Established Anchor
Evening Tea Ritual
Every night at 8:30 pm, you boil water and prepare chamomile tea. This routine has remained unchanged for two years.
Each habit moves through four connected stages. Mapping them reveals where change becomes possible.
A cue in your environment or internal state that initiates the behavior. It might be a time of day, a location, an emotion, or the presence of other people.
The motivational force behind the habit. You do not crave the action itself — you crave the change in state it delivers, such as comfort, stimulation, or relief from boredom.
The actual habit you perform — the thought, feeling, or physical action. It must be achievable within your current ability and context to become repeatable.
The outcome that satisfies the craving and teaches your brain to remember this loop. Without a reward, the loop weakens over time.
Click each card to bring it forward. New habits sit beneath established anchors — like cards stacked in a deck, each layer supporting the next.
Established Anchor
Every night at 8:30 pm, you boil water and prepare chamomile tea. This routine has remained unchanged for two years.
New Layer
While the water heats, open your book to a bookmarked page. Read exactly two pages — no more, no less.
Identity Shift
Over weeks, the pairing transforms. You no longer read because you should — you read because it is part of who you are at 8:30 pm.
Tap a card to explore the stack
A step-by-step breakdown of one common habit and how to redirect it toward a calmer alternative.
Our coaches can walk you through identifying triggers and designing responses that fit your daily rhythm.
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