HABIT
Habit is our “best friend or
worst enemy.” We are “walking bundles
of habits.” Habit is the “fly-wheel
of society,” keeping men patient and docile
in the hard or disagreeable lot which some must fill.
Habit is a “cable which we cannot break.”
So say the wise men. Let me know your habits
of life and you have revealed your moral standards
and conduct. Let me discover your intellectual
habits, and I understand your type of mind and methods
of thought. In short, our lives are largely a
daily round of activities dictated by our habits in
this line or that. Most of our movements and
acts are habitual; we think as we have formed the
habit of thinking; we decide as we are in the habit
of deciding; we sleep, or eat, or speak as we have
grown into the habit of doing these things; we may
even say our prayers or perform other religious exercises
as matters of habit. But while habit is the veriest
tyrant, yet its good offices far exceed the bad even
in the most fruitless or depraved life.
1. THE NATURE OF HABIT
Many people when they speak or think
of habit give the term a very narrow or limited meaning.
They have in mind only certain moral or personal tendencies
usually spoken of as one’s “habits.”
But in order to understand habit in any thorough and
complete way we must, as suggested by the preceding
paragraph, broaden our concept to include every possible
line of physical and mental activity. Habit may
be defined as the tendency of the nervous system
to repeat any act that has been performed once or
many times.
THE PHYSICAL BASIS OF HABIT.-Habit
is to be explained from the standpoint of its physical
basis. Habits are formed because the tissues
of our brains are capable of being modified by use,
and of so retaining the effects of this modification
that the same act is easier of performance each succeeding
time. This results in the old act being repeated
instead of a new one being selected, and hence the
old act is perpetuated.
Even dead and inert matter obeys the
same principles in this regard as does living matter.
Says M. Leon Dumont: “Everyone knows how
a garment, having been worn a certain time, clings
to the shape of the body better than when it was new;
there has been a change in the tissue, and this change
is a new habit of cohesion; a lock works better after
having been used some time; at the outset more force
was required to overcome certain roughness in the
mechanism. The overcoming of this resistance is
a phenomenon of habituation. It costs less trouble
to fold a paper when it has been folded already.
This saving of trouble is due to the essential nature
of habit, which brings it about that, to reproduce
the effect, a less amount of the outward cause is
required. The sounds of a violin improve by use
in the hands of an able artist, because the fibers
of the wood at last contract habits of vibration conformed
to harmonic relations. This is what gives such
inestimable value to instruments that have belonged
to great masters. Water, in flowing, hollows out
for itself a channel, which grows broader and deeper;
and, after having ceased to flow, it resumes when
it flows again the path traced for itself before.
Just so, the impressions of outer objects fashion for
themselves in the nervous system more and more appropriate
paths, and these vital phenomena recur under similar
excitements from without, when they have been interrupted
for a certain time."
ALL LIVING TISSUE PLASTIC.-What
is true of inanimate matter is doubly true of living
tissue. The tissues of the human body can be molded
into almost any form you choose if taken in time.
A child may be placed on his feet at too early an
age, and the bones of his legs form the habit of remaining
bent. The Flathead Indian binds a board on the
skull of his child, and its head forms the habit of
remaining flat on the top. Wrong bodily postures
produce curvature of the spine, and pernicious modes
of dress deform the bones of the chest. The muscles
may be trained into the habit of keeping the shoulders
straight or letting them droop; those of the back,
to keep the body well up on the hips, or to let it
sag; those of locomotion, to give us a light, springy
step, or to allow a shuffling carriage; those of speech,
to give us a clear-cut, accurate articulation, or
a careless, halting one; and those of the face, to
give us a cheerful cast of countenance, or a glum
and morose expression.
HABIT A MODIFICATION OF BRAIN TISSUE.-But
the nervous tissue is the most sensitive and easily
molded of all bodily tissues. In fact, it is
probable that the real habit of our characteristic
walk, gesture, or speech resides in the brain, rather
than in the muscles which it controls. So delicate
is the organization of the brain structure and so
unstable its molecules, that even the perfume of the
flower, which assails the nose of a child, the song
of a bird, which strikes his ear, or the fleeting
dream, which lingers but for a second in his sleep,
has so modified his brain that it will never again
be as if these things had not been experienced.
Every sensory current which runs in from the outside
world; every motor current which runs out to command
a muscle; every thought that we think, has so modified
the nerve structure through which it acts, that a
tendency remains for a like act to be repeated.
Our brain and nervous system is daily being molded
into fixed habits of acting by our thoughts and deeds,
and thus becomes the automatic register of all we
do.
The old Chinese fairy story hits upon
a fundamental and vital truth. These celestials
tell their children that each child is accompanied
by day and by night, every moment of his life, by
an invisible fairy, who is provided with a pencil
and tablet. It is the duty of this fairy to put
down every deed of the child, both good and evil, in
an indelible record which will one day rise as a witness
against him. So it is in very truth with our
brains. The wrong act may have been performed
in secret, no living being may ever know that we performed
it, and a merciful Providence may forgive it; but
the inexorable monitor of our deeds was all the time
beside us writing the record, and the history of that
act is inscribed forever in the tissues of our brain.
It may be repented of bitterly in sackcloth and ashes
and be discontinued, but its effects can never be
quite effaced; they will remain with us a handicap
till our dying day, and in some critical moment in
a great emergency we shall be in danger of defeat
from that long past and forgotten act.
WE MUST FORM HABITS.-We
must, then, form habits. It is not at all
in our power to say whether we will form habits or
not; for, once started, they go on forming themselves
by day and night, steadily and relentlessly.
Habit is, therefore, one of the great factors to be
reckoned with in our lives, and the question becomes
not, Shall we form habits? but What habits we shall
form. And we have the determining of this question
largely in our own power, for habits do not just happen,
nor do they come to us ready made. We ourselves
make them from day to day through the acts we perform,
and in so far as we have control over our acts, in
that far we can determine our habits.
2. THE PLACE OF HABIT IN THE ECONOMY OF OUR LIVES
Habit is one of nature’s methods
of economizing time and effort, while at the same
time securing greater skill and efficiency. This
is easily seen when it is remembered that habit tends
towards automatic action; that is, towards
action governed by the lower nerve centers and taking
care of itself, so to speak, without the interference
of consciousness. Everyone has observed how much
easier in the performance and more skillful in its
execution is the act, be it playing a piano, painting
a picture, or driving a nail, when the movements involved
have ceased to be consciously directed and become
automatic.
HABIT INCREASES SKILL AND EFFICIENCY.-Practically
all increase in skill, whether physical or mental,
depends on our ability to form habits. Habit
holds fast to the skill already attained while practice
or intelligence makes ready for the next step in advance.
Could we not form habits we should improve but little
in our way of doing things, no matter how many times
we did them over. We should now be obliged to
go through the same bungling process of dressing ourselves
as when we first learned it as children. Our
writing would proceed as awkwardly in the high school
as the primary, our eating as adults would be as messy
and wide of the mark as when we were infants, and we
should miss in a thousand ways the motor skill that
now seems so easy and natural. All highly skilled
occupations, and those demanding great manual dexterity,
likewise depend on our habit-forming power for the
accurate and automatic movements required.
So with mental skill. A great
portion of the fundamentals of our education must
be made automatic-must become matters of
habit. We set out to learn the symbols of speech.
We hear words and see them on the printed page; associated
with these words are meanings, or ideas. Habit
binds the word and the idea together, so that to think
of the one is to call up the other-and
language is learned. We must learn numbers, so
we practice the “combinations,” and with
4x6, or 3x8 we associate 24. Habit secures this
association in our minds, and lo! we soon know our
“tables.” And so on throughout the
whole range of our learning. We learn certain
symbols, or facts, or processes, and habit takes hold
and renders these automatic so that we can use them
freely, easily, and with skill, leaving our thought
free for matters that cannot be made automatic.
One of our greatest dangers is that we shall not make
sufficiently automatic, enough of the necessary foundation
material of education. Failing in this, we shall
at best be but blunderers intellectually, handicapped
because we failed to make proper use of habit in our
development.
For, as we have seen in an earlier
chapter, there is a limit to our mental energy and
also to the number of objects to which we are able
to attend. It is only when attention has been
freed from the many things that can always be thought
or done in the same way, that the mind can
devote itself to the real problems that require judgment,
imagination or reasoning. The writer whose spelling
and punctuation do not take care of themselves will
hardly make a success of writing. The mathematician
whose number combinations, processes and formulae are
not automatic in his mind can never hope to make progress
in mathematical thinking. The speaker who, while
speaking, has to think of his gestures, his voice or
his enunciation will never sway audiences by his logic
or his eloquence.
HABIT SAVES EFFORT AND FATIGUE.-We
do most easily and with least fatigue that which we
are accustomed to do. It is the new act or the
strange task that tires us. The horse that is
used to the farm wearies if put on the road, while
the roadster tires easily when hitched to the plow.
The experienced penman works all day at his desk without
undue fatigue, while the man more accustomed to the
pick and the shovel than to the pen, is exhausted
by a half hour’s writing at a letter. Those
who follow a sedentary and inactive occupation do
not tire by much sitting, while children or others
used to freedom and action may find it a wearisome
task merely to remain still for an hour or two.
Not only would the skill and speed
demanded by modern industry be impossible without
the aid of habit, but without its help none could
stand the fatigue and strain. The new workman
placed at a high-speed machine is ready to fall from
weariness at the end of his first day. But little
by little he learns to omit the unnecessary movements,
the necessary movements become easier and more automatic
through habit, and he finds the work easier.
We may conclude, then, that not only do consciously
directed movements show less skill than the same movements
made automatic by habit, but they also require more
effort and produce greater fatigue.
HABIT ECONOMIZES MORAL EFFORT.-To
have to decide each time the question comes up whether
we will attend to this lecture or sermon or lesson;
whether we will persevere and go through this piece
of disagreeable work which we have begun; whether
we will go to the trouble of being courteous and kind
to this or that poor or unlovely or dirty fellow-mortal;
whether we will take this road because it looks easy,
or that one because we know it to be the one we ought
to take; whether we will be strictly fair and honest
when we might just as well be the opposite; whether
we will resist the temptation which dares us; whether
we will do this duty, hard though it is, which confronts
us-to have to decide each of these questions
every time it presents itself is to put too large
a proportion of our thought and energy on things which
should take care of themselves. For all these
things should early become so nearly habitual that
they can be settled with the very minimum of expenditure
of energy when they arise.
THE HABIT OF ATTENTION.-It
is a noble thing to be able to attend by sheer force
of will when the interest lags, or some more attractive
thing appears, but far better is it so to have formed
the habit of attention that we naturally fall into
that attitude when this is the desirable thing.
To understand what I mean, you only have to look over
a class or an audience and note the different ways
which people have of finally settling down to listening.
Some with an attitude which says, “Now here
I am, ready to listen to you if you will interest me,
otherwise not.” Others with a manner which
says, “I did not really come here expecting
to listen, and you will have a large task if you interest
me; I never listen unless I am compelled to, and the
responsibility rests on you.” Others plainly
say, “I really mean to listen, but I have hard
work to control my thoughts, and if I wander I shall
not blame you altogether; it is just my way.”
And still others say, “When I am expected to
listen, I always listen whether there is anything
much to listen to or not. I have formed that habit,
and so have no quarrel with myself about it.
You can depend on me to be attentive, for I cannot
afford to weaken my habit of attention whether you
do well or not.” Every speaker will clasp
these last listeners to his heart and feed them on
the choicest thoughts of his soul; they are the ones
to whom he speaks and to whom his address will appeal.
HABIT ENABLES US TO MEET THE DISAGREEABLE.-To
be able to persevere in the face of difficulties and
hardships and carry through the disagreeable thing
in spite of the protests of our natures against the
sacrifice which it requires, is a creditable thing;
but it is more creditable to have so formed the habit
of perseverance that the disagreeable duty shall be
done without a struggle, or protest, or question.
Horace Mann testifies of himself that whatever success
he was able to attain was made possible through the
early habit which he formed of never stopping to inquire
whether he liked to do a thing which needed
doing, but of doing everything equally well and without
question, both the pleasant and the unpleasant.
The youth who can fight out a moral
battle and win against the allurements of some attractive
temptation is worthy the highest honor and praise;
but so long as he has to fight the same battle over
and over again, he is on dangerous ground morally.
For good morals must finally become habits, so ingrained
in us that the right decision comes largely without
effort and without struggle. Otherwise the strain
is too great, and defeat will occasionally come; and
defeat means weakness and at last disaster, after
the spirit has tired of the constant conflict.
And so on in a hundred lines. Good habits are
more to be coveted than individual victories in special
cases, much as these are to be desired. For good
habits mean victories all along the line.
HABIT THE FOUNDATION OF PERSONALITY.-The
biologist tells us that it is the constant
and not the occasional in the environment that
impresses itself on an organism. So also it is
the habitual in our lives that builds itself
into our character and personality. In a very
real sense we are what we are in the habit of
doing and thinking.
Without habit, personality could not
exist; for we could never do a thing twice alike,
and hence would be a new person each succeeding moment.
The acts which give us our own peculiar individuality
are our habitual acts-the little things
that do themselves moment by moment without care or
attention, and are the truest and best expression of
our real selves. Probably no one of us could
be very sure which arm he puts into the sleeve, or
which foot he puts into the shoe, first; and yet each
of us certainly formed the habit long ago of doing
these things in a certain way. We might not be
able to describe just how we hold knife and fork and
spoon, and yet each has his own characteristic and
habitual way of handling them. We sit down and
get up in some characteristic way, and the very poise
of our heads and attitudes of our bodies are the result
of habit. We get sleepy and wake up, become hungry
and thirsty at certain hours, through force of habit.
We form the habit of liking a certain chair, or nook,
or corner, or path, or desk, and then seek this to
the exclusion of all others. We habitually use
a particular pitch of voice and type of enunciation
in speaking, and this becomes one of our characteristic
marks; or we form the habit of using barbarisms or
solecisms of language in youth, and these cling to
us and become an inseparable part of us later in life.
On the mental side the case is no
different. Our thinking is as characteristic
as our physical acts. We may form the habit of
thinking things out logically, or of jumping to conclusions;
of thinking critically and independently, or of taking
things unquestioningly on the authority of others.
We may form the habit of carefully reading good, sensible
books, or of skimming sentimental and trashy ones;
of choosing elevating, ennobling companions, or the
opposite; of being a good conversationalist and doing
our part in a social group, or of being a drag on
the conversation, and needing to be “entertained.”
We may form the habit of observing the things about
us and enjoying the beautiful in our environment,
or of failing to observe or to enjoy. We may form
the habit of obeying the voice of conscience or of
weakly yielding to temptation without a struggle;
of taking a reverent attitude of prayer in our devotions,
or of merely saying our prayers.
HABIT SAVES WORRY AND REBELLION.-Habit
has been called the “balance wheel” of
society. This is because men readily become habituated
to the hard, the disagreeable, or the inevitable,
and cease to battle against it. A lot that at
first seems unendurable after a time causes less revolt.
A sorrow that seems too poignant to be borne in the
course of time loses some of its sharpness. Oppression
or injustice that arouses the fiercest resentment
and hate may finally come to be accepted with resignation.
Habit helps us learn that “what cannot be cured
must be endured.”
3. THE TYRANNY OF HABIT
EVEN GOOD HABITS NEED TO BE MODIFIED.-But
even in good habits there is danger. Habit is
the opposite of attention. Habit relieves attention
of unnecessary strain. Every habitual act was
at one time, either in the history of the race or
of the individual, a voluntary act; that is, it was
performed under active attention. As the habit
grew, attention was gradually rendered unnecessary,
until finally it dropped entirely out. And herein
lies the danger. Habit once formed has no way
of being modified unless in some way attention is
called to it, for a habit left to itself becomes more
and more firmly fixed. The rut grows deeper.
In very few, if any, of our actions can we afford
to have this the case. Our habits need to be
progressive, they need to grow, to be modified, to
be improved. Otherwise they will become an incrusting
shell, fixed and unyielding, which will limit our
growth.
It is necessary, then, to keep our
habitual acts under some surveillance of attention,
to pass them in review for inspection every now and
then, that we may discover possible modifications
which will make them more serviceable. We need
to be inventive, constantly to find out better ways
of doing things. Habit takes care of our standing,
walking, sitting; but how many of us could not improve
his poise and carriage if he would? Our speech
has become largely automatic, but no doubt all of us
might remove faults of enunciation, pronunciation
or stress from our speaking. So also we might
better our habits of study and thinking, our methods
of memorizing, or our manner of attending.
THE TENDENCY OF “RUTS.”-But
this will require something of heroism. For to
follow the well-beaten path of custom is easy and pleasant,
while to break out of the rut of habit and start a
new line of action is difficult and disturbing.
Most people prefer to keep doing things as they always
have done them, to continue reading and thinking and
believing as they have long been in the habit of doing,
not so much because they feel that their way is best,
but because it is easier than to change. Hence
the great mass of us settle down on the plane of mediocrity,
and become “old fogy.” We learn to
do things passably well, cease to think about improving
our ways of doing them, and so fall into a rut.
Only the few go on. They make use of habit as
the rest do, but they also continue to attend at critical
points of action, and so make habit an ally
in place of accepting it as a tyrant.
4. HABIT-FORMING A PART OF EDUCATION
It follows from the importance of
habit in our lives that no small part of education
should be concerned with the development of serviceable
habits. Says James, “Could the young but
realize how soon they will become mere walking bundles
of habits, they would give more heed to their conduct
while in the plastic state. We are spinning our
own fates, good or evil, and never to be undone.
Every smallest stroke of virtue or of vice leaves
its never-so-little scar.” Any youth who
is forming a large number of useful habits is receiving
no mean education, no matter if his knowledge of books
may be limited; on the other hand, no one who is forming
a large number of bad habits is being well educated,
no matter how brilliant his knowledge may be.
YOUTH THE TIME FOR HABIT-FORMING.-Childhood
and youth is the great time for habit-forming.
Then the brain is plastic and easily molded, and it
retains its impressions more indelibly; later it is
hard to modify, and the impressions made are less
permanent. It is hard to teach an old dog new
tricks; nor would he remember them if you could teach
them to him, nor be able to perform them well even
if he could remember them. The young child will,
within the first few weeks of its life, form habits
of sleeping and feeding. It may in a few days
be led into the habit of sleeping in the dark, or
requiring a light; of going to sleep lying quietly,
or of insisting upon being rocked; of getting hungry
by the clock, or of wanting its food at all times
when it finds nothing else to do, and so on.
It is wholly outside the power of the mother or the
nurse to determine whether the child shall form habits,
but largely within their power to say what habits
shall be formed, since they control his acts.
As the child grows older, the range
of his habits increases; and by the time he has reached
his middle teens, the greater number of his personal
habits are formed. It is very doubtful whether
a boy who has not formed habits of punctuality before
the age of fifteen will ever be entirely trustworthy
in matters requiring precision in this line. The
girl who has not, before this age, formed habits of
neatness and order will hardly make a tidy housekeeper
later in her life. Those who in youth have no
opportunity to habituate themselves to the usages of
society may study books on etiquette and employ private
instructors in the art of polite behavior all they
please later in life, but they will never cease to
be awkward and ill at ease. None are at a greater
disadvantage than the suddenly-grown-rich who attempt
late in life to surround themselves with articles
of art and luxury, though their habits were all formed
amid barrenness and want during their earlier years.
THE HABIT OF ACHIEVEMENT.-What
youth does not dream of being great, or noble, or
a celebrated scholar! And how few there are who
finally achieve their ideals! Where does the
cause of failure lie? Surely not in the lack
of high ideals. Multitudes of young people have
“Excelsior!” as their motto, and yet never
get started up the mountain slope, let alone toiling
on to its top. They have put in hours dreaming
of the glory farther up, and have never begun to
climb. The difficulty comes in not realizing
that the only way to become what we wish or dream that
we may become is to form the habit of being that
thing. To form the habit of achievement,
of effort, of self-sacrifice, if need be. To form
the habit of deeds along with dreams; to form the
habit of doing.
Who of us has not at this moment lying
in wait for his convenience in the dim future a number
of things which he means to do just as soon as this
term of school is finished, or this job of work is
completed, or when he is not so busy as now?
And how seldom does he ever get at these things at
all! Darwin tells that in his youth he loved poetry,
art, and music, but was so busy with his scientific
work that he could ill spare the time to indulge these
tastes. So he promised himself that he would
devote his time to scientific work and make his mark
in this. Then he would have time for the things
that he loved, and would cultivate his taste for the
fine arts. He made his mark in the field of science,
and then turned again to poetry, to music, to art.
But alas! they were all dead and dry bones to him,
without life or interest. He had passed the time
when he could ever form the taste for them. He
had formed his habits in another direction, and now
it was forever too late to form new habits. His
own conclusion is, that if he had his life to live
over again, he would each week listen to some musical
concert and visit some art gallery, and that each
day he would read some poetry, and thereby keep alive
and active the love for them.
So every school and home should be
a species of habit-factory-a place where
children develop habits of neatness, punctuality, obedience,
politeness, dependability and the other graces of character.
5. RULES FOR HABIT-FORMING
JAMES’S THREE MAXIMS FOR HABIT-FORMING.-On
the forming of new habits and the leaving off of old
ones, I know of no better statement than that of James,
based on Bain’s chapter on “Moral Habits.”
I quote this statement at some length: “In
the acquisition of a new habit, or the leaving off
of an old one, we must take care to launch ourselves
with as strong and decided an initiative as possible.
Accumulate all the possible circumstances which shall
reenforce right motives; put yourself assiduously
in conditions that encourage the new way; make engagements
incompatible with the old; take a public pledge, if
the case allows; in short, develop your resolution
with every aid you know. This will give your
new beginning such a momentum that the temptation to
break down will not occur as soon as it otherwise
might; and every day during which a breakdown is postponed
adds to the chances of its not occurring at all.
“The second maxim is: Never
suffer an exception to occur until the new habit is
securely rooted in your life. Each lapse is like
letting fall a ball of string which one is carefully
winding up; a single slip undoes more than a great
many turns will wind again. Continuity of training
is the great means of making the nervous system act
infallibly right.... The need of securing success
nerves one to future vigor.
“A third maxim may be added
to the preceding pair: Seize the very first
possible opportunity to act on every resolution you
make, and on every emotional prompting you may experience
in the direction of the habits you aspire to gain.
It is not in the moment of their forming, but in the
moment of their producing motor effects, that
resolves and aspirations communicate the new ‘set’
to the brain."
THE PREPONDERANCE OF GOOD HABITS OVER
BAD.-And finally, let no one be disturbed
or afraid because in a little time you become a “walking
bundle of habits.” For in so far as your
good actions predominate over your bad ones, that
much will your good habits outweigh your bad habits.
Silently, moment by moment, efficiency is growing out
of all worthy acts well done. Every bit of heroic
self-sacrifice, every battle fought and won, every
good deed performed, is being irradicably credited
to you in your nervous system, and will finally add
its mite toward achieving the success of your ambitions.
6. PROBLEMS IN OBSERVATION AND INTROSPECTION
1. Select some act which you
have recently begun to perform and watch it grow more
and more habitual. Notice carefully for a week
and see whether you do not discover some habits which
you did not know you had. Make a catalog of your
bad habits; of the most important of your good ones.
2. Set out to form some new habits
which you desire to possess; also to break some undesirable
habit, watching carefully what takes place in both
cases, and how long it requires.
3. Try the following experiment
and relate the results to the matter of automatic
control brought about by habit: Draw a star on
a sheet of cardboard. Place this on a table before
you, with a hand-mirror so arranged that you can see
the star in the mirror. Now trace the outline
of the star with a pencil, looking steadily in the
mirror to guide your hand. Do not lift the pencil
from the paper from the time you start until you finish.
Have others try this experiment.
4. Study some group of pupils
for their habits (1) of attention, (2) of speech,
(3) of standing, sitting, and walking, (4) of study.
Report on your observations and suggest methods of
curing bad habits observed.
5. Make a list of “mannerisms”
you have observed, and suggest how they may be cured.
6. Make a list of from ten to
twenty habits which you think the school and its work
should especially cultivate. What ones of these
are the schools you know least successful in cultivating?
Where does the trouble lie?