Scan your mornings and evenings for repeat signals—doorways, sounds, transitions, or emotions—that naturally precede the behavior you want. Naming these anchors turns randomness into reliability, making initiation automatic. Keep it obvious, consistent, and low-effort, so the right choice practically greets you before decision fatigue arrives.
Map the sequence: a recognizable cue prompts a tiny action, which triggers feedback you can feel or see, inviting the next adjustment. When the loop is legible and forgiving, you learn faster, recover smoother, and refine conditions until the desired behavior becomes the easiest available path.
Friction is not failure; it is a signpost pointing to leverage. Shorten paths, remove ambiguous steps, and cap choices. Introduce time boxes, preparation rituals, or playful constraints that limit indecision, preserve energy, and make the helpful action so convenient it wins without argument.