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Read the full transcript here.
What changes when we stop imagining transformation as a single breakthrough and start seeing it as thousands of small, low-resistance actions? How do we know whether a small action is genuinely sustainable or merely another form of self-improvement theater? What makes one habit a keystone habit for one person but irrelevant or even counterproductive for another? How can someone choose a direction for change when modern life constantly offers competing prescriptions for what a better self should look like? Why are the boring, repetitive, off-camera moments of change so much harder to honor than the dramatic moment of decision? What would recovery, habit formation, or personal growth look like if relapse and failure were treated as learning signals rather than moral verdicts? When does counting streaks reinforce commitment, and when does it turn a broken streak into a reason to abandon the whole project? How should we think about behaviors like social media use when they resemble addiction in loss of control but differ radically in risk, stigma, and physiology? What does addiction reveal about the way pain, relief, shame, and repetition can form a closed loop? Why might the same addictive mechanism be easier to recognize in a socially condemned drug habit than in a socially acceptable pattern of drinking, working, scrolling, or consuming?
Links:
Eric's Book: How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life
Eric's Podcast: The One You Feed
Staff
Music
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By Spencer Greenberg4.8
133133 ratings
Read the full transcript here.
What changes when we stop imagining transformation as a single breakthrough and start seeing it as thousands of small, low-resistance actions? How do we know whether a small action is genuinely sustainable or merely another form of self-improvement theater? What makes one habit a keystone habit for one person but irrelevant or even counterproductive for another? How can someone choose a direction for change when modern life constantly offers competing prescriptions for what a better self should look like? Why are the boring, repetitive, off-camera moments of change so much harder to honor than the dramatic moment of decision? What would recovery, habit formation, or personal growth look like if relapse and failure were treated as learning signals rather than moral verdicts? When does counting streaks reinforce commitment, and when does it turn a broken streak into a reason to abandon the whole project? How should we think about behaviors like social media use when they resemble addiction in loss of control but differ radically in risk, stigma, and physiology? What does addiction reveal about the way pain, relief, shame, and repetition can form a closed loop? Why might the same addictive mechanism be easier to recognize in a socially condemned drug habit than in a socially acceptable pattern of drinking, working, scrolling, or consuming?
Links:
Eric's Book: How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life
Eric's Podcast: The One You Feed
Staff
Music
Affiliates

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