The Easy Way to Personal Growth

To grow, measure progress in small iterations.

Small iterations are small bites. They make change feel achievable without you taking big jumps.

For example, moving your bedtime from 1 am to 9 pm is a big jump.

Your body will resist the 3-hour downgrade, and you’d have a harder time adjusting.

Compare to sleeping by 11:30 pm.

A 1.5 hour difference, earlier than 1 am.

A small bite.

Your body would resist, but sleeping 90 minutes earlier is easier to achieve.

The same principle applies to improving a skill. Talk to one person out of your comfort zone first. Then two, then three. Until you’re comfortable in a conversation with ten strangers.

Are you building a writing habit? Log the habit daily.

I wrote 123 words today.

I didn’t write today.

You’ll spot inconsistencies and understand why they happen.

I’ve been trying to stick to a sleep schedule. It’s been tough, so I keep a log of my sleep habits. I am more conscious of poor sleep patterns when I track the habit weekly, instead of guessing what went wrong at a Q1 review.

The smaller the steps, the easier the progress.

Same with building a new skill. Or starting a new project. Your question becomes what do I improve tomorrow instead of what do I improve this year.

The former is realistic and actionable. The latter feels like swallowing a whale.

The twist? Small iterations compound fast to produce big results.

Cover image from Kaboompics.com


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