Learn to crush bad habits with a single habit card: log exact actions, use timers, streaks, freezes, journaling, analytics, and squad challenges to track, analyze, and reset your patterns in real time.
Grab the habit you want to curb and write it down—no fluff, just the exact wording. “Scroll Instagram for 30 minutes before bed” is clearer than “use phone too much.” When the description is specific, the brain treats it as a real target, not a vague notion.
Open the Tracker screen, hit the “+” button, and add the habit as a check‑off item. Choose a category like “Productivity” and set the recurrence to “daily.” Each night you tap the card; the checkmark shows up instantly. The visual cue of a completed box is enough to make the pattern feel tangible.
If the habit involves a duration—say, “watch YouTube for more than an hour”—switch to a timer habit. Start the built‑in Pomodoro timer, let it run, then stop it when you’re done. The app only marks the habit as done when the timer reaches zero, so you can’t cheat by clicking the checkmark early.
Every day the habit is logged, a streak number appears on the card. Miss a day and the streak resets to 0. That drop‑off is a blunt reminder that the habit is still alive. Don’t treat a long streak as a badge of honor; see it as a warning sign that the behavior is still entrenched.
When life throws a curveball—travel, illness, a family emergency—tap the freeze icon on the habit card. One freeze protects your streak without you having to perform the habit. The app limits freezes, so you’ll think twice before using them as an excuse.
When the habit finally disappears from your routine, hit archive. The habit vanishes from the dashboard, but the data stays in the background. Later you can pull it up to see how long it lasted and what triggers you noted, giving you insight for future behavior changes.
Tap the notebook icon at the top of the Tracker screen. Write a quick note about why the habit showed up that day—stress, boredom, a specific event. Choose a mood emoji that matches how you felt. The AI automatically tags the entry, so months later you can search “stress” and see every time the habit and that feeling overlapped.
Switch to the Analytics tab and pull up the habit’s completion chart. Notice spikes on weekends or dips after long workdays. Those visual cues are easier to act on than a mental guess. Export the data if you want to plot it in a spreadsheet for deeper digging.
Create a small Squad in the Social tab, invite a buddy who’s also trying to ditch a bad habit. The squad view shows each member’s daily completion percentage. A quick glance at a teammate’s 80 % streak can spark a friendly competition, or at least give you accountability when you’re tempted to skip.
If you notice a sudden surge—maybe a binge‑watch weekend—launch a Raid in your squad. Set a collective goal: “No binge‑watching for three days.” The leaderboard updates in real time, and the shared pressure often nudges you back on track.
When the habit feels overwhelming, tap the brain icon on the dashboard. The screen shrinks to three micro‑activities: a breathing exercise, a vent‑journal prompt, and a tiny win (like “drink one glass of water”). No streak numbers, no guilt. Just a gentle reset that keeps you from spiraling.
In the habit’s settings, choose a push‑notification time that aligns with the trigger. If you usually scroll Instagram after dinner, set the reminder for 8 pm. The app will ping you, and you can decide then to log the habit or skip it. Remember, the AI can’t send the notification for you, but the reminder slot is right there.
Open the Journal, scroll to “On This Day” from a month ago. Seeing that you struggled with the same habit back then—and survived—gives you a reality check. It’s a quiet reminder that habits are cycles, not permanent states.
When you write about the habit, avoid grandiose phrasing. “I am conquering my phone addiction” sounds like a headline; “I checked Instagram twice after 10 pm” feels real. The app’s AI tags work better with concrete language, and you stay grounded.
After a week, glance at the habit card. If the streak is stuck at 0, maybe the recurrence setting is wrong, or the freeze limit is too low. Adjust the habit’s parameters, add a new journal prompt, or swap the category to see if a fresh label changes your perception.
And that’s the toolbox. Use the habit card as a mirror, the journal as a confession, the squad as a safety net, and the analytics as a map. When the next urge pops up, you’ll have a concrete step ready—not a vague intention.
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