The core of sticking to a habit is simple but counterintuitive: the goal isn't a flawless streak, it's unbroken continuity. People usually start by imagining peak performance — an hour every day, never skipping — and that expectation collapses on the first hard day. What actually keeps a habit alive is the smallest version you can still do on your worst days.
The first principle is to start small. A habit shrunk to a two-minute action — one page, a single push-up, two minutes of stretching — still gets done on the days you're exhausted. Small but unbroken always beats big but erratic.
The second principle is to make progress visible. The don't-break-the-chain method is built exactly on this: every completed day adds a link to your chain, and that chain growing in front of you becomes concrete motivation to protect. Visible proof instead of abstract intention.
The third and most important principle: never miss twice in a row. Missing one day is an accident; missing two in a row is the start of a new habit. A single miss won't set you back, but if you carry it into a second day, the chain truly breaks.
Zinciri Kırma combines these three principles: it has you set up the habit as one small decision, shows your progress as a visible chain, and — with skip and repair credits that forgive a missed day — keeps you from falling into that second day. Sticking to a habit isn't a battle of willpower but a well-designed continuity; focus not on being perfect, but on showing up again tomorrow.