7 Tips for replacing Bad Habits with Positive
Habits.
By Jeff Olsen
Whether it’s smoking cigarettes, being late,
drinking soft drinks, blaming others or biting our nails, we all have personal
and professional bad habits that we would like to break. As much as we despise
our bad habits, it can be challenging to make these habits things of the past.
So, what is the solution? I have found the best way to erase a bad habit is to
replace it with a positive habit.
First, think of our habits as a cycle. A
habit is something you do without thinking. And, there are two kinds of habits:
Those that serve you and those that do not serve you. Brushing your teeth
is a habit that serves you; biting your nails is one that doesn’t. Thinking
things through for yourself serves you; blindly accepting everything you read
online or hear through the gossip grapevine doesn’t serve you. Be aware of your
philosophy, which creates your attitude, which creates your actions, which
creates your results, which create your life. A positive philosophy turns into
a positive attitude, which turns into positive actions, which turns into
positive results, which turns into a positive lifestyle. The small decisions
are easy, and when you add them up, they can have an enormous effect on your
life. This cycle is hard to maintain, but I go into more depth in my book, The Slight Edge.
The cycle to create positive habits can be
accomplished through these seven powerful actions:
1. Show up.
If you’ll just commit to showing up, that’s
half the battle right there. By simply showing up you can rise above half of
the population in any circumstance.
2. Show up consistently.
Keep showing up when others fade out.
According to Woody Allen, 80 percent of success is showing up. That’s a
philosophy I subscribe to wholeheartedly -- but I would add two words: 80
percent of success is showing up every day. As essential as it is to show up, it is consistency that
greatly multiplies its power. Showing up consistently is where the magic
happens.
3. Cultivate a positive outlook.
See the glass as overflowing. There are days
when I wake up and I’m in a funk. I might not even know why, but life feels
heavy and depressing, and I just don’t want to get out of the funk. When this
happens, the first thing I do is take inventory of my blessings. According to
positive psychologists, a habit of gratitude is one of the most common traits in consistently happier
people.
4. Be committed for the long haul.
You’ve probably seen those weight loss and
workout programs that promise to change your life and create “a better you” in
90 days. I’m not saying that you don’t get results, but here is the problem
with a 90-day program: It doesn’t give you enough time to build up a new belief
level in yourself that you can continue once the 90 days are over. Instead,
think of farmers. They know they have to wait a full season to reap their
harvests. In our post-industrial world, where so much of everyday life is
accessible through the click of a mouse, it’s easier than ever to forget that.
Related: Set a Simple Goal for the Year
5. Cultivate a burning desire backed by
faith, not hoping or wishing, but knowing.
A burning desire backed by faith simply means
deeply, passionately wanting to get somewhere and knowing -- not hoping, not
wishing, but knowing -- you’re going to get there. In other words, there has to
be congruence between your desire and your faith.
6. Be willing to pay the price.
Whatever the dream or goal, there is a price
you’ll need to pay. Sometimes that means giving something up. It may be
something as simple as giving up a type of junk food you’re attached to, for
the sake of your health, or something as subtle as giving up your right to
be right, or your habit of exerting control over conversations for the sake of
a relationship.
7. Do the things you’ve committed to doing, even when
no one else is watching.
I have found the best way to erase a bad
habit is to replace it with a positive mental or physical habit. So, the next
time you find yourself wanting to partake in that same bad habit remember you
can change your negative habit into a positive one and the result will be a happier
life for you and those around you.
Con amor,
Vero
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