I recently had a conversation with a reader over the 30 Day Trial
method. The idea, made popular by Steve Pavlina, is that you stay
focused on one change for thirty days. After that, it becomes a habit
and no longer requires willpower. It’s a technique I’ve used to start
exercising, switch my eating habits, wake up early and add various other productivity routines.
Our debate centered around whether you should implement one 30DT (30
Day Trial) at a time, or several. According to this reader, life was
short, and he wanted to do as much as possible in a small timeframe. He
was asking advice on whether he should implement 3-4 trials at a time,
or just one.
This isn’t the first time I’ve heard this question, or the first time
I’ve seen the results. Usually someone who stumbles upon the 30DT gets
it in their head to multiply the effects by doing several at the same
time. After ten days of this insanity, they slip and end back where they
started. Nothing changed and nothing gained.
Runaway Enthusiasm
The problem isn’t that doing several 30DT’s at a time is impossible. I’m sure with enough practice and motivation,
you could do it. The problem is that doing several trials at the same
time is overkill. It’s taking something fairly simple and making it
incredibly difficult, just to save a month or two.
This is just one case of runaway enthusiasm, but I’m sure you know of
others. Runaway enthusiasm happens when a new idea or interest fuels
you with intense motivation. For about two weeks. Then that motivation
dies out and you’re left with the wreckage.
For many people this cycle happens every time they start a new diet. It goes from:
For many people this cycle happens every time they start a new diet. It goes from:
- Hearing about the diet.
- Becoming intensely interested in the diet.
- Starting the diet.
- Crashing and eating a bag of donuts after ten days.
Enthusiasm is useful. Without motivation, you can’t get up in the
morning. But with runaway enthusiasm, you aren’t able to control that
extra energy. You bite off more than you can chew. Instead of locking in
gains, you burn yourself out.
Focused Enthusiasm
The opposite of runaway enthusiasm is focus. When you have focused
enthusiasm, you are motivated to take action, but you aren’t stupid
about it. You’re aware that at some point, your motivation will fall
back to normal levels. Instead of squandering your temporary energy, you
need to anchor it in.
When you encounter a burst of motivation,
your should try to secure it into something more permanent. Enthusiasm
is like a spark. It’s powerful, but it burns out quickly. Unless you
find some fuel to capture that temporary heat, it will fizzle out.
How to Anchor in Gains
You can anchor in any improvements by creating a plan. Making this
plan can feel odd when you’re full of enthusiasm. It’s a bit like
writing a will. It’s a plan for what you want done once the motivated
you fades away. It’s a map for you to follow once the lights burn out.
In the movie Memento, a man has long-term memory loss that prevents
him from remembering anything new. To record new details, he tattoos
notes on his body to guide him. In a way, you are doing the same thing
when you anchor in gains. You are writing notes to yourself about what
to do when you forget why you’re supposed to be motivated.
Every plan will be different, but every plan should include both habits and a project.
Habits
Your first step should be to lock in behaviors. Practice your
routines and actions consistently until they become rituals. A ritual
can continue with you even if you lose temporary motivation.
The 30 Day Trial itself is a great way to lock in habits. Even beyond
this method, you should be looking at how you can form rituals of
common behaviors. You don’t want to ritualize things that need to change
with different conditions. But simple rituals can anchor in the
behaviors you need to continue.
Projects
A project is a set of tasks and actions that leads to a goal.
Planning a project is a good way to anchor in your enthusiasm. A project
is a clear commitment to a certain set of actions. Writing a book,
setting up a blog, committing to the gym for 3 months or enrolling in a
course are all examples of projects.
You can use your enthusiasm to make the push to get started. When
starting projects it’s better to over-commit and under-promise. That
means your commitment to finishing the project should be extremely high,
while the promises of how the project will end up are lowered. Set an
easier project with extra commitment.
Harnessing Enthusiasm
The best way to look at motivation is like a wave. You can make a
splash to create a big wave, but it will eventually recede back to the
starting point. By anchoring in the gains you make from a big wave, you
avoid drifting backwards when it recedes. Enthusiasm is wasted if it
isn’t focused patiently towards a bigger goal.
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