ‘habit’ in a negative light as, “a settled or regular tendency or practice, especially one that is hard to give up.”

But the word habit just means the things you do repeatedly.

Let’s take the marathon example. The goal is daunting. But that just means we have to break it down into smaller, more digestible pieces. Just like they say, you eat an elephant one bite at a time (sorry PETA). These smaller, digestible pieces are called habits, and they make or break us.

For instance, one habit could be running a mile per day for the first month of training. Or it could be more ambitious, like 3 miles per day. The point is that you’re taking action, you’re closing the knowledge-action gap.

But closing this gap is difficult. Instituting new habits is tough. Making changes to our lives is hard. If it wasn’t, we’d all be billionaires with chiseled abs. So here is a simple technique for creating new habits to achieve a goal, to focus on the process rather than the outcome.

The name of the game is starting small. Laughably small.

If we set out to run a marathon, but start out with a habit of running ten miles per day, we’ll burn out or more likely, pull a hamstring. Setting overly ambitious habits for ourselves can lead to a quick defeat because you’re really not breaking down the problem effectively. You’re trying to eat the whole leg of an elephant in one sitting. You just can’t do it. You need to ease into it. Therefore, start small. Laughably small.

What I mean by laughably small is so small that if you told someone your new habit they would laugh because they would think you were joking.

For example, let’s say you want to achieve a goal of doing 100 push-ups per day. Start with 1.

For one week, you can only do 1 push-up per day. Sounds possible right? It’s because it is. It’s meant to be. It gives us the momentum to overcome inertia. Then, once we are on a roll, it becomes harder to not complete our habit.

Want to save more money? Save $5 per week for the first month.

Want to learn a language? Spend 5 minutes a day on a language-learning app.

Want to become a better friend? Schedule 5 minutes per day to think about others.

Start laughably small. If you don’t achieve your laughably small habit, then it means the goal is not that important to you. If you can’t sacrifice 5 minutes of your time, then it’s not important. That’s not a knock of your future self if you don’t complete your laughable habit. It just means you have different priorities, which are important to figure out.

Over time, you increase the difficulty of your laughable habits as your momentum and habit-muscles get stronger. You might bump it up to 5 push-ups per day and increase the daily count every week.

But starting is often the hard part. Instituting a habit is hard because it’s different and we don’t know where to start. But the bottom line is: starting is more important than how you actually start. So start laughably small.

Another benefit to laughable habits is the power of compounding, meaning that small improvements over a long period of time make for bigger results than we could have imagined. Think of it this way: if you improved 1% each day at something, you’d be about 38x better at that thing in one year.

“person drawing flow chart” by rawpixel on Unsplash

As Bill Gates is fond of saying,

“We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next ten. Don’t let yourself be lulled into inaction.”

If we want to achieve a goal, we must make progress. But to make progress, we need to focus on our habits, the things we do daily. It can be hard to institute these new habits so we must start with laughable habits and build from there.

It comes back to the same, original principle: focus on the process rather than the outcome. Instead of focusing on your goals, focus on your habits. And most importantly,

Author’s Note: Hey there! Feel free to gnab my free e-book. Would love to stay in touch. Please comment a link to your favorite Medium article so we can start a relationship!

Ryan Reeves

Written by

Just trying to live well… | www.investingcity.org

Welcome to a place where words matter. On Medium, smart voices and original ideas take center stage - with no ads in sight. Watch
Follow all the topics you care about, and we’ll deliver the best stories for you to your homepage and inbox. Explore
Get unlimited access to the best stories on Medium — and support writers while you’re at it. Just $5/month. Upgrade