Thursday, 18 July 2013

18 Tricks to Make New Habits Stick

While we are on the subject of Habits, here is an article I found on LifeHacker:

18 Tricks to Make New Habits Stick


Wouldn’t it be nice to have everything run on autopilot? Chores, exercise, eating healthy and getting your work done just happening automatically. If you program behaviors as new habits you can take out the struggle.

With a small amount of initial discipline, you can create a new habit that requires little effort to maintain. Here are some tips for creating new habits and making them stick:

1. Commit to Thirty Days3-4 weeks is all the time you need to make a habit automatic. If you can make it through the initial conditioning phase, it becomes much easier to sustain. A month is a good block of time to commit to a change since it easily fits in your calendar.

2. Make it Daily – Consistency is critical if you want to make a habit stick. If you want to start exercising, go to the gym every day for your first thirty days. Going a couple times will make it harder to form the habit. Activities you do every few days are trickier to lock in as habits.

3. Start Simple – Don’t try to completely change your life in one day. It is easy to get over-motivated and take on too much. If you wanted to study two hours a day, first make the habit to go for thirty minutes and build on that.

4. Remind Yourself – Around two weeks into your commitment it can be easy to forget. Place reminders to execute your habit each day or you might miss a few days. If you miss time it defeats the purpose of setting a habit to begin with.

5. Stay Consistent – The more consistent your habit the easier it will be to stick. If you want to start exercising, try going at the same time, to the same place for your thirty days. When cues like time of day, place and circumstances are the same in each case it is easier to stick.

6. Get a Buddy – Find someone who will go along with you and keep you motivated if you feel like quitting.

7. Form a Trigger – A trigger is a ritual you use right before executing your habit. If you wanted to wake up earlier, this could mean waking up in exactly the same way each morning. If you wanted to quit smoking you could practice snapping your fingers each time you felt the urge to pick up a cigarette.

8. Replace Lost Needs - If you are giving up something in your habit, make sure you are adequately replacing any needs you’ve lost. If watching television gave you a way to relax, you could take up meditation or reading as a way to replace that same need.

9. Be Imperfect – Don’t expect all your attempts to change habits to be successful immediately. It took me four independent tries before I started exercising regularly. Now I love it. Try your best, but expect a few bumps along the way.

10. Use “But” – A prominent habit changing therapist once told me this great technique for changing bad thought patterns. When you start to think negative thoughts, use the word “but” to interrupt it. “I’m no good at this, but, if I work at it I might get better later.”

11. Remove Temptation - Restructure your environment so it won’t tempt you in the first thirty days. Remove junk food from your house, cancel your cable subscription, throw out the cigarettes so you won’t need to struggle with willpower later.

12. Associate With Role Models - Spend more time with people who model the habits you want to mirror. A recent study found that having an obese friend indicated you were more likely to become fat. You become what you spend time around.

13. Run it as an Experiment - Withhold judgment until after a month has past and use it as an experiment in behavior. Experiments can’t fail, they just have different results so it will give you a different perspective on changing your habit.

14. Swish - A technique from NLP. Visualize yourself performing the bad habit. Next visualize yourself pushing aside the bad habit and performing an alternative. Finally, end that sequence with an image of yourself in a highly positive state. See yourself picking up the cigarette, see yourself putting it down and snapping your fingers, finally visualize yourself running and breathing free. Do it a few times until you automatically go through the pattern before executing the old habit.

15. Write it Down – A piece of paper with a resolution on it isn’t that important. Writing that resolution is. Writing makes your ideas more clear and focuses you on your end result.

16. Know the Benefits - Familiarize yourself with the benefits of making a change. Get books that show the benefits of regular exercise. Notice any changes in energy levels after you take on a new diet. Imagine getting better grades after improving your study habits.

17. Know the Pain – You should also be aware of the consequences. Exposing yourself to realistic information about the downsides of not making a change will give you added motivation.


18. Do it For Yourself - Don’t worry about all the things you “should” have as habits. Instead tool your habits towards your goals and the things that motivate you. Weak guilt and empty resolutions aren’t enough.


Friday, 12 July 2013

How to break the Cookie Habit


On this journey of being an entrepreneur, I'm noticing I have many habits - some of them good, some of them bad habits that I need to change. Developing good habits that should lead me to success, and reprogramming the bad habits is something I want to do.  This video helps with that process!


How to break the Cookie Habit

How Habits Work

How to break the cookie habit - Charles Duhigg



What are your Habits?

This video also lead me to:  http://charlesduhigg.com/additional-resources/ which has flowcharts explaining How to Break a Habit and How to Make a Habit  - worth a look!

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Running your own business AKA "Turbocharged" Personal Growth and Development!

Working in a job

I hated my job. It was simple. I wanted to be doing something else. I wanted to be in control of my life, I wanted to be free to spend my time my way, not have it dictated to me by my job:

"You must be in the office by 9 am, and remain there until almost 6 pm, you must give each day of your life to this job, no matter if your heart wants to be free to go walk in the park on a sunny day, or if you want to read a book, or chat to that interesting person you've encountered..."


YOUR LIFE IS MINE!

I resented this, while also being grateful that I had a job in the first place - happy that I had something that gave me money to enjoy and people to interact with on a daily basis. Happy that I had something that challenged me and gave my brain a work-out! Your job is a funny thing. It's a love/hate relationship! At the end of the day I mainly resented HOW MUCH TIME it took from the rest of my life. I think I would have been quite happy with a 3 day working week. Dream jobs like that don't seem to exist in my industry, so I made the break, quit my job to become an Entrepreneur. Why? Because I valued FREEDOM more than the stability and security of nine to five. Also, I wanted to grow to be the best that I can be, and this is "turbocharging" my growth and personal development.

Working for myself

There have been so many learnings I almost don't know where to start! I knew before I started that I would learn so much about myself during this time, I knew I would need to grow and develop phenomenally in a short space of time. There were skills I simply did not have that I would need to develop quickly. I understood it would be a challenge. The interesting thing is, what I suspected the challenges would be, and what they actually turned out to be, were so different! I was way off the mark! I couldn't believe the things I missed from being an employee.

Issues I expected to encounter:

  • Missing the camaraderie of my work mates (big change to be working alone from home with no-one to talk to all day, particularly for a social creature such as myself.)
  • Missing my regular pay cheque!  (Now it would all be up to me - bit scary that!)
  • potentially allowing myself to be distracted from the work I should be doing - Distraction was an issue I expected to encounter (and I have been right about this one!)
  • Missing the daily commute (I know this sounds weird, but it got me out of the house each day, irrespective of the weather, and gave me an opportunity to interact with humanity, or read my book while on the train, and have a little bit of exercise and fresh air.) I'd notice the buds on the trees in Spring, eagerly watching out for signs of Summer on the way, I'd notice the colour of the leaves change as Summer came to an end. I'd take in the sights and smells each day. I knew I'd miss that.
  • Procrastination: I knew I'd have to watch this carefully as I can tend to avoid doing the difficult and boring tasks that I am not interested in, and it will cause me to fail!

Stuff I had no idea I'd miss:

  • Reporting back to someone. (There are days when you do heaps of good work, and feel proud of your achievements and progress, I miss the opportunity to share this win with someone and the 'feel good' feelings around that.) This really surprised me because I'd always perceived myself as someone who worked autonomously and didn't need management. I had no idea that I used to get approval and recognition from others.  I was completely unaware that that was a need in me.  It was only when there was no chance of it being fulfilled, that I became aware of the need!
  • the biscuits in the canteen!  (They weren't great, but funny how months later you miss their taste!)
  • the 'imposed' structure on my day.  I resented it, so imagine my surprise when I found I missed it?!  It meant I got up at a regular time, unlike these days.
  • People to bounce ideas off / others to discuss issues with. I've noticed a tendency to 'get stuck' because of an issue - I know if I just had someone to explain the issue to, I'd instantly come up with the answer whilst I was discussing it. I hadn't realised I used the process of describing the issue to another as my method to see the problem (and therefore the appropriate solution) more clearly. As a way around this issue, I'm considering talking to a stuffed toy!  lol!  I know the answers are inside me, i'm just not sure how to tap into them without the verbalising process!  Really happy to hear your suggestions on this one folks!

Other Challenges:

  • Getting disheartened.  The journey can sometimes seem very, very long and occasionally I have wished for a bit of encouragement from someone.  Something to re-introduce the vigor and momentum. Constantly being self-motivated can be difficult at times, when progress is slower than you'd like.  It's easy to get disheartened and feel like giving up, or think "This is never going to work, it's too hard."
  • Not being able to see the value (for others) in my work.  Had to turn this one round pretty quickly in order to become productive again.
  • "Fantasy land" expectations:  I had this idea that once I quit my job life would be perfect - I'd have time to exercise, time to prepare and eat healthy meals, time to meditate, read books, watch movies.  Time to catch up with friends without being stressed from the working day.  Gee, life was going to be so good, that all my wrinkles would disappear and my greying hair would start to vanish as my body recovered from the years of bad diet and lack of sleep! The new refreshed me would look ten years younger!  Because I'd meditate every day, my mind and consciousness would expand.  I'd be more peaceful and tap into that inner Wisdom.  I'd be this youthful, wise woman and BE THE BEST ME THAT I COULD BE! That was what life was going to be like, when I was in control of my own destiny... !     Ha!

The reality

I have certainly learnt so much about myself.  About my failings, my (previously unconscious) needs, my strengths, my weaknesses.  The most surprising one, is I've learnt just how important discipline and routine is!  For someone who values Freedom and tends to live a somewhat disorganised/chaotic and exciting life, that was a bit of a shock.  I must say, it's a most interesting journey and I am delighted and blessed to be able to do this.