CONSISTENCY AND SUCCESS COMPOUNDING. I have got this idea from the book âThe Atomic Habitâ by James Clear. If you improve by 1% every day for a year, you will end up 37 times better than you were when you started. Consistency is important because all of the important things in life benefit from compound interest. In the meantime, improving by 1 percent isnât especially outstandingâsome of the time it isnât even recognizableâhowever, it tends to be undeniably progressively important, particularly over the long haul. The distinction a small improvement can make after some time is amazing. Hereâs how the math works out: if you can show signs of improvement every day for one year, youâll end up thirtyâseven occasions better when youâre set. Then again, on the off chance that you deteriorate every day for one year, youâll decrease almost down to zero. What begins as a little success or a minor mishap aggregates into something significantly more. This figure showing the exponentiality that is explained in the book #atomichabits This 1% growth or worse makes an exponential graph and Einstein said that one of the biggest failures of the human race is the inability to understand the exponential function. Our physical health, mental health, making money, creativity, everything, it all benefits from compounding.To get this compound returns you have to put in the consistency. #jamesclear said here âAverage speed is far more important than maximum speed.â Actually most of us in maximum speed mode. Like we get the burst of motivation after reading this article and be like, OKAY, I am going to practice 5 hours of math today, then I will do X for 5 hours and then I will do Y for 7 hours in a row. And then if we do this, we forget it for the next 2 weeks or more. That is worrying about our maximum speed. But actually, if we just practice it for 30 or 45 minutes per day for two months weâd end up spending less time overall, probably. But we will actually improve so much more because we are applying this consistency. So I think the more we can be consistent in the thing that we do, the more we can show up, the more we benefit from compounding. #bookreview https://www.instagram.com/p/CBzkXwKB2rS/?igshid=b1tae8csdbrq












