The Power of Habit
The
Power of Habit
It is
through the power of habit that every act we do affect over character. This is
why habit is called second nature; habit adds new tendencies, which became an
important part in the sun total of once character.
The
tendency to repeat too action that we have been in the habits of doing is seer
in our most trivial concern, as well as in more important matter, as well as in
more important matter.
People
get into habit of sitting, standing and lying in certain postures, which are
then said to be characteristics.
Knowledge of the power of habit is the chief means by which
animals are trained to be useful to man. It is by habit that the Gavaly house
is trained wild to keep his place in the same way as his horse, to give rapid
obedience to the word of command.
The importance of habit is just as great in forming moral
character as in the training of soldier and horses to automatic obedience to
the word of command. All moralists recognize the fact that it is possible for
men to became better or worse by the cultivation of good or bad habits, infact,
that it is just this while makes moral progress and deterioration possible. A
man who yields to temptation may at first do so with reluctance, but after
yielding once or twice, resistance become more difficult until at last by
continues submission he is to completely enslaved that has no control over his
evil passions. On the contrary, if he had conquered the first temptation, his
will would have thereby become stranger, and after frequent victories, he would
have been so habituated to self- control that the temptation, which had first
tried him, would have lose then attractive power and then he might have led his
moral will, strengthened by the habit of victory, to still greater moral
efforts.
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