Scale down any habit to a two-minute version to overcome starting friction: 'Exercise for 30 minutes' becomes 'Put on workout clothes.'
Instead of committing to 'meditate for 20 minutes,' commit to 'sit on the meditation cushion and take three breaths.' You can stop after two minutes, but you must start. Most people naturally continue once they've started.
The two-minute version is the goal, when it's actually just a gateway to make starting easier—the real habit is what comes after.
Atomic Habits
James Clear
A framework for building habits: make it obvious (cue), attractive (craving), easy (response), and satisfying (reward).
Humans naturally gravitate toward the option requiring the least work; design habits to be the path of least resistance.
Peak motivation occurs when working on tasks right at the edge of your current abilities—not too hard, not too easy.
What is the primary psychological barrier that the Two-Minute Rule is designed to overcome?
True or False: The two-minute version of a habit is the actual goal you're trying to achieve.