Full disclosure: If you buy the book through the link, it won't cost you any more, but I'll get a few pennies. But my main motivation for doing this is to understand the book properly. What follows is my summary of the chapter.
I'm going
to try to go faster. I want to get to the practical advice, and I
suspect other people do too.
In a novel
called “The Dice Man” by George Cockroft, the protagonist, Luke
Rinehart, uses a drastic method to escape the rut. He writes down six
possibilities, throws the dice, and does whatever. It works because
he's consciously making a list of options and then adding a random
element. Of course he didn't have to put things like “murder”
down as one of the options!
So why
don't more of us do it? Well, in the novel, other people are appalled
by the random behaviour. We find routines comforting. Flying is less
scary the more you do it. Surgery is less tiring the more you do it
(which is a very good thing when you arrive in A&E near the end
of the shift).
Habits
tend to be emotionless. You do have feelings while you, say, brush
your teeth, but they're feeling about whatever you're thinking about,
which is unlikely to be your teeth. We tend not to be proud of our
habits, and feel they don't say much about us and aren't very
important for reaching goals – we feel we aren't in control and
anyway, we hardly notice most of them.
One of the
effects of Parkinson's disease is that patients find it very hard to
form new habits and may even forget old ones.
Children
tend to be happier in families with regular routines like all eating
together, sitting in the same places. It can feel weird to go to a
friend's house, where they do things differently.
Most of us
learn young to be polite to strangers, so people are nice back and
it's self-reinforcing. Sadly, some people start out very pessimistic
about strangers; they expect rejection, and that makes them behave
in ways which makes rejection more likely. A simple habit of not
bothering with “Please”, “Thank you” and “Good morning”
can all too easily lead to a lonely old age.
Habits are
important at work, too. Companies which stagnate tend to bust (not
surprising) but companies which innovate too fast also go bust. You
need to have most of the workforce to be running on habit most of the
time, because habits are efficient.
Much of
our eating is habitual. But if you count when to start, when to stop,
what to eat, who to eat it with etc. as separate decisions, we make
over 200 of them per day, and very few of them are conscious. Food
just falls into our mouths by itself. Much of our shopping is
similarly automatic – we buy pretty much the same food that we
bought last week.
All this
repetition is efficient, but it get very boring. So we decide to
change, and then we find we're doing the same old, same old again.
The first
step to change is to notice what we're currently doing. We don't need
to resort to dice to get out of the rut. We can change things around
once we know which bits aren't helping, but it's best to go slowly.
1 comment:
That could be why we're sometimes not sure if we really did something, such as taking pills or taking off the gas - we did it without consciously deciding to?
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