Rebis
Blessed are the hearts that can bend
I pick up a lot of habits that sustain themselves for a respectable period, yet they drop out of sight when I don't maintain them. I see a lot of people trying hard to create habits that'll ultimately make them a more productive person (Waking up at 6:30, planning days in periodic intervals and tidying your room (Thanks JBP). Yet, often times than not people do not sustain these habits as they've had a slice of that lifestyle (Neat Freak, Avid Reader, GYM Rat etc).
I don't think the problem is habit formation for most, or at least for me. The problem is seeing the fundamental, long-term benefits of sustaining such a habit and how it will benefit them in the future. If I maintain a habit long-term I can usually see most of the benefits in a short period, there are diminishing returns if I sustain that over a long period which suggests moderation, or switching out habits is better if you're not a highly-productive person. For example, being neat is nice in some respects, it's nice to get out a folded piece of clothing from your drawer. It's nice to wake up, brush your teeth and change in a period of 5 minutes. But, if you're focused on doing work on your computer to a degree in which you can ignore the mess, you'll only realise some mess once you come out of the zone. It looks nice to fold your clothes but you rarely look in your clothing drawers, so the orderly behaviour will only be appreciated like 2-3 times a day.
Simply put, I think most habits are pleasing to have once you reap the rewards of the habit, but the reason they aren't sustained isn't because you're bad at forming habits, maybe it's because you don't see the utility in maintaining a habit. If you did see the utility and saw the benefits as something necessary to your life then I think they'd be easily adopted. You see people watch youtube videos of the methodical plan that businessmen go through where they have something like 15-20 tasks a day and think "hey, I could do that!". You could, sure, but the reason they have such a routine is because they're highly productive individuals and they need to plan out their days in a strict fashion in order to maintain that level of productivity. Businessmen do it out of necessity, not because they think it'd be cool to pick up a habit.
I don't think the problem is habit formation for most, or at least for me. The problem is seeing the fundamental, long-term benefits of sustaining such a habit and how it will benefit them in the future. If I maintain a habit long-term I can usually see most of the benefits in a short period, there are diminishing returns if I sustain that over a long period which suggests moderation, or switching out habits is better if you're not a highly-productive person. For example, being neat is nice in some respects, it's nice to get out a folded piece of clothing from your drawer. It's nice to wake up, brush your teeth and change in a period of 5 minutes. But, if you're focused on doing work on your computer to a degree in which you can ignore the mess, you'll only realise some mess once you come out of the zone. It looks nice to fold your clothes but you rarely look in your clothing drawers, so the orderly behaviour will only be appreciated like 2-3 times a day.
Simply put, I think most habits are pleasing to have once you reap the rewards of the habit, but the reason they aren't sustained isn't because you're bad at forming habits, maybe it's because you don't see the utility in maintaining a habit. If you did see the utility and saw the benefits as something necessary to your life then I think they'd be easily adopted. You see people watch youtube videos of the methodical plan that businessmen go through where they have something like 15-20 tasks a day and think "hey, I could do that!". You could, sure, but the reason they have such a routine is because they're highly productive individuals and they need to plan out their days in a strict fashion in order to maintain that level of productivity. Businessmen do it out of necessity, not because they think it'd be cool to pick up a habit.