So I’m thinking about habit tracking lately.
Trying to figure out why it works.
The idea is simple: keep track of how many days in a row you’ve gone without missing your habit. Watch the number build up.
And, magically, once it passes 10 or so, that number becomes a watchful judge.
It sits there, just waiting for you to miss a day.
But if you don’t, it gets bigger.
And judgy-er.
And the pain of breaking the chain gets larger.
The Pain of Loss
The reason this works is because of a concept called loss aversion.
Go look it up, if you haven’t heard of it.
If you have, a short refresher. Humans fear loss more than they desire gain. Therefore, if you have a Ferrari, you’ll do more to keep from losing it than someone who doesn’t have a Ferrari will do to get one.
Same thing with an unbroken habit chain. You’ll do more to keep it unbroken then you did to get it there in the first place.
So that simple, increasing number becomes a larger and larger potential loss. If you miss a day after day one, no biggie. If you miss a day after three weeks, that’s already painful.
If you miss a day after three months, your brain knows that’s a huge setback, a huge loss. And it will work to make sure it doesn’t happen.
Loss aversion is a basic evolutionary strategy.
A “loss” can be as severe as the end of your life. But a gain has never led to immortality. So loss aversion is just how evolution has solved that conundrum.
Better to avoid the loss, stay alive, and be around for good things that may happen later.
The Power of Pain
So if you’ve got a habit that you’re trying to build and it just doesn’t seem to stick, use loss aversion.
Invoke the power of pain by building a chain for your habit.
The longer it gets, the harder it will be to break.