Can the New Year resolution this
time last longer than it ever did? Can the weight management program sustain
till the time the desired weight is achieved? Can the financial savings and
investments discipline be better than ever before?
http://bhushankulkarni2903.blogspot.in/2014/09/can-we-make-changes-fast-and-sustain.html
Can we make these changes? Can we
sustain the decisions or resolutions?
We are figuring out whether
changes are possible. Whether we can break old habits and form new ones that
will elevate us to the level we desire and deserve.
In the previous blog (Can we make
changes and sustain them too? – Part 1) we spoke about three powerful steps for
forming new habits. If you missed reading that blog please follow the below
link.
There is a famous dialogue in the
movie ‘Wanted’. The dialogue goes something like this. “Ek bar jo maine
commitment kar di, uske baad main apne aap ki bhi nahi sunta’ (Once I make any
commitment then I don’t listen even to myself).
I think our brain has many
characteristics of this dialogue. That is where breaking old habits and forming
new habits becomes challenging.
Every habit starts with the
psychological pattern called as ‘Habit Loop’. This is a three part process.
1.
The cue or a
trigger:
This part of the
habit loop tells our brain to go into automatic mode and let a behaviour
unfold.
2.
The routine:
This is the
behaviour itself. When we talk about habits, we are generally talking about
this part of the habit loop.
3.
Reward:
Something that our
brain likes about the behaviour that help it remember the ‘habit loop’ in
future.
Now the question is if this is
how habits are formed is it possible to break unwanted habits and acquire or
inculcate the desired habits?
I am sure we all have seen
sometime or the other our friend transform completely. Be it weight loss, more
energy, more passion for the purpose, new and efficient habits etc etc. And we
wonder just little less than a year when I saw her, she was not like this. I am
seeing a completely different person. How did this person make it possible, we
wonder?
My friend Tony who is a pilot
with a private airline company is one such person I have seen. He says he has
been using ‘rocket philosophy’ to form new habits. A rocket requires tremendous
energy while taking off and reach lower orbit of earth.
Habits are like that. We need
maximum energy to form new habits initially.
I still had two questions.
1. How many days of deliberate
efforts are required before the habit gets into routine?
2. What is the guarantee that we
will not come back to the earlier habit?
Many experts have suggested
repeating the new behaviour for 21 days. It’s painful to get up early morning.
It requires lot of effort to go to gym and take that first step. We all have
tried these things. And we all have reverted to the earlier habit.
Tony says it’s not a straight
line thing. It’s not a cookie cutter kind of a solution. You will have a
tendency to come back to the earlier pattern. That’s easy for the brain.
Effortless.
He says he uses another method
called as ‘flight height’. What is it I asked? At lower altitudes you need more
power to run an aircraft and vice versa. Whenever you see the new habits losing
steam, you apply more mental thrust and sustain the habit.
A combination of ‘rocket philosophy’ and ‘flight height’ will help improve the
chances of acquiring and sustaining new habits.
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