Good habits, bad habits The science of making positive changes that stick

Wendy Wood, 1954 June 17-

Book - 2019

Wood draws on three decades of original research to explain the fascinating science of how we form habits, and offers the key to unlocking our habitual mind in order to make the changes we seek.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Wendy Wood, 1954 June 17- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 303 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [263]-286) and index.
ISBN
9781250159076
  • Part I. How We Really Are
  • 1. Persistence and Change
  • 2. The Depths Beneath
  • 3. Introducing Your Second Self
  • 4. What About Knowledge?
  • 5. What About Self-Control?
  • Part II. The Three Bases of Habit Formation
  • 6. Context
  • 7. Repetition
  • 8. Reward
  • 9. Consistency Is for Closers
  • 10. Total Control
  • Part III. Special Cases, Big Opportunities, and the World Around Us
  • 11. Jump Through Windows
  • 12. The Special Resilience of Habit
  • 13. Contexts of Addiction
  • 14. Happy with Habit
  • 15. You Are Not Alone
  • Epilogue
  • How to Stop Looking at Your Phone So Often
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

In 2002, Wood published a study showing that 43 percent of the average person's day is spent doing things by habit: ingrained practices that don't require extensive thought. This book addresses her ongoing research, including the realization that by habit aligns more with how an action is performed as opposed to what the action is. Using a combination of recent studies and accessible examples drawn from real life (dieting, personal finance, exercise) Wood posits that habits are born out of repetitive tasks and routines that can be encouraged. Bad habits are not necessarily the result of lack of will power or self control; they persist because of obstacles and negative cues to better choices. Eliminate these barriers, these sources of friction, and it becomes easier to adopt desirable habits. Later chapters address developing habit resilience as a lifelong attitude, habitual behavior and addiction therapy, and the psychological, societal, and emotional aspects of our habitual choices. Readers interested in making lifestyle changes will find this a good source for logical, realistic, and supportive encouragement.--Kathleen McBroom Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In her enlightening debut, Wood, professor of psychology at USC, rejects the popular narrative that links willpower to lasting behavioral change, and instead proposes that most human conduct stems from learned habits, not conscious decision-making. Wood contends that the way to create new behavioral patterns that will eventually become second nature is to engage in habitual, repetitive action. Wood acknowledges research that shows that some people might possess innate powers of self-control that defy the norm, but she argues that these supposedly high levels of self-control should really be understood as efficient habit formation. She eloquently explains current research on the role habits play in everyday activities such as snacking, exercising, and commuting. She also offers strategies for stopping undesirable habits by disrupting the contexts that enable them, and shares real-life examples of habit change. For instance, she demonstrates how laws banning smoking in public spaces forced a widespread change of habits and led to a national decline in smoking . Her insightful, data-driven advice includes tactics such as "stacking"--grouping desired behaviors together with already-established behavioral patterns to incorporate actions into routines. Wood's research and perspective on the malleability of habits will bring hope to any reader looking to create long-term behavioral change. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The nuances of creating a proactive, positively charged habitual life.Wood (Psychology and Business/Univ. of Southern California) has spent her career amassing research material to support theories that human behavior is best controlled with habitual repetition rather than willpower and good intentions, which are often not nearly enough to shift everyday activity. The author believes that in order to change behavior, the mechanics of habit formation must be understood first. Wood persuasively instructs readers with an informative amalgam of data, graduate training experiments, and psychological theories on conscious thought and rewiring desire and mannerisms. She notes that the same learning mechanisms responsible for bad habits also control good ones. "Going to the gym regularly and smoking a couple of cigarettes a day are the same," she writes, with the difference being how our habitual selves perceive and strive for personal goals. Wood notes that recent scientific studies reveal just how difficult human behavior is to change over the long term, but this data is also arming people with better game plans to disrupt the forces behind destructive patterns. Perhaps the most practical aspect of the book is the focus on functional tools and principles to interrupt and overcome the kinds of habits that prevent people from attaining more fruitful livelihoods and overall contentment. It is possible to achieve what she calls a "habit life" free from negative influences through the systematic replacement of poor habits with new ones that are beneficial and become just as familiar and comfortable. She instructs readers to disable the compulsive cues that engage such potentially bad behavior as overeating, distracted driving, and online shopping. When applied to real-life situations and acknowledged by readers seeking true behavioral reengineering, her research and valuable perspectives offer both hope and the possibility for a more manageable, productive life. A practical and cautionary story about how to break the cellphone habit concludes this intelligent assessment with encouragement.A timely, essential guide to understanding and molding our behaviors to achieve better results in our ever changing lifestyles. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.