We are suckers for streaks. Think of Joe DiMaggio’s hitting streak, the Celtic’s eight straight NBA Championships, or Wayne Gretzky’s consecutive game scoring streak to just name a few from sports alone.
But it isn’t just in sports that we track streaks. One of the most tracked and promoted metrics on learning apps like Duolingo is the “consecutive days” streak that users build and work to maintain. Continuing and extending this streak, as well as the fear of breaking it, keeps their users (including me) logging in day after day. It is what makes these apps “sticky” and helps them achieve multi-billion-dollar valuations.
But I am learning that for me, streaks can also have their downside. This may just be a result of my somewhat compulsive personality, but in my pursuit of streaks I can find I lose sight of why the streak or activity in question is or was important to me in the first place.
One example is my consecutive days swimming in the ocean since we relocated to Bermuda. Since I became a resident here in October of 2020, I have swum in the ocean every single day I have been on the island. There are days I don’t really feel like it (you know, when a hurricane is coming through!), and yet, to not break the streak, I hop in to make sure I get at least a few hundred meters in. Why?
The original answer was that I did not want to take this opportunity for granted. I did not want to become so inured to living on an island that I stopped taking advantage of the ocean that is my backyard. I wanted to make sure I still appreciated and embraced the amazing opportunity that living here presented.
The question is, is my streak now getting in the way of that? Making sure I don’t take something for granted, that I am appreciative of the opportunity, is the goal, not the streak. The streak was initially just a proxy for measuring that. Maybe now that proxy measurement is getting in the way of the actual goal. I focused on what was easy to see, and lost sight of what I was actually pursuing in the first place.
The same is perhaps true for my exercising. The day Talulla was born, I had my shirt off for skin-to-skin with her, and the nurse said: “make sure you don’t get a Dad bod now!” To ward this off, I have not missed a day of working out since that day, literally. That might be the right thing, but it might also mean that 6+ years in, working out when I am healthy and when I am sick, I am now chronically overtrained. Is that streak helping? It might instead be getting in the way of the objective.
Or my Duolingo streak. Now more than 365 days long, is my compulsive need to extend it daily helping in my ultimate goal? I would have to unpack that. I started studying Mandarin because Talulla was studying it, and I wanted to be able to do that with her. If I am pressed for time, and find myself in the app instead of spending time with her, again, is the streak helping me or hurting me in what I really want to achieve?
These are certainly specific and personal questions to me and my life, but I think the same questions or at least types of questions are applicable more broadly. What in our lives are we doing and chasing because we have done and chased them in the past? How often do we revisit why we are doing or chasing them, and if the activity in question is the right or best way to do that?
For me, I am thinking through these now, but in transparency, I still haven’t “broken” any of the three streaks above. That being said, the next time a hurricane hits? You might find me on dry land, not in the stormy waters.