One rule that completely changed how I think about progress is the 1% rule from James Clearās Atomic Habits. It sounds simpleāget 1% better every dayābut once you understand whatās behind it, itās kind of mind-blowing.
Hereās why: When you improve by just 1% each day, youāre not just stacking habitsāyouāre multiplying results over time. And this is where things get a little nerdy (in the best way), so grab your math brain.
Letās break it down.
Improving by 1% each day means multiplying your progress by 1.01 daily (because 1% = 0.01). Thatās not much at first:
- Day 1: 1 Ć 1.01 = 1.01
- Day 2: 1.01 Ć 1.01 = 1.0201
- Day 3: 1.0201 Ć 1.01 = 1.0303
⦠but keep going, and the numbers take off.
After one full year, the math looks like this:
1 Ć (1.01)^365 ā 37.78

Thatās nearly 38 times betterājust by making small, consistent improvements. Thatās compound growth in action. Itās not about working harder every single dayāitās about building on what you already did the day before.
This principle works everywhere: fitness, finances, relationships, rehab, even your mindset. But hereās the catch: donāt take it too literally. One push-up a day wonāt turn you into an athleteābut the mindset behind it is what really matters.
To make it work, focus on three things:
- Start small. Pick one thing that feels manageable. Donāt try to overhaul everything at once.
- Stay consistent. Progress might feel slow at first, but it builds momentum.
- Track your growth. Noticing the small wins keeps you motivated and shows you how far you’ve come.
I unknowingly applied this exact mindset during my anatomy prepāand it changed everything. Instead of cramming, I chipped away at the material, little by little. Hereās how I broke it down:
- One system at a time. I focused on muscle groups, bones, and nerves separately. I used cue cards (though honestly, if I had known about Anki back then, Iād have switched in a heartbeat).
- Active recall + spaced repetition. I spent just 10ā15 minutes each day reviewing my cards. It didnāt feel like much, but it stuck.
- Gamify your progress. I turned it into a game using a modified version of the GROW method, so I always knew which areas needed more attention and avoid wasting time on what I already know.
By the end, I had nothing left to cramāI finished my revision two days early and felt calm walking into the exam. Thatās what small, consistent action can do.
Understanding the 1% rule is one thingāputting it into practice is where the real change happens. Whether youāre studying, training, or building any habit, small steps can create big momentum over time. So letās make it practical.
š§Ŗ Letās Experiment
Progress adds up.
You donāt need giant leapsājust small, intentional steps each day.
Change doesnāt have to feel overwhelming. Instead of aiming for perfection, aim for momentum. One small win a day can compound into real, lasting progressāwhether you’re studying anatomy or building a new habit.
šÆ Try This:
Pick one topicājust oneāthat feels manageable. Spend 10ā15 minutes reviewing it with flashcards or Anki. Use active recall (quizzing yourself) instead of rereading. Once you’ve reviewed it twice, sort it using a simplified version of the GROW Method: what you got, what you still need to review, what you’re okay with, and what you wonāt forget. Tackle the tricky stuff first tomorrow.
š§ Final Thought:
You donāt need to do it all at once. The magic is in showing up consistentlyābecause even 1% a day adds up to something remarkable.
Keep it simple, stay curious, and keep learningāyouāve got this.
Take care,
Carina š¦

2 thoughts on “š± How to Turn 1% Efforts Into Long-Term Success.”