Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Author On How To Get Back On Track

Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Author On How To Get Back On Track

James Clear says the desire to belong almost always overpowers the desire to improve — so the real habit hack is joining a group where your target behavior is already normal.

Jul 3, 2026 28:25 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

James Clear, author of Atomic Habits, joins Steven Bartlett to unpack how to reset habits when life shifts. Clear explains why "upstream habits" like exercise and reading unlock cascading benefits, why habits must change shape with life's seasons, and why identity — not willpower — is what makes habits stick long-term. The single most actionable takeaway: join groups where your desired behavior is the normal behavior, and the environment does the heavy lifting for you.

#atomic habits #identity-based habits #upstream habits #Four Burners Theory #habit seasons #reflection as practice #environment design #social norms #belonging vs improvement #habit formation timeline #context-dependent behaviour #cold outreach networking #life sequencing #habit formation #James Clear #identity #reflection #social environment #behaviour change #seasons of life #repetition #belonging #work ethic #self-improvement

James Clear, author of Atomic Habits, explains how to reset habits mid-year, choose upstream habits, apply the Four Burners Theory, and use identity-based behaviour change to get back on track.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens not with pleasantries but with a claim: sleep is the single biggest positive investment you can make in your own performance, a view Steven Bartlett says has been endorsed by every leading expert he's hosted, including Matthew Walker. The argument is deployed as a natural lead-in to the episode's first sponsor, Helix. Bartlett shares that he sent a mattress to a team member named Juan who travels frequently, and that Juan reported the best sleep of his life. The Helix study figure — 82% of participants saw an increase in deep sleep — is dropped as data backing. The segment closes with a 27% discount code and a 120-night trial offer at helixsleep.com/diary, setting up the episode content proper.

  • Steven Bartlett lays his problem bare: he wants 30 new habits simultaneously — better writing, running, public speaking, even texting friends on birthdays. How does anyone decide where to start? James Clear's answer is both practical and elegant: begin by identifying which habits are 'upstream' from other good things happening. The diagnostic question is simple — what does a good day look like for you? For Bartlett, the answer is sleep. For Clear, it's a workout and reading: two inputs that silently improve focus, sleep quality, and nutrition as side effects. He didn't set out to fix his diet; he just started exercising, and better food choices followed naturally. This cascading logic — one upstream habit triggering multiple downstream benefits — makes prioritisation tractable. Clear then adds a second tier: the meta-habit of reflection and review. Working hard, he argues, is capped at 10–20% gains. Working on the right thing can yield 100x or 1000x. But you only figure out what the right thing is if you carve out time to think. Reflection, he concludes, is the habit above all habits.

  • Steven Bartlett introduces a quietly important idea: systems expire. When you're deep in the trenches, you rarely surface long enough to ask whether your current approach still makes sense. Clear latches on enthusiastically, pointing to one of the most overlooked problems with habits — the assumption that a good habit is one you do forever, in the same form. He tells the story of his writing practice: two articles a week for three years, totalling 150 pieces. It was the habit that launched his career. Then came the Atomic Habits book deal, and that habit had to stop. He wrote the book for three years. Then it became a weekly newsletter. The habit survived, but its shape changed. Clear admits he's a slow learner with this. Bartlett connects it to parenting — becoming a parent is a forced inflection point, a season change where old systems simply stop fitting. Clear broadens this: new job, new city, children leaving home — life is full of inflection points that signal a new season, and when seasons change, habits must follow.

  • Steven Bartlett introduces a phrase he's heard repeatedly from mothers on the show: you can't have it all at the same time. James Clear frames this not as pessimism but as geometry. The Four Burners Theory divides life into four domains — work, family, friends, and personal health — like burners on a stove. Having all four blazing simultaneously leads to mediocrity across the board. For genuine excellence in any area, you can realistically run only two fully at once. Clear acknowledges he doesn't know if the exact formulation is empirically true, but treats it as a useful organising principle. He extends it into a broader concept: life as a sequence of roughly 10-year seasons, perhaps five or six in total across an adult life. Some seasons belong earlier — entrepreneurship, travel, building — and others belong later. Certain windows are biologically constrained. The real skill is deliberate sequencing: understanding what you want the big movements of your life to be, then placing them in the right order. Clear concludes with his own current choice: he has deliberately turned the career burner down while his children are small. They're only five once, only in second grade once. That trade-off is conscious and accepted.

  • The conversation turns to one of the most common self-improvement beliefs: habits take 66 days to form. Clear doesn't dismiss it outright but exposes its limitations. The figure comes from a single study, and within that study the range is enormous: drinking a glass of water at lunch might solidify in two or three weeks; a daily after-work run could take seven to nine months. The average is effectively meaningless for predicting any individual's experience. Clear's real answer to 'how long does it take?' is forever — because a habit you stop is no longer a habit. He reframes the goal entirely: habits are not a finish line to be crossed but a lifestyle to be lived. A 30-day cleanse, a 90-day sprint — these are the wrong mental models for enduring change. Just as being a good spouse yesterday earns you no credit for tomorrow, yesterday's gym session doesn't bank future results. The important things in life are endless battles. Clear also draws a useful distinction that academics would insist on: true habits are automatic, mindless behaviours like tapping barbecue tongs or tying shoes. What most people call 'habits' — going to the gym, meditating, writing — are actually consistent routines and rituals. They get easier, but they never become fully automatic.

  • Steven Bartlett wants to understand what's happening in the brain when repetition makes a habit easier. Clear's answer is multi-layered and grounded. First: logistics. The first month of a gym habit is full of one-time friction costs — figuring out what time to go, which route to take, whether there's a water fountain. Someone told Clear they sometimes skipped workouts because they forgot their water bottle and the gym had no fountain. Tiny friction, massive consequence. Once those decisions are made, they disappear. Second: territory. Clear references Steven Pressfield's concept — a wolf roaming new land feels uncomfortable, but over time it establishes its territory and that space feels like home. The first day at the gym, you feel judged. After a month, it's your place. Third — and most important — is identity. Every repetition of a habit casts a vote for the type of person you are becoming. No single push-up transforms your body, but it votes for 'I'm someone who doesn't miss workouts.' No single sentence finishes a novel, but it votes for 'I'm a writer.' Individually these votes are tiny. Collectively, they build a body of evidence for an identity. And once a habit becomes part of how you see yourself — not just something you do, but part of who you are — you'll actively fight to protect it.

  • Steven Bartlett gives the listener a behind-the-scenes look at his leadership style: he intentionally labels his team members by identity rather than praising their actions. Studies he's read show that 'you are a kind person' leads to more kind behaviour than 'that was kind.' So he calls team members innovators and experimenters, not because they were innovative once, but to build the identity. Clear reinforces this with the voter turnout research: prompting people to identify as 'a voter' produced significantly higher turnout than simply asking if they intended to vote. The same architecture — identity first, behaviour second — appears in both cases. Clear illustrates with the smoking example from Atomic Habits: 'I'm trying not to smoke' still positions the person as a smoker trying to resist. 'I'm not a smoker' signals a completed identity shift. Bartlett connects this to Leon Festinger's cognitive dissonance — the psychological discomfort of holding contradictory beliefs. If your identity is 'I am a great accountant' and AI threatens that story, your instinct is to dismiss either the AI or your own identity. We are poorly equipped to hold two contradictory things as simultaneously true. The lesson for habits: the more your actions reinforce a clear identity, the less dissonance you have to manage.

  • James Clear zooms out from individual identity to social identity, and the argument gets uncomfortable. Every group you belong to — your family, your street, your CrossFit gym, your nationality — carries a set of unspoken behavioural expectations. Habits that align with those expectations are attractive and reinforced. Habits that conflict with them attract criticism and friction. When people face the actual choice — the habits I want, but social exclusion, versus habits I don't love, but belonging — belonging wins almost every time. This is not weakness; it is deep evolutionary wiring. The desire to fit in is more powerful than the desire to improve. This creates a design problem: if your environment's norms run against your goals, willpower alone cannot win long-term. The answer is not to fire your friends. Clear is explicitly cautious about that framing. The answer is to find specific spaces where your desired behaviour is already the norm — a yoga studio, a writing group, a Mastermind retreat — so that for that time, your goal habit is simply what everyone does. You don't need to change your whole social world; you need to create pockets within it where the gravity pulls in the right direction.

  • Bartlett fires an unexpected reference into the conversation: Jeff Bezos's Amazon shareholder letter, which cites Richard Dawkins' idea that all living organisms exist in a constant battle to resist becoming their environment. Death itself is the moment that battle ends. The more different your internal state is from your surroundings — temperature, acidity, whatever — the harder your body works to maintain the difference. Bezos used it to argue Amazon must never stop fighting for differentiation; Bartlett uses it to argue the same about habits. The more different your desired habits are from your environment, the more energy the fight costs. And that fight can sustain for days, weeks, maybe months — but eventually, the environment wins. Clear seizes on the metaphor and articulates it as gravity. Physical environments nudge you with objects, layouts, and cues — a chair pulls you to sit, a door pulls you to exit. Social environments nudge you toward the group's norms and rewards. Neither waits for your decision; they are always operating. The implication is clear: stop fighting your environment and start redesigning it. Make the gravity work for you.

  • Multiple studies confirm that new environments make new habits easier to build, and Clear explains the mechanism: habits are context-dependent. Your Netflix habit is tied to the couch at 7 p.m. Sit on that couch and your brain starts reaching for the remote, not a journal. So if you want to start journaling in your living room, you're fighting an existing contextual script. The solution doesn't require a new apartment. Take a chair, put it in a corner, and make it the journaling chair — the place where the only thing that happens is five minutes of writing. Now you have a new context, a clean slate, no competing habits. The social version of this is the yoga studio: even if no one in your apartment wants to do yoga, you can go to a room full of people for whom yoga is simply what they do on Tuesday morning. You haven't fired your friends. You've created a pocket where your habit lives safely. Clear gives the most personal version: with no entrepreneur peers, he sent 300 cold emails, gathered 30 respondents, and started hosting twice-yearly author retreats — splitting the cost of an Airbnb with six or eight other writers. Those weekends reliably generated six months' worth of execution fuel. He was terrified of looking like a dork. Everyone showed up. Everyone had been waiting for someone to create the space.

  • The episode's final substantive segment is James Clear's most personal story. Having grown up with no entrepreneurs or authors in his family, he had a vision for what he wanted to do but no one close to him who had actually done it. So he created the environment rather than waiting for it. In the first six months of his entrepreneurial career, he sent 300 cold emails to people who seemed one or two years ahead of him — people who had small online audiences and were writing about things they loved. About 30 replied. He met some at a conference six months later. He began hosting retreats twice a year: six to eight authors, a rented Airbnb, split costs, and a weekend of deep conversation about building audiences, growing email lists, and writing books. Every single one of those weekends turned into his best weekend of the year, producing six months of clear execution priorities. His fear throughout — that everyone would say no, that he'd look like a dork for trying — turned out to be unfounded. Everyone wanted the same thing. They were all waiting for someone to create the space. The lesson is both humble and empowering: the community you need may not exist yet. But you are almost certainly not the only one who wants it.

  • Bartlett briefly surfaces from the conversation to contextualise what listeners just heard: this was a 'most replayed moment' — a curated highlight from a longer full episode available in the description. He then pivots to the closing sponsor, NetSuite by Oracle. The pitch is structured around a problem: AI only works with the information it can see, and a messy disconnected business makes AI useless. NetSuite's value proposition is serving as a 'single source of truth' — connecting financials, inventory, commerce, HR, and CRM in one platform, with AI baked into the system via NetSuite Next. For the first time, a free trial of NetSuite Next is available to businesses generating seven figures or more, accessible at netsuite.com/nextai/bartlett. The episode ends cleanly on the sponsor CTA.

Upstream habits
Habits whose benefits cascade into other areas of life automatically; e.g., exercise improving sleep, focus, and diet without those being explicit goals.
Four Burners Theory
A framework dividing life into four domains — career, family, friends, and health — with the idea that excelling requires limiting how many are fully 'on' simultaneously.
Meta-habit
James Clear's term for reflection and review as a habit that governs and optimises all other habits, sitting above them in priority.
Identity-based habits
An approach to behaviour change that starts with who you want to become rather than what you want to achieve, so each action casts a 'vote' for a desired self-concept.
Context-dependent behaviour
The idea that habits are triggered by specific situational cues — time, place, object — rather than willpower, making environmental design central to habit formation.
Cognitive dissonance
Leon Festinger's term for the psychological discomfort felt when holding two contradictory beliefs or when new information challenges an existing identity; discussed here as why people resist changing habits tied to their sense of self.
Inflection point
A moment of significant life change — e.g., having children, changing jobs, moving cities — that signals the need to reassess and reshape habits for a new season.
Resisting equilibrium
Jeff Bezos's concept, drawn from Richard Dawkins, that living organisms (and companies) must constantly expend energy to remain different from their environment; used here as a metaphor for fighting against your social surroundings to maintain desired habits.
Social norms
The unspoken behavioural expectations of a group; James Clear argues these are more powerful than personal willpower in determining which habits stick.
Ostracised
Excluded or cast out from a social group; used by James Clear to describe the cost of pursuing habits that conflict with one's peer group's norms.
Sequencing
The deliberate ordering of major life pursuits — entrepreneurship, family, travel, etc. — across life's seasons to stack advantages and respect biological or circumstantial constraints.
Blind Watchmaker
Richard Dawkins' book (referenced as 'Blind Watchman' in the episode) arguing that evolution is an undirected process; cited here via Jeff Bezos's shareholder letter to illustrate the concept of organisms resisting equilibrium.
Empty nester
A parent whose children have all left home; used by James Clear as an example of a life inflection point requiring a reset of identity and habits.
Crutch
Something relied on as a substitute for genuine problem-solving; James Clear uses it to describe how a strong work ethic can become a crutch that prevents strategic reflection.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Intro & Helix Sponsor Read

The episode opens not with pleasantries but with a claim: sleep is the single biggest positive investment you can make in your own performance, a view Steven Bartlett says has been endorsed by every leading expert he's hosted, including Matthew Walker. The argument is deployed as a natural lead-in to the episode's first sponsor, Helix. Bartlett shares that he sent a mattress to a team member named Juan who travels frequently, and that Juan reported the best sleep of his life. The Helix study figure — 82% of participants saw an increase in deep sleep — is dropped as data backing. The segment closes with a 27% discount code and a 120-night trial offer at helixsleep.com/diary, setting up the episode content proper.

Claims made here

Sleep is the biggest positive investment you can make in your own performance, according to multiple leading experts.

Steven Bartlett Matthew Walker and other leading experts

82% of participants in a Helix study reported an increase in deep sleep after using a Helix mattress.

Steven Bartlett Helix internal study

Chapter 2 · 01:28

Choosing Which Habit to Start: The Upstream Habit Framework

Steven Bartlett lays his problem bare: he wants 30 new habits simultaneously — better writing, running, public speaking, even texting friends on birthdays. How does anyone decide where to start? James Clear's answer is both practical and elegant: begin by identifying which habits are 'upstream' from other good things happening. The diagnostic question is simple — what does a good day look like for you? For Bartlett, the answer is sleep. For Clear, it's a workout and reading: two inputs that silently improve focus, sleep quality, and nutrition as side effects. He didn't set out to fix his diet; he just started exercising, and better food choices followed naturally. This cascading logic — one upstream habit triggering multiple downstream benefits — makes prioritisation tractable. Clear then adds a second tier: the meta-habit of reflection and review. Working hard, he argues, is capped at 10–20% gains. Working on the right thing can yield 100x or 1000x. But you only figure out what the right thing is if you carve out time to think. Reflection, he concludes, is the habit above all habits.

Claims made here

Working on the right thing can yield 100x or 1000x the result compared to simply working harder, which may only increase output by 10–20%.

James Clear no source cited

Chapter 3 · 04:50

Systems That Expire: Habits Must Change Shape With Life

Steven Bartlett introduces a quietly important idea: systems expire. When you're deep in the trenches, you rarely surface long enough to ask whether your current approach still makes sense. Clear latches on enthusiastically, pointing to one of the most overlooked problems with habits — the assumption that a good habit is one you do forever, in the same form. He tells the story of his writing practice: two articles a week for three years, totalling 150 pieces. It was the habit that launched his career. Then came the Atomic Habits book deal, and that habit had to stop. He wrote the book for three years. Then it became a weekly newsletter. The habit survived, but its shape changed. Clear admits he's a slow learner with this. Bartlett connects it to parenting — becoming a parent is a forced inflection point, a season change where old systems simply stop fitting. Clear broadens this: new job, new city, children leaving home — life is full of inflection points that signal a new season, and when seasons change, habits must follow.

Claims made here

James Clear wrote a new article every Monday and Thursday for 3 years, producing approximately 150 articles, before signing his Atomic Habits book deal.

James Clear no source cited

Chapter 4 · 07:40

The Four Burners Theory: Sequencing a Life

Steven Bartlett introduces a phrase he's heard repeatedly from mothers on the show: you can't have it all at the same time. James Clear frames this not as pessimism but as geometry. The Four Burners Theory divides life into four domains — work, family, friends, and personal health — like burners on a stove. Having all four blazing simultaneously leads to mediocrity across the board. For genuine excellence in any area, you can realistically run only two fully at once. Clear acknowledges he doesn't know if the exact formulation is empirically true, but treats it as a useful organising principle. He extends it into a broader concept: life as a sequence of roughly 10-year seasons, perhaps five or six in total across an adult life. Some seasons belong earlier — entrepreneurship, travel, building — and others belong later. Certain windows are biologically constrained. The real skill is deliberate sequencing: understanding what you want the big movements of your life to be, then placing them in the right order. Clear concludes with his own current choice: he has deliberately turned the career burner down while his children are small. They're only five once, only in second grade once. That trade-off is conscious and accepted.

Chapter 5 · 10:40

Repetition, the 66-Day Myth, and Habits as a Lifestyle

The conversation turns to one of the most common self-improvement beliefs: habits take 66 days to form. Clear doesn't dismiss it outright but exposes its limitations. The figure comes from a single study, and within that study the range is enormous: drinking a glass of water at lunch might solidify in two or three weeks; a daily after-work run could take seven to nine months. The average is effectively meaningless for predicting any individual's experience. Clear's real answer to 'how long does it take?' is forever — because a habit you stop is no longer a habit. He reframes the goal entirely: habits are not a finish line to be crossed but a lifestyle to be lived. A 30-day cleanse, a 90-day sprint — these are the wrong mental models for enduring change. Just as being a good spouse yesterday earns you no credit for tomorrow, yesterday's gym session doesn't bank future results. The important things in life are endless battles. Clear also draws a useful distinction that academics would insist on: true habits are automatic, mindless behaviours like tapping barbecue tongs or tying shoes. What most people call 'habits' — going to the gym, meditating, writing — are actually consistent routines and rituals. They get easier, but they never become fully automatic.

Claims made here

On average, it takes about 66 days to build a habit, according to one study.

James Clear A study on habit formation (unspecified)

Building a simple habit like drinking a glass of water at lunch may take only 2–3 weeks, while a complex habit like daily running may take 7–9 months.

James Clear no source cited

Chapter 6 · 15:00

Why Repetition Makes Habits Easier: Territory, Familiarity, and Identity

Steven Bartlett wants to understand what's happening in the brain when repetition makes a habit easier. Clear's answer is multi-layered and grounded. First: logistics. The first month of a gym habit is full of one-time friction costs — figuring out what time to go, which route to take, whether there's a water fountain. Someone told Clear they sometimes skipped workouts because they forgot their water bottle and the gym had no fountain. Tiny friction, massive consequence. Once those decisions are made, they disappear. Second: territory. Clear references Steven Pressfield's concept — a wolf roaming new land feels uncomfortable, but over time it establishes its territory and that space feels like home. The first day at the gym, you feel judged. After a month, it's your place. Third — and most important — is identity. Every repetition of a habit casts a vote for the type of person you are becoming. No single push-up transforms your body, but it votes for 'I'm someone who doesn't miss workouts.' No single sentence finishes a novel, but it votes for 'I'm a writer.' Individually these votes are tiny. Collectively, they build a body of evidence for an identity. And once a habit becomes part of how you see yourself — not just something you do, but part of who you are — you'll actively fight to protect it.

Chapter 7 · 17:40

Identity Labels, Cognitive Dissonance, and the Voter Study

Steven Bartlett gives the listener a behind-the-scenes look at his leadership style: he intentionally labels his team members by identity rather than praising their actions. Studies he's read show that 'you are a kind person' leads to more kind behaviour than 'that was kind.' So he calls team members innovators and experimenters, not because they were innovative once, but to build the identity. Clear reinforces this with the voter turnout research: prompting people to identify as 'a voter' produced significantly higher turnout than simply asking if they intended to vote. The same architecture — identity first, behaviour second — appears in both cases. Clear illustrates with the smoking example from Atomic Habits: 'I'm trying not to smoke' still positions the person as a smoker trying to resist. 'I'm not a smoker' signals a completed identity shift. Bartlett connects this to Leon Festinger's cognitive dissonance — the psychological discomfort of holding contradictory beliefs. If your identity is 'I am a great accountant' and AI threatens that story, your instinct is to dismiss either the AI or your own identity. We are poorly equipped to hold two contradictory things as simultaneously true. The lesson for habits: the more your actions reinforce a clear identity, the less dissonance you have to manage.

Claims made here

Referring to someone as 'a kind person' (identity label) leads to more kind behaviour than saying 'that was kind' (adjective label).

Steven Bartlett no source cited

People are more likely to vote if they are prompted to identify as 'a voter' rather than simply asked whether they plan to vote.

James Clear no source cited

Leon Festinger coined the term cognitive dissonance, which describes the difficulty of holding two contradictory beliefs simultaneously.

Steven Bartlett no source cited

Chapter 8 · 19:45

Social Belonging vs Self-Improvement: The Most Powerful Habit Force

James Clear zooms out from individual identity to social identity, and the argument gets uncomfortable. Every group you belong to — your family, your street, your CrossFit gym, your nationality — carries a set of unspoken behavioural expectations. Habits that align with those expectations are attractive and reinforced. Habits that conflict with them attract criticism and friction. When people face the actual choice — the habits I want, but social exclusion, versus habits I don't love, but belonging — belonging wins almost every time. This is not weakness; it is deep evolutionary wiring. The desire to fit in is more powerful than the desire to improve. This creates a design problem: if your environment's norms run against your goals, willpower alone cannot win long-term. The answer is not to fire your friends. Clear is explicitly cautious about that framing. The answer is to find specific spaces where your desired behaviour is already the norm — a yoga studio, a writing group, a Mastermind retreat — so that for that time, your goal habit is simply what everyone does. You don't need to change your whole social world; you need to create pockets within it where the gravity pulls in the right direction.

Society & Culture
Your Social Group Is the Most Powerful Habit System

Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Au… · Jul 3, 2026 Society & Culture

When habits clash with your social group's norms, the desire to belong almost always wins over the desire to improve. The solution isn't to fire your friends — it's to find specific spaces where your desired behaviour is already normal. Join groups where your target habit is just what everyone does.

Science
Jeff Bezos, Richard Dawkins, and Resisting Equilibrium

Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Au… · Jul 3, 2026 Science

In his shareholder letter, Jeff Bezos referenced Richard Dawkins' idea that all living organisms exist in constant battle to resist becoming their environment. Death itself is when we stop fighting that battle. The more different your desired habits are from your environment, the harder you'll have to fight — so make the environments match.

Chapter 9 · 22:00

Resisting Equilibrium: Jeff Bezos, Dawkins, and Environment as Gravity

Bartlett fires an unexpected reference into the conversation: Jeff Bezos's Amazon shareholder letter, which cites Richard Dawkins' idea that all living organisms exist in a constant battle to resist becoming their environment. Death itself is the moment that battle ends. The more different your internal state is from your surroundings — temperature, acidity, whatever — the harder your body works to maintain the difference. Bezos used it to argue Amazon must never stop fighting for differentiation; Bartlett uses it to argue the same about habits. The more different your desired habits are from your environment, the more energy the fight costs. And that fight can sustain for days, weeks, maybe months — but eventually, the environment wins. Clear seizes on the metaphor and articulates it as gravity. Physical environments nudge you with objects, layouts, and cues — a chair pulls you to sit, a door pulls you to exit. Social environments nudge you toward the group's norms and rewards. Neither waits for your decision; they are always operating. The implication is clear: stop fighting your environment and start redesigning it. Make the gravity work for you.

Claims made here

Jeff Bezos's shareholder letter referenced Richard Dawkins' concept that all living organisms are in a constant battle to resist becoming their environment, and that death occurs when this resistance ceases.

Steven Bartlett Jeff Bezos's Amazon shareholder letter; Richard Dawkins (The Blind Watchmaker)

Chapter 10 · 24:50

New Environments, the Journaling Chair, and Creating Safe Spaces for Habits

Multiple studies confirm that new environments make new habits easier to build, and Clear explains the mechanism: habits are context-dependent. Your Netflix habit is tied to the couch at 7 p.m. Sit on that couch and your brain starts reaching for the remote, not a journal. So if you want to start journaling in your living room, you're fighting an existing contextual script. The solution doesn't require a new apartment. Take a chair, put it in a corner, and make it the journaling chair — the place where the only thing that happens is five minutes of writing. Now you have a new context, a clean slate, no competing habits. The social version of this is the yoga studio: even if no one in your apartment wants to do yoga, you can go to a room full of people for whom yoga is simply what they do on Tuesday morning. You haven't fired your friends. You've created a pocket where your habit lives safely. Clear gives the most personal version: with no entrepreneur peers, he sent 300 cold emails, gathered 30 respondents, and started hosting twice-yearly author retreats — splitting the cost of an Airbnb with six or eight other writers. Those weekends reliably generated six months' worth of execution fuel. He was terrified of looking like a dork. Everyone showed up. Everyone had been waiting for someone to create the space.

Claims made here

New habits tend to be easier to build in a new environment, according to multiple studies.

James Clear Multiple unspecified studies on habit formation and environment

Chapter 11 · 27:20

James Clear's Entrepreneurial Community-Building Story

The episode's final substantive segment is James Clear's most personal story. Having grown up with no entrepreneurs or authors in his family, he had a vision for what he wanted to do but no one close to him who had actually done it. So he created the environment rather than waiting for it. In the first six months of his entrepreneurial career, he sent 300 cold emails to people who seemed one or two years ahead of him — people who had small online audiences and were writing about things they loved. About 30 replied. He met some at a conference six months later. He began hosting retreats twice a year: six to eight authors, a rented Airbnb, split costs, and a weekend of deep conversation about building audiences, growing email lists, and writing books. Every single one of those weekends turned into his best weekend of the year, producing six months of clear execution priorities. His fear throughout — that everyone would say no, that he'd look like a dork for trying — turned out to be unfounded. Everyone wanted the same thing. They were all waiting for someone to create the space. The lesson is both humble and empowering: the community you need may not exist yet. But you are almost certainly not the only one who wants it.

Business
300 Cold Emails and the Retreat That Changed Everything

Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Au… · Jul 3, 2026 Business

James Clear had no entrepreneurs in his family and no authors in his network. So he sent 300 cold emails, got 30 responses, and started hosting author retreats twice a year. Those weekends gave him 6 months of execution fuel each time. Creating the space took courage — but everyone was waiting for someone to do it.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

Society & Culture
Your Social Group Is the Most Powerful Habit System

Most Replayed Moment: The Mid-Year Reset - Atomic Habits Au… · Jul 3, 2026 Society & Culture

When habits clash with your social group's norms, the desire to belong almost always wins over the desire to improve. The solution isn't to fire your friends — it's to find specific spaces where your desired behaviour is already normal. Join groups where your target habit is just what everyone does.

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5 / 11 cited (45%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

82% of participants in a Helix study reported an increase in deep sleep after using a Helix mattress.

Steven Bartlett Helix internal study

On average, it takes about 66 days to build a habit, according to one study.

James Clear A study on habit formation (unspecified)

Building a simple habit like drinking a glass of water at lunch may take only 2–3 weeks, while a complex habit like daily running may take 7–9 months.

James Clear no source cited

People are more likely to vote if they are prompted to identify as 'a voter' rather than simply asked whether they plan to vote.

James Clear no source cited

Referring to someone as 'a kind person' (identity label) leads to more kind behaviour than saying 'that was kind' (adjective label).

Steven Bartlett no source cited

New habits tend to be easier to build in a new environment, according to multiple studies.

James Clear Multiple unspecified studies on habit formation and environment

Sleep is the biggest positive investment you can make in your own performance, according to multiple leading experts.

Steven Bartlett Matthew Walker and other leading experts

James Clear wrote a new article every Monday and Thursday for 3 years, producing approximately 150 articles, before signing his Atomic Habits book deal.

James Clear no source cited

Leon Festinger coined the term cognitive dissonance, which describes the difficulty of holding two contradictory beliefs simultaneously.

Steven Bartlett no source cited

Jeff Bezos's shareholder letter referenced Richard Dawkins' concept that all living organisms are in a constant battle to resist becoming their environment, and that death occurs when this resistance ceases.

Steven Bartlett Jeff Bezos's Amazon shareholder letter; Richard Dawkins (The Blind Watchmaker)

Working on the right thing can yield 100x or 1000x the result compared to simply working harder, which may only increase output by 10–20%.

James Clear no source cited