8 ways to break bad habits and create good ones

8 ways to break bad habits and create good ones


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Why are bad habits so simple to pick up and good habits so hard to develop?​ “Bad habits, frankly, are easier,” says Adam Borland, a psychologist with the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. “They can


become more ingrained because we kind of go on autopilot.” ​ Finding the motivation to exercise or keep up a daily or weekly schedule is more difficult than sitting on the couch and


watching Netflix, for example, Borland notes. ​ But the new year is a perfect time to try something new, to stretch boundaries, to override the tendency to act outside our best interests


without conscious thought. But creating those good habits — and getting away from the bad ones — is even more difficult in the modern era, when we’re often tied to digital devices.​ “Our


brains are overwhelmed by the way our modern world stimulates them, and the natural systems that we have for building habits have been basically hijacked,” says Russell A. Poldrack, a


psychology professor at Stanford University in California and author of _Hard to Break: Why Our Brains Make Habits Stick._​ As a result, it can take some time to create a habit we want to


adhere to for our own good.​ A lot of digital apps designed to help form habits suggest it takes about three weeks to do the job. But modern research doesn’t back up that time frame — not by


a long shot.​ Poldrack points to one study from the _European Journal of Social Psychology_ that put the time frame for habit forming at between 18 and 254 days, with an average of 66


days.​ Breaking a bad habit is not necessarily about willpower, adds Poldrack: “It’s really about avoiding the temptation to begin with.”​ SMALL STEPS, BIG CHANGES​ In his bestselling book 


_Atomic_ _Habits: An_ _Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones,_ entrepreneur James Clear says to imagine an ice cube in a room so cold you can see your breath.


Slowly, the room begins to heat up, going from 26 degrees to 27 degrees to 28 degrees. The ice cube is still frozen. Twenty-nine degrees, 30 degrees, 31 degrees. Still, nothing happens. Then


it’s 32 degrees and the ice cube starts to melt. ​ A one-degree shift alters everything.​ Similarly, Clear writes, we can cause big changes in our lives little by little: “Habits are the


compound interest of self-​improvement. The same way that money multiplies through compound interest, the effects of your habits multiply as you repeat them.”​ There’s no shortage of tips


out there for starting — and sticking to — a new practice.​ Stanford University behavior scientist BJ Fogg, author of _Tiny Habits: The Small Changes That Change Everything,_ encourages


piggybacking a new habit onto an existing one. The existing “anchor habit” should be something you do every day, such as brushing your teeth or turning on the computer. Fogg himself stacked


a new habit (doing push-ups) onto an anchor habit (going to the bathroom) and now does at least 50 push-ups a day.​ Jud Brewer, a psychiatrist and director of research and innovation at


Brown University’s Mindfulness Center, advises being curious about why you choose to do something your best self would rather not be doing. Curiosity feels much better than the rumination


that follows giving in to a bad habit, according to Brewer, author of _The Craving Mind: From Cigarettes to Smartphones to Love — Why We Get Hooked and How We Can Break Bad Habits_.​


Numerous studies, meanwhile, have shown that “implementation intentions” — a term researchers use to describe a plan for responding when a certain situation arises — are effective for


sticking to a goal.