Most habit books teach you how to do more. Temple of Habits asks a sharper question: what is worth doing, again and again, for years of your one life? Instead of piling on hacks, Priya Dhanvel shows you how to build sacred habits that feel like quiet acts of devotion to what matters most. You will learn to turn corners of your home into habit altars, design gentle cue design that actually fits your days, and protect your energy with friction walls that guard your attention. This is a practical guide to habit rituals and personal rituals that are both grounded and soulful. Through clear explanations, examples, and exercises, you will align daily routines with the identities you most want to inhabit, from how you care for your body to how you show up for relationships and creative work. You will experiment with weekly vigils, season resets, vows and audits, and celebration rites that make behaviour change feel less like punishment and more like tending a small, beloved temple. Temple of Habits is for thoughtful readers who are tired of white-knuckle productivity and ready for intentional living. Whether you are rebuilding after a major life change or quietly sensing that your days do not yet match your values, this book offers a humane redesign. It will help you sculpt identity based habits and an environment design that support a slower, truer form of spiritual productivity: a life in which your time, attention, and effort faithfully serve what you hold sacred.
Temple of Habits
SKU: 9789376550524
$35.99 Regular Price
$24.98Sale Price
- Priya Dhanvel is a writer deeply interested in how ordinary people shape their days into lives that feel honest and alive. Rather than chasing extreme makeovers, she is drawn to the quiet, repeatable gestures that slowly reveal who we are. Her work brings together insights from psychology, design, and everyday spiritual practice, always with an eye to what can be tried this week, in a real home, with real constraints. She is particularly attentive to the small rituals that appear in many cultures: a corner of a room cleared for a lamp and a book, the way a shared meal begins, the careful straightening of a workspace before rest. These moments, often overlooked, suggested to her that people everywhere are already building temples out of ordinary time and objects. Priya writes for readers who are thoughtful, slightly weary of self-help that scolds, and ready to treat their priorities with more tenderness and structure. She believes that a good book on habits should leave you feeling both seen and gently challenged, with more options rather than more pressure. Temple of Habits grows from her conviction that devotion is not only for grand causes or special people, but can be woven into the texture of any life willing to pay attention.


















