At any moment, at any time, on any day of the week, you can choose to do something differently. There is no rule with habit change – it does not take 2 weeks, 21 days, or 1,000 hours. Iβve stopped behaviors that Iβve been doing for years in a moment, Iβve also taken months to wean myself away from whatever habit I was doing. That said, there is an underlying framework to successful behavior change that includes 4 components. I will discuss all pieces in this blog.
The backbone or framework of it all is what I call your WHYspiration. Why are you inspired to change a habit? Get real clear on why you want what you want and your path towards arriving there will be smoother. Ask yourself: Why do you want what you want? How will your life be different when you make that change? Why have you not made that change yet? What are you willing to do to get where you want to be? How strong is your Whyspiration?Β Knowing why you want what you want, your Whyspiration, is crucial because of how our brain is wired. Our brainβs entire goal is for us to survive; to make it to the next day alive. It does this by repeating over and over what weβve always done because, hey, look, youβre still alive, right? Our brain is literally wired for survival. Thatβs itβs goal. Itβs not here to make sure we are thriving in our life or that we love how we’re spending our days. It is here to make sure we donβt run across a tiger in the woods. In fact, if our brain had itsβ way, weβd spend our days in bed with popcorn, Netflix, and a remote. Truly. Thatβs safe, comfortable and since weβve done it before and survived, itβs easy. In order to change habits, we have to practice different behaviors and get out of the βhabit of easyβ. We have to look at discomfort as a sign that weβre on the right path to that better version of ourselves. Here are the four ingredients of habit change to get started on that journey:
1) Accountability: You need someone by your side to keep you accountable. Your brain is an excuse generator. It is an expert at convincing you why you need to keep doing what youβve been doing. Itβs an expert at convincing you that your βnew planβ is ridiculous and pointing out the reasons why you should not change what you’ve been doing. Again, your brain isnβt evil. Itβs trying to keep you alive. What it doesnβt realize is that we donβt need to stay alone and in bed with Netflix to survive. There arenβt tigers out in the wild anymore. Itβs time for some change. Get a coach or a friend to hold you accountable to your goals. You will get faster and more sustainable results with a professional coach (I know a great one!?) just as you will get better at tennis when you hire a tennis coach versus ask your buddy who knows as much about tennis as you. If you hire a coach, theyβll help you set small, achievable goals. If you work with a friend, tell them your goals. Get specific. Tell them how they can help you (ask them if you can text them after youβve gone to the gym or when you get in bed by 10).
Left alone, you will continue to do what youβve always done.
Saying our goals aloud can be scary and telling them to someone else can be even scarier but, as Iβve said before, nothing phenomenal happens in our comfort zone. Feel the fear and do it anyways.Β
2) Visualize: What will your life be like when you shift that habit? How will your days be different? Close your eyes and get clear on what your day will look like and, even better, what youβll feel like. Athletes are constantly trained to close their eyes and visualize their winning race down to every micro-detail. What will the uniform feel like, what will your breath sound like, what will your body feel like as it gets to the finish line first, who will be watching you, how will it feel when the winning medal is hung around your neck? I want you to visualize that also. Take something as simple as getting to bed earlier. Visualize it. Where will your phone be? Visualize yourself pouring your sleepy time tea. What excuses will your brain come up with to stay up late? What will you do? How will you feel as you get under the covers and look at the earlier time on the clock? How will your body feel as it drifts off to sleep? How will you feel in the morning when you know you did what you said youβd do? You get the point. Visualize it and make it happen. Expect your brain to resist and visualize how youβll override it.Β
3) Mindset Shift: Get your mind on your side. If you think you can or think you can’t, you’re right.Β I hear from so many clients that they canβt lose weight. When I ask why, they say because they never have before. Uh, helloβ¦if I thought I couldnβt write a blog because I never had before, where would I be now? If, as a 1 year old, I thought I couldnβt walk because I never have before, where would I be? You get the point. The fact that we havenβt yet, doesnβt mean we canβt ever. What we think about our future is what it will be. If we think we can or think we canβt, weβre right. Edison said: βIβve never failed. I just found 10,000 ways that didnβt work.β
When we shift from seeing our past attempts as failures but as learning experiences, we move from hopeless to hopeful.
Take my clients who want to lose weight. When they can look at their past as a lesson (what they did that did work and didnβt work) versus evidence that theyβll never succeed, they begin to see that success is possible.Β I also love Einsteinβs quote: βFailure doesnβt mean youβre a failure. It means you havenβt succeeded yet.β
4) Take Action Every Damn Day: No matter your new habit, take action every single day. If you are doing sit-ups to strengthen your back, do some every day. If you are scheduling your days to bring calmness to your system, write out your schedule every single day. If you are cutting back on sugar or alcohol in your diet, cut back in some way every day. If you are lessening the influence Facebook has in your life, set specific time goals every single day. Get specific and start today. The longer you sit and think about what you βshouldβ do, the less likely it is that youβll do it. Start small but get started. A body in motion stays in motion. Set yourself up for success by choosing do-able goals.Β
There you go: how to start a new habit to evolve your wonderful self to your next best version. Small hinges move large doors. Small steps create big change. Donβt allow your brain to convince you to stay where you are so that you get to this time next year and beat yourself up further. You are reading this blog for a reason. Your inner warrior is speaking. We are here to evolve and it is up to us to lead our brain in that direction. Change occurs when we take small actions consistently. How can you get started today?
If youβre interested in getting more conscious in your life, examining the thoughts youβre thinking, understanding why you do what you do, learning how your past is influencing your present, sign up to take my 10-Day Cleanse for Conscious Living. Itβs a ten-day online course that you can take anywhere (on the beach!). I’m putting it on crazy sale for the month of June because I so believe in the power of YOU! Use the coupon code JUNE and then commit to yourself. Do it for you, for your family, or for your job. It doesnβt matter your reasons to do it. Just Do It.
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