In 2009, Fred Stutzman was a graduate student at the
University of North Carolina. He was trying to grind out some important work on
his thesis. But there was a problem.
His favorite coffee shop, which had previously been
a quiet sanctuary where he could escape distraction and get work done, had just
added a new and very dangerous feature.
Wireless internet.
Now Stutzman found himself constantly distracted by
the endless supply of entertainment and social media on the web — even if he
really wanted to get something done. He tried disconnecting from the internet,
but it wasn’t that simple. He was always clicking it back on to “take a break.”
He was constantly fighting the urge to check his messages and updates.
Thankfully, Stutzman happened to be a programmer
studying Information Science. When he went home that night, he decided to
create a software program that would solve his problem.
The program he created was simple. You turned the
application on, told it how long you wanted to focus, and it prevented your
computer from going online for that amount of time. If you wanted to get back
on before your time was up, you had to turn your computer completely off and
reboot.
The program was called Freedom. Not long after
Stutzman created it, the application went viral. It was picked up by NPR, The
Economist, The New York Times, Oprah Magazine, Time, and nearly every major
news outlet you can imagine. More than 500,000 people downloaded it.
It seems that many people were struggling with
online procrastination.
Why did Freedom work so well? And what can it teach
us about sticking to better habits and mastering our willpower?
The Power of Decision Elimination
Making decisions over and over again will drain your
willpower. This is true even if it’s the same, tiny decision — like constantly
resisting the urge to check your email. (Another example is continually trying
to follow a new, strict diet.)
You might be able to resist for 5 minutes or an hour
or maybe even a week, but eventually, your willpower will begin to fade and
you’ll give in. This is known as decision fatigue. In a previous article I
discussed how it has a measurable impact on your willpower and the choices you
make throughout any given day.
The Freedom app that Stutzman designed is effective
not only because it prevents you from reaching the web, but also because it
reduces decision fatigue. It eliminates your options and, as a result, doing
the right thing becomes much easier. In other words, the application places a
constraint on your behavior.
This brings us to an important point: constraints
can make it easier to stick to good habits by eliminating the number of
decisions you need to make to move forward.
Constraints are a Good Thing
People often say that they want options. When it
comes to getting things done, however, options aren’t always a good thing. When
everything is a possibility, it actually becomes harder to make the right
choice (or any choice at all). This is the paradox of choice.
Meanwhile, when we place a constraint on ourselves,
it can become much easier to get something done. This is especially true if it
is a constraint that forces us to start small.
If you
want to become more creative, you can use constraints to drive your creativity.
For example, you could write a book by only using 50 different words. This is
the strategy Dr. Seuss used to write Green Eggs and Ham.
If you
want to eat more vegetables, you could limit yourself to only one type of
vegetable this week. By limiting the number of choices you have to make, it’s
more likely that you’ll actually eat something healthy rather than get
overwhelmed trying to figure out all of the details of the perfect diet.
We often think that we want an open road and the
ability to choose any direction for ourselves. But sometimes, what we need is a
tunnel that can reduce our choices and send us in a focused direction.
How can you eliminate the need to make the same
decisions over and over again? How can you use constraints to drive your habits
forward — even if it’s in a very small way?
James Clear writes at JamesClear.com, where he
shares science-based ideas for living a better life and building habits that
stick. To get strategies for boosting your mental and physical performance by
10x, join his free newsletter.
This article was originally published on
JamesClear.com.
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