Microwaving another bag of broccoli
That was the 1 habit I wanted to work on.
The rest of the 1-1-1-1-1 pact
* 1 habit
* 10 pages
* 100 reps
* 1000 words
* 10000 steps Which adds up to 11,111 and maps to
* Habit building
* Reading
* Weightlifting
* Writing
* and Walking Initially I'm aiming for 500 days but I want to do these daily for the rest of my life. Which means the intensity is lower than other challenges you might come across. Which are great, which I've definitely tried and strayed off of.
The PACT idea is from Tiny Experiments. You decide "I will ACTION for DURATION"
It stands for
* Purposeful: it's about the daily behaviors
* Actionable: I know these are doable
* Continuous: I'm going for daily for... hopefully decades
* Trackable
I already do most of these on various days but now I'm trying to be deliberate about getting all of those in every day.
So what's with the broccoli?
1. One habit every 21 days?
This is probably Video-idea Driven Development.
I've long wanted to do some kind 10k, 1000, 100, 10 thing but could never figure out how to round out the "1"
* 1 minute meditating?
* 1 gratitude?
* 1 video posted? But last week I realized 1 could be a flexible thing I could use to represent an experiment to try. The 1 also reminds me of the BJ Fogg thing of "Floss 1 tooth":
"Think of it this way: You can keep many tiny plants alive by giving them a few drops of water a day. It’s the same with habits. There are still days when my motivation is unusually low for flossing. On those days, I floss only one tooth."
I want to document this whole thing through vlogs so, yes, I did think this might be a way to make the videos a littttle less repetitive.
I'll be able to align the "1" to some shorter-term goal I have. Right now? Lose some weight. It starts in the kitchen, etc. so I want to eat a bag of broccoli every day.
Why this goal? First, it's not an all-day goal. All-day goals become hard.
* Tracking food every day takes a lot of effort initially and I always fall off.
* Avoiding snacking is another all-day thing
* Avoiding anything as a whole is an all-day thing So with these habits I'll aim to make them things I add to the day and can very clearly say "I'm done"
With the broccoli I can cook it, eat it, say "I'm done", then feel slight discomfort for 2 hours because I should probably split it into 2 meals.
2. We don't have walrus meat so we need to add hard things (10 pages)
Earlier this year I read The Wide Wide Sea by Hampton Sides. It's about Captain James Cook. It was an extremely hard life with not so great food on the ships:
Midshipman George Gilbert had stronger words for walrus flesh. He described the elaborate procedure the men improvised to make the “disgustful” meat palatable. “We let it hang up for one day that the blood might drain from it,” Gilbert wrote. “After that, we towed it overboard for twelve hours, then boiled it for four hours, and the next day cut it into steaks and fried it. And even then it was too rank both in smell and taste to make use of except with plenty of pepper.”
But Captain Cook loved it because of the goal: make maps of the world
He was finally doing what he loved and knew best: serious cartographic fieldwork, on a big scale, in an unfamiliar place. There wasn’t time for laying down much precision—the minute details would have to be filled in by later explorers—but the general idea of Alaska, its outline, was coming into focus.
Anyway, it was a reminder that life can be kind of easy compared to centuries ago. We seek out these hard things because we don't have to hunt for food anymore. Shaan Puri had a great phrase for this sort of content: "toughness influencers"
So anyway. Speaking of books, that's what the 10 represents: 10 pages of re
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