Today and tomorrow you’ll attempt to train yourself to take pleasure in acting virtuously. Continue cultivating the virtue you’ve been focusing on this week, but now select one more. This should be a character strength you expect it will be difficult for you to exhibit, though one that you identify with and want to develop, like the virtue you selected on Day 2. Again, if you need a list of virtues, see the addendum at the end of Day 1.
Your efforts today to turn your virtues into habits should involve the same method you’ve been employing for the past two days: deliberate action and the use of Aristotle’s doctrine of the mean. However, you now need to make a special effort to take pleasure—or at least not feel pain—in behaving virtuously.
Much here will probably depend on the degree to which you identify (or want to identify) with your chosen virtues. Remind yourself today why you find it important to develop these character strengths, and throughout the day ask yourself whether the pleasure you get from acting virtuously differs in quality (not simply in quantity) from the pleasure you get from other pleasure-providing activities.
Create another virtue log for yourself today in addition to the one you created on Day 2. Now add another column to both logs labelled “pleasure,” resembling the table in the image below. Fill out both logs with the usual information: the actions you did and the time when you completed them. But now also note, on a scale of 1-10, the pleasure that you took in completing these actions.