![]() In some ways, we are what we do every day – and yet a lot of what we do every day is subconscious and reflexive, based on patterns and routines we developed long ago without fully realizing it.įor Warren, the cultivating of a God-centered awareness in her daily habits, and a culling out of the habits that were distracting her from God, were integral. I’ve been thinking a lot about my own habits ever since Tish Harris Warren’s Liturgy of the Ordinary, which points out the ways in which small, carefully-cultivated acts of habit can determine our identity over time. It’s a book about how to instill good habits, and how to break bad ones, and it delves into some of the science and psychology behind how we develop habits and how habits affect our lives. The topic is right there in the title: habits. Still, I found it helpful for my Christian walk, and so I wanted to share it here.Ītomic Habits is not a book that is trying to hide what it’s about. But the book I am going to review today is not written for a Christian audience specifically, and I cannot speak to the author’s faith. Most of the books I cover here are explicitly Christian, in that they are written by Christians or touch on specific Christian topics. ![]()
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