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Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of One Habit a Day by Ashdin Doctor

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 10 minutes ago
  • 3 min read

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Some books arrive in your life like a loud motivational speaker with a mic that’s a notch too high. Others slip in quietly, pull out a chair, order cutting chai, and say, “Listen, try this one small thing today.” One Habit a Day belongs firmly to the second category.

 

I remember reading it late one evening, phone on silent, the house finally exhaling after a long day. No dramatic before-and-after promises. No “change your life by tomorrow” bravado. Just a steady, calm voice — the kind that doesn’t rush you, doesn’t judge you, and doesn’t pretend you’re broken.

 

That voice, of course, belongs to Ashdin Doctor — better known as The Habit Coach™. If you’ve ever stumbled upon his podcast during a commute or a restless morning walk, you’ll recognize the tone instantly. It’s familiar, grounded, lightly humorous, and deeply reassuring. The book feels less like a self-help manual and more like a curated extension of his podcast — distilled, slowed down, and given space to breathe.

 

At its core, One Habit a Day offers exactly what the title promises: 31 habits, one for each day, designed to gently nudge your life in a better direction. Not overhaul. Not revolution. Nudge. And that word matters. These habits aren’t exotic or intimidating. They’re deceptively simple — the kind that make you nod and think, “Oh. I already knew this… didn’t I?” And yet, knowing and doing remain distant cousins.

 

Ashdin doesn’t pretend otherwise. He doesn’t harp. He doesn’t sermonize. Each chapter is succinct, purposeful, and ends with a small exercise — a prompt that quietly asks you to stop reading and start noticing. The exercises aren’t flashy, but they linger. Like a pebble in your shoe. You feel them long after the page is turned.

 

What I particularly enjoyed was how Ashdin uses etymology and everyday metaphors to keep things interesting. Habits here aren’t abstract concepts; they’re lived ideas. A “shark” isn’t marine biology — it’s motivation with teeth. “Create vs Compete” isn’t a buzzword — it’s a mirror held up to our constant comparison culture. “Stop Whining” lands not as a scolding, but as an invitation to reclaim agency.

 

The writing style mirrors the philosophy. Clean. Conversational. Unpretentious. There’s no academic stiffness, no jargon-laden paragraphs trying to impress you. Instead, Ashdin sprinkles in personal experiences, moments from his journey, and insights gathered from working with people across the world. You can almost hear the soft pause between sentences — that coaching silence where reflection happens.

 

Structurally, the book is forgiving. You don’t have to read it cover to cover. You can dip in, skip around, linger on what resonates, ignore what doesn’t — and that’s intentional. Depending on where you are in life, some habits will feel urgent, others irrelevant. This isn’t a flaw; it’s the design. Growth, after all, is contextual.

 

Emotionally, the book doesn’t aim to overwhelm. Instead, it gently slows you down. There were moments when I caught myself rereading a line, not because it was profound in a quotable way, but because it quietly named something I’d been doing on autopilot. Those pauses — those small internal nods — became the real reward.

 

That said, this is not a book for the know-it-all mindset. If you’re hunting for earth-shattering revelations or radical frameworks, you might feel underwhelmed. The habits here are familiar. The magic lies not in novelty, but in consistency and clarity. For some readers, that may feel too soft. For others — especially those tired of being shouted at by productivity culture — it will feel like relief.

 

One strength worth highlighting is how humane the book feels. Ashdin doesn’t position himself as a guru on a pedestal. He feels like a fellow traveller — a few steps ahead, waving back, saying, “This worked for me. Try it if you like.” The inclusion of fun, reflective prompts reinforces this sense of companionship rather than instruction.

 

As I closed the book, I didn’t feel transformed. I felt steadier. And that, perhaps, is its quiet triumph. In a world obsessed with dramatic change, One Habit a Day reminds us that real transformation often happens in whispers — in the habits we repeat when no one is watching.

 

If you’re open to exploring yourself, to becoming a slightly better version of who you already are, this book might just sit beside you like a patient friend. No pressure. No hype. Just one habit today. And maybe another tomorrow.

 

 

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