Habit-Creation Cheat Sheet
By Tergar Meditation Community • 2 min read

We often assume that if we fail to stick to a new routine — whether it’s meditation, exercise, or a creative project — it’s because we lack willpower. We blame ourselves for not being disciplined enough.
But according to Mingyur Rinpoche, falling off the wagon isn’t a personal moral failure; it is simply the force of our old habits. “Liking” the idea of meditation is good, but it isn’t enough. Inspiration is fleeting, but habit determines consistency.
We don’t need more willpower; we need a better strategy to rewire our neural pathways.
Here is a “cheat sheet” based on Mingyur Rinpoche’s teachings to help you build a practice that sticks.
How to Build a New Meditation Habit
1. Take it Step by Step
The most common mistake is starting with a goal that is too big (an hour a day) or looking too far ahead (doing this “forever”).
The Timeline of Change
2. Make It Impossible to Forget
You don’t need a monastery to meditate. Rinpoche suggests meditating “short times, many times” — brief moments of awareness (3 to 10 seconds) repeated frequently throughout the day. The more often you remember, the stronger the habit becomes.
External Reminders
Daily Life Cues — turn common activities into triggers for a 3-second check-in:
3. Train the Monkey Mind
Your mind will wander. Rinpoche calls our overactive mind the “monkey mind.” The goal isn’t to silence the monkey, but to give it a part-time job, such as listening to sound or feeling the breath.
4. Troubleshooting: When it Feels Hard
Resistance is just old habit energy leaving the body. It is not a sign that something is wrong.
The Core Formula
If you boil it all down, the formula for a new meditation habit looks like this:
Small Steps × Daily Repetition × Gentle Persistence = New Habit
December 2025
Learn meditation under the skillful guidance of world-renowned teacher Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche at your own pace.

“I could see how the people at the hospice have challenges, just like others, and they don’t have access to meditation.” – Stefan Markov
There’s an inextricable relationship between our minds and our external world. Whether we perceive our environment as gorgeous or hideous, useful or a hindrance, neutral or deeply meaningful — it all depends on what’s within us. If you can perceive it, it’s happening in your mind.
A single book, a long-held dream of adventure, and a ticket to Nepal—this is the story of how an outward search for meaning became a journey inward and finding one’s inner sun.
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