Reader notes

Short field notes for making the book usable.

Use these notes when you want a quick explanation before opening the book, workbook, or audit. Start with the latest note, then choose the free chapter, workbook, buying guide, or support path based on what you need next.

Start with one answer

What do you need the article to decide?

Choose the route before you read so the note ends in action instead of another saved tab.

The room keeps beating my planRead the environment-design note, then make the useful action easier to start.Latest note My day has too many choicesRead the decision-load note, then reduce the live choices around the habit.Decision route I need the whole map firstOpen Chapter 1 and the audit before choosing book, workbook, or support.Free route
Two-minute path

Turn a note into one clear next move.

  1. 1Pick the closest patternChoose a note
  2. 2Check the whole layer mapRead Chapter 1
  3. 3Install the fixUse the workbook

Search path

The article cluster answers one practical question: why does the useful plan keep losing?

Start with the failure pattern, then follow the layer that explains it. If the plan fades after the first burst, read the habit-failure note. If it breaks on crowded days, read decision fatigue. If the room, phone, or calendar keeps winning, read environment design.

Topic paths

Choose the note by the stuck layer.

Environment designWhen the old loop is physically easier than the useful action. Decision loadWhen useful habits disappear on high-choice days. Habit fadeWhen the first burst works, then the system goes quiet.
Only have ninety seconds? Use the fastest route for your reader state before the index turns into another open loop.
Environment Decision load Habit fade

Latest note

If discipline keeps losing to the room, phone, calendar, or setup friction, this route turns willpower pressure into one environment change you can test today.

June 6, 2026 · 7 minute read

How to design your environment for self-discipline

Start here when the useful action is clear but the old loop is easier to see, reach, start, and restart. The note turns self-discipline into a five-part environment audit.

  • Reader stateThe plan is clear but the setup keeps favoring the old loop
  • Layer focusCues, friction, defaults, recovery, weekly review
  • Next actionChange the moment before the habit begins
Latest article: environment design and disciplineSee how cues, friction, defaults, and recovery paths decide whether useful habits survive ordinary days. Previous noteReduce live choices before demanding more discipline. Open the workbook pathTurn the diagnosis into a 90-day practice surface.
Choose by reader state

After a note, take the smallest useful next step.

The articles are a diagnosis surface, not another place to collect ideas. Use the route that matches what you know right now.

Still orientingRead Chapter 1 and run the audit before deciding what to buy. Problem is clearOpen the main book path when the seven-layer frame already explains the loop. Need repsUse the workbook when you can name the stuck layer and need practice. Blocked by accessGet help with files, formats, refunds, or accessibility before continuing.
Best next step

Want the full starting point?

Read Chapter 1 first if you are still deciding. Use the workbook path once you can name the layer that keeps breaking, or compare formats when you are ready to buy.

Get the free chapterStart the book without payment or account setup. Compare buying optionsSee the current Amazon and direct-bundle availability before choosing a format. Need help choosing?Use support for format, access, or buying questions.