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We all know that change is hard. It's unsettling, it's time-consuming, and all too often we give up at the first sign of a setback.
But why do we insist on seeing the obstacles rather than the goal? This is the question that bestselling authors Chip and Dan Heath tackle in their compelling and insightful new book. They argue that we need only understand how our minds function in order to unlock shortcuts to switches in behaviour. Illustrating their ideas with scientific studies and remarkable real-life turnarounds - from the secrets of successful marriage counselling to the pile of gloves that transformed one company's finances - the brothers Heath prove that deceptively simple methods can yield truly extraordinary results.
230 pages, Kindle Edition
First published February 16, 2010
All change efforts have something in common: for any thing to change, someone has to start acting differently
If you change, everything will change for you.
An strong barrier to change is that the mind and the heart often disagree. What looks like laziness is often exhustion.
What looks like a people problem is often a situation (path) problem.
In Essence: Instead of asking what's broken and how we can fix it, ask: What's working and how we can do more of it.
In Essence: Clarity dissolves resistance.
When you describe a compelling destination, you're helping to correct one of the rider's great weaknesses, the tendency to get lost in analysis.
In Essence: When you are at the beginning of a change, don't obsess about the middle, because the middle is going to look different when you get there; instead, Look for a strong beginning and a strong ending and get moving.