1) Continuous Cognitive Recognition of YOUR Triggers and choosing the correct action to immediately implement is the key to your success.
2) Behavioral Change Process: Recognize the Trigger, Take appropriate action (daily), Develop a Ritual, Let it Become a Habit, Be Comfortable in Transition, and then, Looking back a year from now, you will see your Transformation.
Resources:
Mel Robbins, The 5 Second Rule (Book) - It's simple: When you recognize a trigger of an old behavior pattern you no longer wish to practice, count to 1005 - 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005 - it allows you to reset your brain and override that initial impulse action.
BJ Fogg, The Book: Tiny Habits - Professor Fogg is a behavioral scientist. He states being aware of your triggers is where behavioral change starts (if you ever find yourself caught in a continuous loop, like the movie ground hog day, identify what is the trigger?).
His Formula: B=MAP Here's the simplest way to explain it: "Behavior (B) happens when Motivation (M), Ability (A), and a Prompt (P) come together at the same moment."
My own reminder of the process necessary for creating my internal behavioral changes: The Symbol "-->" is "leads to"
Recognize My Triggers --> Implement a New Daily Action --> Repeat Daily/Weekly Until It's Now a Ritual --> Form Monthly Habits --> Quarterly Transitions = the Transformation I Seek.
The secret key for me is recognizing "change" does not happen at once - we all go through a transition phase before the "magical transformation" happens. This "magical transformation" is best viewed from the other side of transition.
"Look where I was then, and now look where I am now."
With the above in mind, the 12 Week Year helps me to keep everything in bite size pieces and measure and track it all without overwhelm.
Brian P. Moran: The 12 Week Year (Book) - Adjust “12 month annual” planning into 4-13 week chunks. This helps to stay on track with achievement and is a fantastic resource.
Tip - Do not let the "score card" become your obstacle.
My Super Secret - Achievement is more about what you say "NO" to, than it is about saying "YES..."