Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 1490 answers
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Pick three genuine successes from the past two years — shipped a project, nailed a presentation, maintained a habit for months, solved a hard problem. For each one, answer: (1) What conditions were present? (2) What did I do differently from my usual approach? (3) Who was involved? (4) What was my.
Attributing your successes entirely to luck, timing, or other people while attributing your failures entirely to personal deficiency. This asymmetry — psychologists call it the self-serving bias in reverse — makes your success patterns invisible. If you can't own what you did right, you can't.
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Deliberately breaking a pattern at the trigger point creates space for new behavior.
Deliberately breaking a pattern at the trigger point creates space for new behavior.
Deliberately breaking a pattern at the trigger point creates space for new behavior.
Deliberately breaking a pattern at the trigger point creates space for new behavior.
Identify one automatic behavioral pattern you want to change. Map its chain: trigger -> response -> consequence. Tomorrow, when the trigger fires, execute a pre-planned competing response instead. It doesn't need to be perfect — it just needs to be different. Write down what happened. The goal.
Using willpower to 'resist' the pattern instead of replacing it with a competing response. Suppression strengthens the very pattern you're trying to break because it keeps the original response mentally active. The research is clear: you break patterns by executing alternatives, not by.
Deliberately breaking a pattern at the trigger point creates space for new behavior.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Pull up a collection of notes you've written over the past 30-90 days — a journal, a work log, a notes app, anything with at least 20 entries. Set a timer for 25 minutes. Read through every entry without editing. On a separate page, write down any recurring themes, repeated phrases, or topics that.
Reviewing notes with a hypothesis already in mind and selectively noticing entries that confirm it. This is confirmation bias dressed as pattern recognition. You'll know you've fallen into it when every review session 'discovers' the pattern you expected to find and never surfaces anything that.
Reviewing your captured notes over time reveals patterns you did not see in the moment.
Not every recurring event is meaningful — some repetitions are coincidental.
Not every recurring event is meaningful — some repetitions are coincidental.
Not every recurring event is meaningful — some repetitions are coincidental.
Small patterns repeated daily become the dominant forces in your life.