Christine Carter The 1minute secret to forming a new habit TED

Transcriber: Joseph Geni
Reviewer: Camille Martínez

I don’t know about you,

but when our family got
the stay-at-home order in March of 2020,

I came out of the gates pretty darn hot.

“Embrace not being so busy,” I wrote.

“Take this time at home
to get into a new happiness habit.”

That seems hilarious to me now.

My pre-coronavirus routines
fell apart hard and fast.

Some days I would realize at dinnertime

that not only had I not showered
or gotten dressed that day,

but I hadn’t even brushed my teeth.

Even though I have coached people
for a very long time

in an effective, science-based
method of habit formation,

I struggled.

Truth be told, for the first
few months of the pandemic,

I more or less refused to follow
my own best advice.

This is because I love to set
ambitious goals.

Getting into a good little habit

is just so much less exciting to me

than embracing a big,
juicy, audacious goal.

Take exercise, for example.

When the coronavirus hit,

I optimistically embraced the idea

that I could get
back into running outside.

I picked a half-marathon to train for

and spent a week or so
meticulously devising

a very detailed training plan.

But then I actually only stuck
to my ambitious training schedule

for a few weeks.

All that planning and preparation

led only to a spectacular
failure to exercise.

I skipped my training runs,

despite feeling like
the importance of exercise

and the good health that it brings

has never been more bracingly clear.

The truth is that our ability
to follow through on our best intentions,

to get into a new habit like exercise

or to change our behavior
in any way, really,

doesn’t actually depend on
the reasons we might do it

or on the depth of our convictions
that we should do so.

It doesn’t depend on
our understanding of the benefits

of our particular behavior

or even on the strength of our willpower.

It depends on our willingness
to be bad at our desired behavior.

And I hate being bad at stuff.

I am a go-big-or-go-home kind of a gal.

I like being good at things,

and I quit exercising

because I wasn’t willing to be bad at it.

Here’s why we need
to be willing to be bad:

being good requires
that our effort and our motivation

be in proportion to each other.

The harder something is for us to do,

the more motivation we need
to do that thing.

And you might have noticed,

but motivation isn’t something
that we can always muster on command.

Whether we like it or not,

motivation comes and motivation goes.

When motivation wanes,

plenty of research shows
that we human beings

tend to follow the law
of the least effort,

meaning we just do the easiest thing.

New behaviors tend to require
a lot of effort,

because change is really hard.

To establish an exercise routine,

I needed to let myself
be kind of half-assed about it.

I needed to stop trying
to be an actual athlete.

I started exercising again

by running for only one minute at a time.

Every morning, after I brushed my teeth,

I’d change out of my pajamas
and walk out the door,

my only goal, to run for one full minute.

These days, usually I actually do run
for 15 or 20 minutes,

but on the days that I’m totally
lacking in motivation

or I just feel like I have no time,

I still do that one minute.

And this minimal effort always turns out
to be way better than if I did nothing.

Maybe you relate.

Maybe you’ve also failed

in one of your attempts
to change yourself for the better.

Perhaps you want to use less plastic

or meditate more

or be a better anti-racist.

Maybe you want to write a book

or eat more leafy greens.

I have great news for you.

You can do and be those things,

starting right now.

The only requirement is that
you stop trying to be so good.

You’ll need to abandon your grand plans,

at least temporarily.

You’ll need to consider
doing something so minuscule

that it would be better
than not doing anything at all.

So right now, ask yourself:

How you can strip that thing
that you have been meaning to do

into something so easy you could do it
every day with barely a thought?

It might be eating one piece of lettuce
on your sandwich at lunch

or going for a one-minute walk outside.

Don’t worry – you’ll get to do more.

This better-than-nothing behavior
is not your ultimate goal.

But for now, what could you do
that is ridiculous easy

that you can do even when
nothing is going as planned?

Even though you ultimately
might want to do more and be more,

remember that we humans
are often too tired

and too stressed

and too distracted

to do the things
that we really do intend to do

and to be the people
that we most intend to be.

On those days,

our wildly ambitious behaviors
really are better than nothing.

A one-minute meditation
is relaxing and restful.

A single leaf of romaine lettuce
happens to have a half a gram of fiber

and loads of nutrients.

A one-minute walk gets us outside
and moving around,

which our bodies really need.

So try doing one
better-than-nothing behavior.

See how it goes.

The goal, remember, is repetition,

not high achievement.

So let yourself be mediocre
at whatever you’re trying to do,

but be mediocre every day.

Take only one step,

but take that step every day.

If your better-than-nothing habit

doesn’t actually seem
better than doing nothing,

consider that you’re
getting started at something

and that initiating a behavior
is often the hardest part.

By getting started,

we’re establishing
the neural pathway in our brain

for a new habit,

which makes it much more likely
that we’ll succeed with something

more ambitious down the line.

Why is this?

Well, it’s because once we hard wire
a habit into our brains,

we can do it without thinking,

and therefore without needing
much willpower or effort.

A better-than-nothing habit

turns out to be incredibly easy
to repeat again and again

until it’s on autopilot.

This is because we can do it
even if we aren’t motivated,

even if we’re tired,

even if we have no time whatsoever.

And once we start acting on autopilot,

that’s the golden moment

that our habit can begin
to expand organically.

After only a few days of running
for just one minute,

I started feeling a real desire
to keep on running,

not because I felt like I should
be exercising more,

or because I felt like I needed
to impress my neighbors or something,

but because it felt more natural
to keep running

than it felt to stop.

Now, I of all people know
that it can be incredibly tempting,

especially for the
overachievers among us –

you know who you are –

to encourage ourselves to do more

than our designated
better-than-nothing habit.

So I must warn you:

the moment in which you are no longer
willing to do something unambitious

is the moment in which
you are risking everything.

It’s the moment you end up
checking your phone

instead of whatever it is
that you intended to do.

It’s the moment in which
you stay on the couch

binge-watching TikTok videos or Netflix.

The moment you think you “should” do more

is the moment you introduce
difficulty and force

and negotiation with yourself.

It’s the moment you eliminate
the possibility that it will be easy

and even enjoyable.

So that’s also the moment

that will require a lot more motivation,

and if the motivation isn’t there,

failure will be.

Fortunately, the whole idea
behind the better-than-nothing habit

is that it doesn’t depend on motivation,

which we may or may not muster.

It’s not reliant
on having a lot of energy.

You do not have to be good at this.

You need only to be willing

to do something
that is wildly unambitious,

to do something that is
just a smidge better than nothing.

But again, don’t do more
if you feel any form of resistance.

I’m happy to report
that after months of struggle,

I am now a runner.

I became one simply
by allowing myself to be bad at it.

You definitely could not
call me an athlete;

there are no half-marathons in my future.

But I am consistent.

To paraphrase the Dalai Lama,

the goal is not to be
better than other people

but rather to be better
than our previous selves.

And that, I definitely am.

When we abandon our grand plans
and great ambitions

in favor of taking that first step,

we shift.

And paradoxically,

it’s only in that tiny shift

that our grand plans and great ambitions

are truly born.

Thank you.