All protocols
4,984 protocols across every category, most recommended first.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsAvoid Fitness Tracking Apps and Wearable Metrics for Intrinsically Rewarding Exercise
Avoid turning enjoyable exercise into an extrinsically rewarded activity by logging it in a phone app or over-focusing on watch/Fitbit metrics.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsTalk to Strangers
Brief conversations with strangers increase positive emotion, reduce loneliness, and improve the sense that life is going better; applies to introverts and extroverts.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsSee Real Faces Daily
See real faces at least once a day, not just faces on a screen.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsPrioritize In-Real-Time Social Connection
Prefer live, synchronous interaction over asynchronous communication; if not in person, use video when possible, and phone calls can also be highly emotionally connective.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsUse Real-Time Connection Instead of Texting When Possible
Texting is described as a weaker substitute for social connection; schedule real-time interaction and call friends you have not talked to recently.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo a Personal Experiment with More In-Real-Time Social Connection
Try increasing real-time social connection and notice immediately afterward how it made you feel to update your prediction about socializing.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsAvoid Replacing Social Connection with Social Media Scrolling
Scrolling faces and DMs can create the illusion of connection without delivering real social nourishment.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsIntroverts Should Try Small Doses of Social Connection
Start small rather than jumping into huge parties; one-on-one formats like a coffee date may create less social anxiety, and introverts should balance social interaction with alone time.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsUse Mini Micro-Doses of Social Connection
Use small interactions to refill the 'leaky tire' of happiness; if not feeling happy, add one more interaction than your current baseline and monitor how it feels over time.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsGround Yourself in Your Senses
Use sensory attention to become embodied and present: notice what you see, hear, and how your breath changes.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsUse Podcasts or Audio as an Emotion Regulation Strategy During Certain Tasks
Can be useful when it fills the head enough to reduce rumination without impairing presence in the physical task; avoid using audio in situations where full sensory presence matters, such as art engagement or ballroom dancing.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsTrain Your Brain to Find Delights
Repeatedly noticing and recording delights shifts attention away from hassles and toward positive emotion.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsUse Negative Emotions as Signals for Behavioral Change
Treat negative emotions as information: loneliness may mean you need more social connection, and overwhelm may mean you need to take something off your plate before burnout or illness.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo Not Suppress Negative Emotions
Negative emotions are useful signals; suppressing them gives up important information.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsWalk Your Dog
Provides exercise and social interaction; especially useful for people who otherwise would not exercise.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo a Half Hour of Cardio Exercise Per Day
Meta-analyses were cited as showing that 30 minutes of cardio exercise per day can be as effective as antidepressant medication for reducing symptoms of depression.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsPet Your Animal Mindfully
Interacting physically with pets can create sensory presence.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsSchedule an Hour of Protected Free Time on Your Calendar
Put a future 1-hour block on your calendar and do not schedule anything in it to create time affluence.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsPractice Negative Visualization
Stoic practice of imagining losing valued things to break hedonic adaptation and increase appreciation; examples included imagining losing success, being exiled, losing a partner, losing health, or not being able to walk. Use imagination to appreciate what you have, especially for things you cannot literally space out.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsAvoid Manifesting by Fantasizing About Rewards
Deeply imagining the rewards of a future goal can reduce motivation to do the work.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsImagine Obstacles to a Habit You Want to Build
Instead of fantasizing about the reward, vividly imagine the obstacles and plan solutions in advance; example given was preparing running clothes or a warm hat the night before.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsRemember Positive Experiences Are Finite to Savor Them More
Recognizing that good moments are temporary can increase appreciation and savoring; use finitude as a cue to pay attention now.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsUse Memento Mori
Contemplate mortality to appreciate life more and avoid taking experiences for granted.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo More for Others
Helping others is framed as a major behavioral hack for happiness; examples include donating, volunteering, spending money on others, and treating someone else instead of yourself.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsReligious Treatment for Addiction
Use religion or religious transformation as a treatment approach for alcoholism/addiction; described as the most reliable treatment in the literature.
- ▶ 1DietSteak
Steak is presented as a highly satiating, high-essential-amino-acid food. Eating it plain rather than heavily dressed may help preserve natural taste and satiation signals; excessive condiments may blunt this effect over time.
- ▶ 1DietAvoid Refined Starches After Satiating Meals
Avoid adding refined starches such as pasta after an already satiating meal if trying to avoid triggering additional appetite; even a small amount may increase blood glucose and drive desire for more food.
- ▶ 1DietPittsburgh Char Steak
Order steak with a Pittsburgh char for a flavorful preparation.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsMorning Orderliness Ritual
Use a morning ritual of putting your environment in order to support clear thinking and orientation: look around your room or kitchen, make your bed, and spend about 10 minutes organizing one thing. If mornings are difficult, get up, shower, make your bed, and do something useful; repeated daily, order accumulates quickly.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsHigh-Intensity Interval Training Before Cognitive Flexibility Tasks
Doing a HIIT session just before cognitive flexibility work improves executive control and function.