Akrasia is the ancient Greek term for acting against your better judgment—the gap between what you plan to do and what you actually do. This phenomenon occurs because:
The solution involves creating commitment devices that lock in decisions ahead of time, designing your environment to make good choices easier than bad ones, and using implementation intentions (When X happens, I'll do Y) to bridge the gap between planning and action.
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<p>Tired of feeling busy but not productive? This refreshing guide cuts through the productivity noise with evidence-backed strategies tested in real life. Chris Bailey spent a year as his own guinea pig—meditating for 35 hours, working 90-hour weeks, living in isolation—to discover what actually works. Spoiler: it's not about doing more things, but about doing the right things with deliberate attention. Perfect for overwhelmed people who want to accomplish what matters.</p>
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