Easy ways to finally break a bad habit

Editors at CureJoy
Diet Matters. Wellness Works
6 min readMar 1, 2018

Do you reach out for your phone and skim through Facebook first thing in the morning? Or maybe bite your lips when you are thinking about something? We all have habits. But for some of us, certain habits could cause a lot of damage to our health. Like pulling out a cigarette when we feel stressed.

Most of us are aware it could probably take 21 days to break a habit. But more recent studies suggest an average of 66 days of staying on track to get rid of a bad habit. Also, you might be interested to know that in the study, the actual number of days ranged from 18 to 254 days, indicating that it can take a very short or a very long time.

To bust your habit, it’s important to understand a few basics.

What is a habit?

A habit is a behavior that is performed with minimum thinking or cognitive effect. These are repetitive actions which we have performed over a period of time and have now become entrenched in our brains as neural pathways.

If we analyze our daily behavior, we can see that most of it is habitual. Habits do not require much conscious effort. It helps us save time on performing daily activities without much thinking. And for this same reason, it is more difficult to change.

Habits can be divided into three types depending on the nature of activities.

  1. Motor Habits: These are habits related to our physical actions such as standing, sitting, running, walking, exercising, maintaining body postures, etc. Such activities are controlled by the muscular activities of the body.
  2. Intellectual Habits: These habits are related to psychological processes requiring our intellectual abilities. Observation skills, accurate perception, logical thinking, reasoning ability, etc. are some examples.
  3. Habits Of Character/Emotions: Certain habits are an expression of our character. For example, helping people in need, trusting people, being honest, a friendly manner, time management, cleanliness, tidiness, etc. Since these habits also have an essence of feeling and emotion, they are also called emotional habits.

Habits are hard to change. That’s a fact. So, even as you prepare to break a habit, be willing to cut yourself some slack and allow falls. Here are a few steps for you to try while trying to break a bad habit.

Identify the function of your habit

We brush our teeth regularly to avoid going to the dentist. We check our email first thing at work in order to help us organize our day. Bad habits are no different. They too have a function. This routine that we fall back on helps us to get through our daily life without having to think too much about the next step. These habits sustain us without us having to give it a second thought. Identifying what prompts the habit is the first step to nipping it.

Trying to ignore a bad habit might sound like a good idea but the opposite is more likely to lead you to success. To break a bad habit, increase your awareness of what you are doing in the first place.

Experts suggest that it helps a lot if you can understand the behavior and its cause before you try to change it.

Note down EVERYTHING about your habit

Record every detail of your habit as and when you indulge in it. Note down how often you are doing it, what circumstances got you to do it, what you were thinking of when you did it, etc. This too will help us identify and understand the behavior we hope to change.

When you write something down on a paper or type it out on a computer, it becomes more real.

Researchers have found that writing out a goal and keeping it handy to look at every day or as many times you need, can help you stay on track.

Change your passwords

Puzzled? It helps to change your passwords to commands that remind you of the change in the habit you are trying to achieve. Let’s say, if you want to stop smoking, change your password to “quit smoking”. In this way, every time you type out this instruction, you are reinforcing the need for change in your brain, making it slightly easier to achieve your goal.

Don’t focus on what not to do

Like writing down something reinforces it in your mind, focusing on what you will do rather than what you will not do is a better way to get good results in breaking a habit. When you focus on not doing something, you are confusing the brain because the brain’s habit-learning system doesn’t really learn anything by “not doing”.

A determined “I am going to eat only two meals a day” or “I will eat only one slice of pastry a week” will get far better results than “I will not eat junk food”.

Say it out loud!

Sometimes, we reflexively fall back into the habit we are trying to break. More often than not, we tend to rationalize why we should engage in that bad habit “just once”. Experts suggest that when we go through these thoughts and justifications in the moments before engaging in the habit, say it aloud. It is likely that when we hear ourselves saying “I know this is bad, but one more time won’t hurt me”, the argument will not sound convincing even to us. And this might just be what we need to help strengthen our resolve.

Prep yourself for an obstacle course

The next step in breaking a habit is to realize and prepare for all the obstacles you will face along the way. This will prepare you to identify the obstacles as they come and effectively dodge them. Most people bank heavily on their willpower and initial enthusiasm. This is a treacherous trend, feel experts, as too much positivity can make people take their obstacles lightly and fall under pressure.

In the case of breaking habits, a little negative thinking is far better than too much positive thinking as it can keep you prepared for the worst.

Imagine you are trying to cut down on sugary foods. But your fridge may have a leftover cake, or your colleagues may be in the habit of going out for a dessert break. Trying not to think of the cake in the fridge will only get you thinking more and more about it and make you depressed–maybe even depressed enough to give in and indulge. Going out with your colleagues and refusing to have dessert will only get your colleagues to insist you must. After all, what are friends for?

The best way to overcome this is to set your environment to an ideal scene. Donate the leftover cake, skip the dessert outing with colleagues, or better still, tell them of your goal to stop them from tempting you to have it.

Find a friend to support you

Getting a friend to share the same goal is probably one of the best things that will work for you. You can keep each other motivated and ensure both of you stay on track. And even if you fall, your friend can help you get on track again.

Don’t forget to cut yourself some slack

Habits are hard to break and will take a lot of time and effort. You can be sure there will be many a slip, too. But don’t lose heart. A slip shows you what types of situations will make you fall for the temptation and how you can avoid them in the future.

Remember, there’s always a way out. Just be patient and trust yourself.

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