Habit stacking is a simple but powerful technique popularized by James Clear in Atomic Habits. The idea is this: instead of trying to build a new behavior in a vacuum, you attach it right after an existing habit you already do without fail every day. The formula is clear — after I do [my current habit], I will do [my new habit]. For example, after you pour your morning coffee, you stretch for two minutes; or after you brush your teeth, you read one page. Why does it work? Because the already-rooted habit becomes a ready and reliable cue for the new behavior; the brain does not have to learn a fresh trigger from scratch. A well-chosen anchor lets you stop leaning on willpower and start building an automatic chain instead. The chain method feeds on exactly this contextual stability: it encourages you to place each task at a specific daily moment and a natural anchor in your existing routine, reduces completion to a single tap, and, through the growing chain, makes the behavior less deliberate and more automatic as the days add up. Stacking supplies the anchor; the chain makes that anchor visible and rewards the streak.
Habit Stacking
A method of anchoring a new habit right after an already established one, using the existing habit as the trigger.