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Most habit plans fail for a boring reason: they are built for calm weeks. When pressure hits, the routine is too big, too rigid, and too dependent on motivation, so it breaks. The Habit Ladder is a practical guide to building routines in layers so they can shrink without disappearing - and grow again when life makes room. Instead of chasing perfect streaks, you will learn how to protect the smallest action that keeps you moving.
Priya Dhanvel shows you how to define habit minimums you can do even on a hard day, then turn them into a scaled habit plan with clear rungs for progress. You will design fallback routines for travel, illness, deadlines, and low-energy periods, so you do not have to choose between "all in" and "nothing". You will also learn safe habit stacking, simple environment design tweaks that reduce friction, and a lightweight tracking system that helps you adjust without obsessing.
This book is for anyone who wants consistency under pressure: busy professionals, parents and carers, students, creatives, and anyone tired of restarting. With a short weekly habit review, you will keep your ladder aligned to your real schedule and practise burnout prevention as a feature of the system, not a separate project. The result is not a stricter life, but a sturdier one: routines that support you through changing seasons, and a calmer way to build long-term change.

The Habit Ladder

SKU: 9789377787516
$23.99 Regular Price
$19.10Sale Price
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  • Priya Dhanvel writes about the practical side of change: what people can do on ordinary days, not just ideal ones. Her work is shaped by the experience many readers know well - trying to improve while managing unpredictable weeks, shifting responsibilities, and the quiet pressure to be "consistent" in a way that often ignores real life. She is especially interested in small actions that keep momentum alive, and in designing routines that do not collapse the moment life gets busy. Priya approaches habit-building as craft rather than contest. Instead of asking for more discipline, she looks for better defaults: clearer cues, lighter minimums, kinder recovery plans, and a way to scale that respects energy and attention. She draws inspiration from traditions where steady practice matters more than intensity - the slow accumulation of skill seen in everyday rituals, from morning tea to handwritten lists to the patient repetition behind any art learned over time. Her guiding belief is simple: sustainable habits should make life feel more workable, not more judged.

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