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Freedom from Habits - 7 Daily Steps to Transformation
Sheri Zampelli
Do
you have a bad habit you’d like to kick? Whether it’s overeating,
interrupting conversations or quitting before you reach your goal, bad
habits are learned and they can be unlearned. In this article I will
outline a plan for success with seven daily steps to get started and
help you stay on track.
One way to motivate yourself is to focus on who you want to be and why.
Why do you want to stop your bad habit? Why do you want to change your
behavior? How will you benefit? Focusing on what’s positive about change
will help you hang in there during tough times. You may also want to
think about who you DON’T want to be and why. Perhaps your
self-defeating behavior is incongruent with your inner self-image. Think
of the legacy you want to leave behind or what type of person you want
to be when you’re 30, 50 or 70. Where do you see yourself in 5-10 years?
The actions you take today will determine who you become tomorrow.
If you’ve made it far enough in life to learn to read and use a
computer, you’ve probably had a few successes along the way. Reflect
back on previous successes and ask yourself what made success possible?
What motivated you? Consider the losses or gains you will experience by
making current or future changes. Use this information to motivate you
toward future successes.
Your current habits have probably been reinforced over many years. Your
old behaviors likely have built in rewards that keep you stuck. You can
develop new habits by setting small, manageable goals and designing
built-in rewards each time you achieve them. An example of a reward is
saving money in a jar each day you achieve your goal then buying
yourself a treat with the savings. It can also include doing something
you enjoy after each successful day or week. If your new behaviors don’t
have built-in rewards you’ll probably get frustrated and give up.
As you work on your new goals and develop new habits, be prepared for
setbacks and resistance. Don’t beat yourself up when things don’t go
exactly as you had planned, instead, use your failures as cues to what
needs to be different next time. Keep a journal and write in it daily.
Outline what works, what doesn’t, and why. Be flexible and change your
goals as time moves on. Plan ways to avoid future setbacks.
Finally, successfully breaking a habit means that you have to start
thinking of yourself in a new way. Rather than labeling yourself or
defining yourself in terms of your problem, you need to begin seeing
yourself as a success. One tool to use is positive affirmations.
Positive affirmations help you to keep your focus on what you want, not
what you don’t.
One of the important things to remember when using affirmations is the
power of repetition. You should say your affirmations to yourself at
least 50-100 times a day. Some people say, “I tried that positive
self-talk and it doesn’t work.” It’s true, you cannot say your
affirmations 5-10 times a day and expect them to work. The repetition is
what works. Here are some ways to keep focused and honest about your
affirmations.
1. Use an affirmation journal. Write the date at the top of a page and
then write out each of your affirmations and number them as you go, this
way you can really keep track of how many you actually did.
2. Make your own affirmation tapes. Write out a list of affirmations
then speak them into a tape recorder. To make them even more effective,
use background music or sing them. Make them catchy and hard to get out
of your mind. The most effective tapes are endless loop tapes available
at Get an empty jar and add a coin or bean to it each time you say an
affirmation. Or fill a jar with 50-100 coins or beans and transfer them
to another empty jar as you say your affirmations. This way you will see
progress and keep an accurate count of how many affirmations you’ve
actually said.
3. You can also write your affirmations on index cards and post them in
various parts of your home or office to keep you reminded of your new
self-statements. Another way to change your self-image is through
visualization. The more often you can see yourself engaging in your
desired behavior the less likely you will be to sabotage yourself when
changes occur. Visualization helps you to become mentally comfortable
with success so that when true success happens, you are prepared. Take
time each day to see yourself as the type of person you want to become.
Identify yourself with your new behavior. Practice it mentally.
Getting Started:
• Outline the habit you would like to give up and what you’d like to be
doing instead.
• Map out 1-10 CONCRETE steps you can take in the next 21 days to
succeed. Plan them into your daily schedule.
• Write a paragraph or more about where you’d like to be in 5-10 years.
What kind of person do you want to be?
• Write a list of all your successes in life. Keep it and add to it as
you think of more.
• Make a reward list and vow to reward yourself each time you achieve a
goal.
Daily To Do List
1. Remind yourself throughout the day: “I can do something for one day
that would appall me if I had to keep it up for a lifetime.” Put
yourself on a 5-min. basis if necessary.
2. Tell yourself: “Each day that I stick to my plan I move closer to
becoming the person I want to be.” “I am becoming a new person. I let
the old me go free. It no longer suits my personality.”
3. Write out your successes daily.
4. Give yourself rewards for each success. Acknowledge your progress.
5. Write about setbacks you had. Try to remember what you were thinking,
or doing that may have provoked the setback. Plan a way to resolve this
in the future.
6. Set aside 15-20 minutes daily to vividly imagine yourself doing your
new behavior or achieving your desired goal. Each time you do this, list
it in your success journal.
7. Write, speak or read at least 50-100 affirmations daily. Use a jar,
stickers, cards, beans or a journal to keep an accurate, truthful count.
You might think to yourself, “This will never work or this is too easy
or this will take too long.” But you can only truly make those comments
after you have put this strategy to work for a bare minimum of 30-days.
The greatest results will come if you do exercises like this everyday,
non-stop from now on. What you do have to lose by trying?
Copyright 2006 Sheri
Zampelli
Article Directory:
www.articledashboard.com
Sheri O. Zampelli, M.S., CCH is the author of From
Sabotage to Success, How to Overcome Self-Defeating Behaviors and Reach
Your True Potential. For weekly motivation check out her Podcast and
Weekly Tips at
www.donateyourweight.com
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