| name | affirmation-guide |
| description | Build and use an affirmation practice based on Scott Adams' specific methodology. Use when someone says 'how do affirmations work', 'teach me affirmations', 'does Adams really write affirmations', 'how to manifest goals', 'affirmation practice', 'I want to try affirmations', or 'what's Adams' affirmation system.' Teaches Adams' specific 15x daily writing practice with his caveats and track record. |
Affirmation Guide
Build an affirmation practice using Scott Adams' specific methodology from Coffee with Scott Adams and How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big.
The Adams Affirmation System
Adams claims to have used a specific affirmation technique for decades. He does not claim to understand the mechanism. He claims it has worked for him consistently — and he's transparent about the fact that he cannot distinguish between "affirmations cause outcomes" and "affirmations are correlated with the kind of focused thinking that causes outcomes."
His formulation: "I, Scott Adams, will become a famous cartoonist." He wrote this 15 times a day, by hand, before Dilbert existed. He also used affirmations for other goals throughout his life and claims a high hit rate.
Adams's caveats (he is explicit about these):
- He does not know if affirmations work through some mystical mechanism or simply through focused attention and priming
- He does not claim the universe rearranges itself — he acknowledges the possibility that affirmations simply keep the goal top-of-mind and help you notice opportunities
- He does not claim 100% success rate
- He considers the practice essentially zero-risk: "What's the downside? You wasted 5 minutes writing?"
How to Run This
Step 1: Understand the System
Explain Adams's specific practice:
The method:
- Write a specific affirmation 15 times per day
- Write it by hand (Adams is specific about this — typing doesn't count in his version)
- Use first person, present or future tense
- Be specific about the outcome
- Do it every day without fail
The format: "I, [Your Name], will [specific outcome]."
Not: "I want to be successful." (Too vague)
Not: "The universe will bring me wealth." (Not first person, not specific)
Yes: "I, Charlie Deist, will publish a bestselling book by December 2026."
Step 2: Choose the Affirmation
Ask: "What's the specific outcome you want? Not a vague aspiration — a concrete result that you would recognize if it happened."
Guide them to specificity:
- Bad: "I will be rich" (when? how much? rich compared to what?)
- Better: "I will earn $200,000 per year" (specific, measurable)
- Best: "I, [Name], will earn $200,000 per year through [specific means]" (specific, personal, actionable)
Adams's examples from his own life:
- "I, Scott Adams, will become a famous cartoonist" — written before Dilbert
- "I, Scott Adams, will get an MBA from Berkeley" — he got into Berkeley
- "I, Scott Adams, will score in the 94th percentile on the GMAT" — he scored 94th percentile (the specific number matters to the story)
Step 3: Set the Practice
Daily routine:
- Pick a time of day (morning is common, but Adams isn't dogmatic)
- Get a physical notebook or paper
- Write the affirmation 15 times
- That's it — no meditation, no visualization (unless you want to), no ritual
Duration: Adams suggests doing it until the affirmation either comes true or you decide to change it. There is no fixed timeline.
Multiple affirmations: Adams has used multiple simultaneously, but recommends starting with one.
Step 4: Address Skepticism
The user will likely be skeptical. Adams addresses this directly and repeatedly:
"This sounds like magical thinking."
Adams's response: "Maybe it is. But I can tell you my experience, and my experience is that it has worked for me every time I've done it. I can't explain the mechanism. I'm not going to pretend I can."
"Isn't this just confirmation bias?"
Adams: "Possibly. If writing something 15 times a day makes you more likely to notice opportunities, act on them, and persist when things get hard — is that confirmation bias or is that the mechanism?"
"What about all the things that DIDN'T work?"
Adams acknowledges he has not publicly tracked failures. He presents this as a personal practice that has worked for him, not as a scientifically proven method.
The moist robot interpretation: If you prefer a materialist explanation, affirmations may work through:
- Priming: Keeping the goal in working memory so you notice relevant opportunities
- Commitment device: The act of writing daily reinforces identity ("I am someone who is working toward X")
- Attention direction: In a world of infinite distractions, 15 daily repetitions force focus on one outcome
- Behavioral activation: The specificity of the affirmation clarifies what actions to take
Step 5: Build Their Affirmation
Help them craft it:
AFFIRMATION: "I, [Full Name], will [specific measurable outcome] [by when / through what means]."
Daily practice:
- Time: [When they'll do it]
- Method: Handwrite 15 times in [notebook/paper]
- Duration: Until achieved or deliberately changed
Step 6: The Track Record Conversation
Be honest about what Adams claims and what he doesn't:
What he claims:
- He has used this practice for decades
- Multiple specific affirmations have come true (Dilbert, GMAT score, Berkeley MBA)
- He considers the hit rate remarkably high
What he doesn't claim:
- Scientific proof of mechanism
- That it works for everyone
- That it's anything more than his personal experience
- That the universe is listening
What the user should know:
- This is a low-risk, low-cost practice
- Worst case: you spend 5 minutes a day thinking about what you want
- Best case: something unexplainable happens
- Most likely case: focused daily attention on a specific goal makes you more likely to achieve it through conventional means
Closing
"Adams would tell you to just try it. The cost is 5 minutes a day and a notebook. If it works, you'll have a story. If it doesn't, you lost nothing. His advice: try it for 6 months before judging."
Related Skills
- moist-robot-hypothesis — Affirmations work because humans are programmable. The moist robot skill explains the mechanism: repetition, priming, and identity-level inputs that reprogram the biological machine.
- systems-designer — Affirmations are a daily system for identity and focus. The systems designer can help build the broader system that the affirmation practice fits into.
Related Frameworks
affirmation-system.md — The full framework article on Adams's affirmation methodology