Day 1657 & Thoughts on How to Measure Increased Habit Loads

Day 1657 Record Keeping
Day 1629 Fixed Meditation (15 min, metta)
Day 1503 Writing (7, 13 min Pomodoros, very hard)
Day 1042 Exercise (25 min, biking)

Day 783 Mobility/Stretching (10 min, back & back erector smash)
Day 93 Flossing (20 teeth)


Ok sleep.

Thoughts on How to Measure Increased Habit Loads
One of the last pieces of the whole self-improvement puzzle (for me, anyways) is how to efficiently increase the amount of work I do on a habit. This is all the more confusing because I’m starting every habit so that it’s incredibly small, to increase the likelihood of it getting to automaticity. But what I’ve found by just naturally going by feel is that I bite off more than I can chew.

So if I start a small habit of biking for 10 minutes, once it’s up to a superhabit, I’ll have a day where I go for 30 minutes. This never works out, and I’m almost always forced to drop down. Maybe not back to 10 minutes (there’s usually a natural swell after the habit is established), but perhaps 15. But if I do it too quickly, the habit not only shrinks back, but it affects other habits.

Initially I thought of it in terms of performing an experiment - maybe I can try the gradual method of slowly adding minutes or I can test out 30 day challenges and see if that gets me further. But another method I was looking into was periodization for athletes.

When I was in high school my friend wanted to join the cross country team. Over the summer he was given a program to follow to get him from running a mile to running up to 9 miles. It involving some days of rest, some days of increased loads, and some days of average or light runs. I never was certain as to whether it was based on some study or if it was just passed down as coaching wisdom. It worked for my friend, but when I tried it, I failed miserably.

While I search for the background on that kind’ve training, it might be helpful to just monitor what days I feel more energized and what days I don’t, based on a rudimentary scale, after I increase the load of a habit. This week I increased my biking by 5 minutes, moving from 20 to 25 minutes. Yesterday I felt great and did 30 minutes. Today I felt like I was dragging even to get to 25. That could mimic the pattern across time if the energy patterns are similar with every push.

That’s, of course, a big if. I don’t, for example, know if it is system wide, since I’m also working really intensely on writing, and upping flossing. I also don’t know how long I’ll have to wait to get things completely automatic with a higher load, nor do I know how to test it in any sort of efficient, elegant way.

Day 890

Day 890 Record Keeping
Day 862 Fixed Meditation (45 min)
Day 736 Writing (3/30 min)
Day 276 Rowing (HIIT, 14 min, 15s:60s, 2400 m)
Day 17 Mobility/Stretching 67 (hip opener)
—–
Eating
Day 114 Pantry Check
Day 112 Food Recording

Early to Rise
Day 45 Bacon & Water
Day 45 Sleep Recording (1|1:30|12:30|12:45)
Day 17 Bedtime Curfew 58

Bad sleep, late wakeup. Day 3, No Alcohol Challenge. Increased time in meditation, attempted an easy HIIT on rower, first since tweaking my hip flexor and the first using Kelly Starrett’s strict form advice as advocated in his book, Becoming a Supple Leopard. Worked out really well.

I really really want to do another 8 week HIIT course, but A) I might be pushing too many things and B) I have to figure out a method to continue that course through the travel I’ll be doing in the next few months.

I have two goals - to be able to push multiple habits in skill level and intensity AND to be able to push and maintain habits while traveling. I think both are delicate operations but may be do-able.

Day 819

Day 819 Record Keeping
Day 791 Fixed Meditation (23 min)
Day 665 Writing
Day 205 Rowing (HIIT, 17 min, 30s:1min, 3300 m)
—–
Eating
Day 43 Pantry Check (72)
Day 41 Recording 

Great sleep, good wakeup.
Excellent meditation.  Experimented with different music for HIIT - I realize I tend to always listen to really high octane fighting the world type music to get me pumped. I’m curious if this affects my motivation to enjoy the pain periods of pushing any skill, so I tried listening to Enya during this instance of rowing, which was hilarious. I can’t say yet what the effect is. My performance from my last similar HIIT was lower, but I cracked up a couple of times in the middle of more relaxed stages of my workout. Will this continue to negatively affect my output? Will it help me start difficult practice? Idunno, we’ll see…