The (Other) Rubber Band Habit Trick

Getting into (and out of) habits is hard. People use all types of tricks to help.

The Common (old) Method

A common trick for kicking a “bad” habit is the rubber band snap method. Relying on Pavlovian associations in our brain, the idea is to wear a rubber band on your wrist, and every time you do “x” bad thing (swearing, eating junk food, talking negatively about yourself, etc…) you snap the rubber band. The pain becomes associated with the negative behavior. We don’t like pain, so we stop doing the behavior.

Snapping the rubber band

The New Method

An alternative use for rubber bands in positive habit creation is to simply transfer the rubber band from one wrist to the other each day once the habit has been completed.

Here’s how it works:

  1. Place a rubber band on one wrist in the morning
As simple as 1,2,3

Personally, I like having things on my left wrist (probably since I’m left-handed). I feel “off” when things aren’t over there. Moving things from my right to left provides that sense of setting things right (or left, in this case).

Benefits:

  • Simple — Not only are rubber bands cheap, but it’s also quicker and easier to use the rubber band method than using a habit journal or app
Track as many habits as you want

Hope this helps!

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I like writing about things that interest me. I’m hoping some of it may be interesting to you as well. Keep up with me and my projects at www.kylescheer.com

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Kyle Scheer

I like writing about things that interest me. I’m hoping some of it may be interesting to you as well. Keep up with me and my projects at www.kylescheer.com