We want the outcome of the habit without doing the habit. I heard that in James Clear’s “Atomic Habit” book, and it relates. Over the past few years I’ve struggled to organize my thoughts and stay focused on my goals for the day. My motivations started high each day and I’d have a hundred things I’d want to accomplish. At work, I’d diligently get through one or two before being distracted by either planning on the best approach for the next
A major issue was I didn’t set my goals before my motivation dwindled. I have more energy in the morning at work. It’s at that time when I should address the hardest tasks, but with a million things on my mind, how could I identify those? In my role, there are always several things competing for attention. A lot of the time is spent responding to issues and putting out fires. A whole day can easily go by with a lot of work but without a lot of progress. This was discouraging.
So over the holiday
Another benefit is once the habit of journalling is there, and I’m sitting down to write every morning, I can expand this beyond just a list. But for right now, it’s giving me better clarity in my thought, and I’m grateful for that.