MAKING GOOD HABITS INEVITABLE AND
BAD HABITS IMPOSSIBLE
CHAPTER 14
The goal of everything that we have been sharing with you over the past few months have centered on making good habits become inevitable. To that end, we must realize that SOMETIMES SUCCESS IS LESS ABOUT MAKING GOOD HABITS EASY AND MORE ABOUT MAKING BAD HABITS HARD. If you constantly find yourself struggling to follow through on your plans, you could try creating what psychologist call A Commitment Device.
A COMMITMENT DEVICE – Is a choice you make in the present that controls your actions in the future. It is a way to lock in future behavior (bind you to good habits), while at the same time restrict you from bad ones.
For Instance –
A person may want to develop more discipline and create a path for future success, so he/she will join the military.
A person may want to increase their credit score while simultaneously eliminate debt, so he/she will only use cash and/or a debt card for purchases.
A person may have a desire to reduce overeating, so he/she will purchase food in individual packages rather than in bulk size.
A person may have a desire to cut calories for example, therefore they could exercise “portion control” by asking the waiter to bring a to go box with their meals.
THE KEY IS TO CHANGE THE TASK SUCH THAT IT REQUIRES MORE WORK TO GET OUT OF THE GOOD HABIT THAN TO GET STARTED ON IT.
• The automotive industry made wearing seat belts hard NOT to fasten!
The annoying chiming sound the car makes when a seatbelt is unfastened is a commitment device! Hearing the constant chiming increase the odds that you’ll do the right thing—fastening the seatbelt, thus making a bad habit (not wearing a seatbelt) difficult in the present. Commitment devices are useful because they enable you to take advantage of good intentions before you can fall victim to temptation.
TAKE A MINUTE AND THINK OF WAYS YOU CAN MAKE A BAD HABIT BECOME MORE DIFFICULT TO ENGAGE IN.
6 STEPS TO MAKE BAD HABITS IMPOSSIBLE
1. IDENTIFY CUES.
Something has to trigger a habit, and A CUE CAN BE ANYTHING. Maybe stress makes you crave chocolate, or the sound of your alarm clock triggers you to hit the snooze button. Maybe rejection makes you turn to the Internet. Identifying cues helps you understand what puts your habits into motion.
There Are Different Types Of Cues
Physical Cues – How your body responds
Behavioral Cues – The actions we engage in
Cognitive Cues – The thoughts or images we imagine
Emotional Cues – How we are feeling inside
2. CREATE A DISRUPTION.
Once you know the cues, you can throw bad habits off track by creating a disruption. If the alarm cues you to bash the snooze button every morning, put the alarm clock on the other side of the room. Trekking across the cold floor will likely disrupt the snooze habit. If engaging in prolonged back and forth verbal exchanges (arguments) increases your heart rate, take deep breaths and work on staying calm.
3. FIND A HABIT REPLACEMENT.
Research shows that replacing a bad behavior with a good one is more effective than stopping the bad behavior alone. The new behavior “interferes” with the old habit and prevents your brain from going into autopilot. When you are craving something sweet after your dinner, deciding to eat fruit (grapes) every time your mind thinks “cookie”, substitutes a positive behavior for the negative habit.
4. KEEP IT SIMPLE.
It’s usually hard to change a habit because the behavior has become easy and automatic. The opposite is true, too: new behaviors can be hard because your brain’s BASAL GANGLIA, (the “autopilot” part), hasn’t taken over this behavior yet. Simplifying new behaviors helps you integrate them into your autopilot routines.
5. THINK LONG-TERM.
Habits often form because they satisfy short-term impulses, the way chewing on your nails might immediately calm your nerves. But giving in to short-term desires often has long-term consequences. Staying focused on the long term while trying to change habits will help you remember why you’re investing the effort.
6. STAY PERSISTENT.
Research has shown that what you’ve done before is a strong indicator of what you’ll do next. This means established habits are hard to break. But the good news is, if you keep at it, your new behaviors will turn into habits, too. Persistence works — at first it might be painful to get up at 5 am for that jog, but soon it will be second nature.
Bible Study Notes | CH. 14
Atomic Habits by James Clear
April 28, 2021 • Pastor Arthur Jackson III
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Atomic Habits by James Clear