Willpower Doesn't Work

By: Benjamin Hardy

Introduction

Willpower doesn’t work. We all know the feeling of setting big, exciting goals but falling short despite hard work. After enough failure, it’s easy to conclude that you are the problem. But what if it was not your fault?

Willpower is the power to exert your free will against internal or external obstacles. According to psychological research, your willpower is like a muscle. It’s a finite resource that depletes with use. Therefore, by the end of a strenuous day, your willpower muscles are exhausted, and you’re left with zero self-control.

If you need to exert willpower to do something, there is an obvious internal conflict. It means your desire for your goals isn’t strong enough and you aren’t invested in yourself and your dreams. It also comes from a challenging environment that opposes your goals.

To achieve a goal, you need to make a committed decision by:

  • Investing upfront.
  • Making it public.
  • Setting a timeline.
  • Installing several forms of feedback/accountability.
  • Removing or altering everything in your environment that opposes your commitment.

Rather than relying solely on your own internal strength, true commitment involves building external defence systems around your goals.

For example, if you want to eat healthily, remove all unhealthy foods from your house. If you want to be more motivated, take on greater responsibility and increase the stakes for both success and failure.

You can design your worldview by shaping your external inputs:

  • The information you consume.
  • The people you surround yourself with.
  • The places you go.
  • The experiences you have

You must proactively shape your environment to have the life you want so you can subsequently shape your thoughts and behaviours.


Part 1: Your Environment Shapes You

Historian Will Durant spent four decades studying the history of the world and concluded that great leaders did not shape history. Instead, he found that difficult situations created great leaders. He found that necessity creates more greatness than intelligence or vision. He said that the ability of the average man could be doubled if it were demanded.

In our individualistic culture, we often believe our environment is separate from us. The truth is that our environment shapes everything we do and think. Your environment has a direct and measurable impact on the rest of your life, unless you actively change it. Most people live small because their environment doesn’t require them to become more than they currently are.

Goal-setting and attitude change only work for a small subset of behaviours, such as giving a public speech, because it is something you rarely do, thus it requires your conscious attention.
Every environment has a set of written or unwritten rules, and it shapes how you think, act, and behave.
In one experiment, a group of fleas were placed in a jar. When there was no lid on the jar, the fleas could easily jump out. However, when the lid was placed on the jar, the rules of the environment changed. 

Quickly, the fleas became trained not to jump so high. Three days later, when the lid was removed, the fleas remained at the lowered height and did not jump out of the jar.

The same is true for you. Who you are and what you can do in one environment is very different from who you are and what you can do in another. You are always acting in a role, and the roles are typically fixed. You act a particular way because of the rules of the situation you are in. You can change your patterns and change your roles by altering your environment. If you remain stuck in the same roles and patterns, it doesn’t matter how much willpower you exert – you will always be confined within the limiting context of your role.

When you’re in an enriched environment, your desired behaviour is automated and outsourced. When you’re in an ordinary environment, you must remain conscious of what you’re doing and thus require willpower to act in desired ways.


Part 2: How to Make Willpower Irrelevant

Peak experiences are deeply moving, and it is often in these moments that we have our best ideas and can truly assess what we want in life. These experiences happen when we connect with ourselves. Peak experiences happen during periods of rest and recovery. Schedule “disconnected days” for relaxing, thinking, and learning.

Resting and recovering will actually increase your productivity. Only those who truly detach – mentally, emotionally, and physically – can reattach when they start working again. After you are rested, you will return empowered and energised. Journaling is a key part of resting. Take an honest look at your life, how far you’ve come, and where you’d like to go. This will help you stay connected to your “why.”

It is important to have a daily environment to help you stay on the right path toward your goals. You need to continually check in and make course corrections to ensure you’re going in the direction you want to. The best way to do this is to begin each day with a morning routine to put yourself into peak state.

You should journal every morning to set the tone for your day. Write your goals down daily to deepen your own sense of belief and desire in those goals. Success happens when you take twenty steps in one direction. Most people take one step in twenty directions.

Elimination is the fastest path to progress and forward momentum. In order to transcend your current environment, remove the excess baggage that is keeping you where you are. Get rid of the physical objects you don’t need, distractions, people that don’t inspire you, and your short-term memory.

If you’re stuck doing automatic behaviour, change your default option and your behaviour will change too. People often take the first choice given to them. Our environment prompts behaviour, so to break unconscious habits, change your environment.

Act consciously and do everything with intention. If you know ahead of time what you’ll do if you veer off course, you’re more likely to stick to your habit. You must replace an addictive behaviour with another behaviour, so implementation intentions are crucial.


Part 3: Outsource High Performance and Success to Your Environment

If you want to achieve your goals, you must determine which environments produce the best outcomes. You can optimise your environment by structuring it with forcing functions, which are self-imposed situational factors that force you to act and achieve what you want.

You can use social pressure to hold you accountable to your goals. If you create consequences for failure, you will work much harder. If you put yourself in higher pressure environments, you are more likely to thrive.

Set up your environment to optimise for productive work. The best creative work requires a blend of intensely tight focus for one to four hours, followed by a relaxed mind in a different environment.
Willpower is not an effective approach to personal change. Outsource your willpower to a goal-enriching environment, and you will flourish.

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