Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 607 answers
You know automation is complete when you cannot remember not doing the behavior.
Conduct a foundation completeness audit. Create a table with six columns: Health, Work, Relationships, Learning, Finance, and Daily Integration (morning and evening). Under each column, list every automated behavior you have built across the lessons in this phase. For each behavior, assign an.
Two opposite errors. The first is treating the foundation as something that must be completed all at once — reading this lesson and attempting to install a full cross-domain automation system in a single week. The foundation described here took Tomás three years. It was built one behavior at a.
A comprehensive set of automated behaviors providing a stable foundation for everything else.
Complete the Behavioral Sovereignty Assessment — a comprehensive integration of every diagnostic, protocol, and framework from the twenty lessons of Phase 60 and the two hundred lessons of Section 7. Set aside two to three hours. Part 1 — Automation Inventory (30 min): Using the automation.
Confusing behavioral automation with behavioral sovereignty. Automation is the mechanism; sovereignty is the outcome. You can have a fully automated life that serves values you no longer hold, routines that were designed for a person you no longer are, and systems that produce outcomes you no.
When your behavior automatically serves your values you have achieved behavioral sovereignty.