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-rw-r--r-- | website/blog/content/english/cell-phone-experiment.md | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/website/blog/content/english/cell-phone-experiment.md b/website/blog/content/english/cell-phone-experiment.md index c94bbe0128a7..550ba4865ee0 100644 --- a/website/blog/content/english/cell-phone-experiment.md +++ b/website/blog/content/english/cell-phone-experiment.md @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ particular rendezvouses was a novel (read: anachronistic) experience. For all you young whippersnappers reading, take out your stone tablets and chisels. I'm going to explain how this works: -First I would tell my friends where are when to meet me. I emphasized that I +First I would tell my friends where and when to meet me. I emphasized that I would be quite helpless to any changes they might make to the plans once I began commuting, which made the commitments unusually more binding. @@ -242,10 +242,10 @@ friendships that you easily form can just as easily be destroyed. Habits invert this creation/destruction relationship. In my experience "easy come" implies "difficult to go". -For example, I could to easily form the habit of eating chocolate around 15:00 -at work; curbing this habit would require more effort. When I compare this to -the difficulty I experienced habituating a meditation practice, and how easily -I can dislodge my meditation practice, it seems to me that the laws of habits +For example, I could easily form the habit of eating chocolate around 15:00 at +work; curbing this habit would require more effort. When I compare this to the +difficulty I experienced habituating a meditation practice, and how easily I +can dislodge my meditation practice, it seems to me that the laws of habits dictate "easy come, difficult go; difficult come, easy go". I suspect that while my cravings for using a cell phone have temporarily ceased, |