How to Break Bad Habits and Create Good Ones
Gregg Vanourek
Personal development & leadership excellence. Helping you craft your life & work. Co-author, LIFE Entrepreneurs & Triple Crown Leadership. Author, TEDx speaker, teacher. New book in the works on the traps of living.
Got bad habits? You probably do. And you’re not alone.
Are you in the habit of avoiding hard or uncomfortable things, or people? Dispensing advice without being asked?
Not getting enough fresh air and sunshine? Not exercising and moving enough? Sitting too much? Procrastinating? Being late or doing things at the last minute?
Blaming others instead of taking responsibility and finding solutions? Complaining? Doubting yourself ? Compulsively using your smartphone ?
Okay, so you have some bad habits.
Unfortunately, those bad habits can add up to big problems over time: unhappiness, poor health, feeling stuck, lower performance, and relationship harm.
In dealing with bad habits, it’s not as simple as summoning your willpower so you can be stronger when faced with temptation or maladaptive routines. You need more sustainable strategies since your willpower can erode over time.
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How to Break Bad Habits and Create Good Ones
Thankfully, there are many ways to break bad habits and create good ones. Here are 15 practical approaches:
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1. Begin by believing you can change your habits.
Also, believe that if you do so, you’re likely to see powerful results. It all starts with mindset.
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2. Study your bad habits.
Develop self-awareness and get clear on the patterns of your bad habits: What triggers them? How and when? Where? With whom? How often?
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3. Determine the underlying drivers of your bad habits and address those deeper issues.
If stress is prompting one or more bad habits, deal directly with the person or issue that’s causing the stress. That will eliminate the need for a habitual coping mechanism.
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4. Focus on “keystone habits,” since they affect several areas of your life.
In The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg wrote about “keystone habits” that can cause widespread shifts in other areas. For example, he cites the following research about leading keystone habits: A habit of regular exercise often leads people to eat better, become more productive at work, show more patience with others, report feeling less stressed, use credit cards less, and smoke less. The habit of eating together as a family is associated with children having more confidence and emotional control, as well as better homework skills and grades. And the habit of making our beds each morning is associated with higher productivity and a greater sense of well-being and financial discipline.
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5. Prime your environment to promote good habits and prevent bad ones.
Set out your workout clothes and gear the night before so you’re ready to exercise in the morning. Or prepare healthy meals on weekends so they’re ready for the week ahead. Place your smartphone in a different room when you need to focus so you’re not tempted by notifications.
“Environment is the invisible hand that shapes human behavior…. Create an environment where doing the right thing is as easy as possible.” -James Clear, writer and speaker
6. Develop systems that promote good habits instead of simply setting goals and trying to reach them.
Automate things you do over and over. Set up processes that help you eliminate non-essential tasks and avoid repetition. Use your calendar to ensure you’re focusing on the right things at the right time.
“If you want better results, then forget about setting goals. Focus on your system instead…. You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” -James Clear
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7. Follow the four laws of behavior change:
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8. Focus on who you wish to become through your good habits and systems, not on what you want to achieve.
There’s something powerful about this one. If you become the kind of person who exercises every day, or who eats healthy food, it starts to become engrained and automatic. You don’t have to keep fighting for it. You live into it.
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“Your identity emerges out of your habits. Every action is a vote for the type of person you wish to become.” -James Clear
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9. Focus on replacing bad habits with good habits instead of breaking your bad habits.
For me, replacing a hazy morning of checking the news or email with an intentional morning of reading, meditation, and prayer has been a gamechanger. A simple replacement can go a long way.
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10. Eliminate the triggers that your brain associates with the bad habit.
Move the remote control away from the TV. Turn off your notifications. Don’t keep junk snacks in the pantry.
11. Leverage technology to help automate your habits.
Build good habits into your calendar and set reminders for them.
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12. Find an accountability partner to help you with habits.
Make joint commitments. Check in regularly to hold each other accountable. Celebrate progress and victories together.
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13. Surround yourself with people who live the way you want.
One powerful reason this works is that you don’t want to be the one who lets others down or doesn’t follow through with commitments. Also, surround yourself with visual cues of what you want—like Post-It notes, screen savers, pictures, refrigerator decorations, or vision boards with a message or images of your desired future.
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14. Turn a good habit into a streak that you track and celebrate.
Track progress and celebrate success so you feel and enjoy a sense of progress and momentum. Sometimes gamification or challenges can be real motivators (motivation to succeed and/or avoid failure).
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15. Anticipate setbacks.
Don’t expect perfection in all habit-busting domains. When there’s a letdown, commit to getting back on track right away. Don’t let the bad habit groove re-establish itself.
Final Thoughts
By replacing your bad habits with good ones, designing your environment to be more conducive to the life you want, and developing systems that help you be your best, you can improve your life dramatically.
Good habits create leverage. More progress, with less struggle and effort. Stop shooting yourself in the foot and start elevating your days, one habit at a time.
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Reflection Questions
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Tools for You
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Gregg Vanourek ?is a writer, teacher, and TEDx speaker on personal development and leadership. He is co-author of three books, including?LIFE Entrepreneurs: Ordinary People Creating Extraordinary Lives ?(a manifesto for integrating our life and work with purpose, passion, and contribution) and?Triple Crown Leadership: Building Excellent, Ethical, and Enduring Organizations ?(a winner of the International Book Awards). If you found value in this article, please forward it to a friend. Every little bit helps!
(A version of this article first appeared on Gregg Vanourek's blog .)
Former business executive, leadership author, and speaker.
8 个月Excellent and practical counsel on how to break the bad habits we all struggle with.