Question
How do I apply the idea that maintenance of automated behaviors?
Quick Answer
Conduct a quarterly maintenance review of your five most deeply automated behaviors — the ones that run with virtually zero conscious effort. For each behavior, answer four diagnostic questions in writing: (1) Is this behavior still serving the function it was originally designed to serve? (2) Has.
The most direct way to practice is through a focused exercise: Conduct a quarterly maintenance review of your five most deeply automated behaviors — the ones that run with virtually zero conscious effort. For each behavior, answer four diagnostic questions in writing: (1) Is this behavior still serving the function it was originally designed to serve? (2) Has the context in which this behavior operates changed materially since I last reviewed it? (3) Does the quality of output from this behavior still meet the excellence standard from L-1187? (4) If I were designing this behavior from scratch today, would I design it the same way? Any behavior that receives a "no" on questions 1, 3, or 4, or a "yes" on question 2, gets flagged for adaptation. Do not attempt to fix anything during the review. The purpose is diagnostic clarity. Schedule a separate session for each flagged behavior to design the update.
Common pitfall: Assuming that a well-automated behavior is a permanently solved problem. The deeper the automation, the more invisible it becomes — and the more invisible it becomes, the less likely you are to notice when it drifts out of alignment with your current goals, context, or standards. The failure is not that the behavior breaks. The failure is that it continues executing flawlessly while the world it was designed for quietly disappears.
This practice connects to Phase 60 (Automated Mastery) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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