Habits

Context Helps

Have you noticed how easily you whip out your smartphone to start scrolling or fiddling around even when you don’t have any specific task that you want to accomplish with it? And there are so many reasons why we do this. Maybe you’re bored. Or tired. Or when you’ve just sat down with nothing else to do.

You may not even notice what you’re doing. It has become an automatic and unconscious behavior for many of us. This smartphone habit is one of the many that most of us have developed over the years.

Last month, when one of the participants in my Emotional Intelligence course for project managers asked a question, it triggered something else in my mind about habits and how they’re so difficult to change once formed.

While many of us have developed good habits that are helpful to us, rarely would anyone disagree that they have one or two that are not so helpful. The interesting thing is that even when we are aware of what our bad habits are, we still find it hard to change them.

Why is this the case?

We may know those behaviors are not in our best interests. Still, we just can’t help ourselves but engage in them. In many instances, we know exactly what we need to stop doing. We just seem powerless to do so.

One thing most of us have failed to realize is that habits (even the bad ones) tend to serve a purpose in our lives. A habit is formed when you consistently meet an important need with a chosen behavior. Choosing that behavior each time the need presents itself is what leads to a habit being formed.

Once formed, the behavior is no longer a choice. It’s now done automatically without your conscious awareness. Our brain does this in order to free up brain power for the more important stuff. Studies have shown that habits form almost half of our daily actions.

The unfortunate thing is that we continue to engage in them even when these habits are not serving our best interests. More often than not, we delay or prevent our own success in life with some of these harmful habits. In some extreme cases, people engage in habits that eventually kill them.

I have come across people who have formed the habit of reacting negatively to constructive criticism even when it will help them. These people are shunning valuable counsel that could make a difference in their lives.

I’ve seen others who have developed the habit of being disrespectful to people they ought to show respect. They may realize it and feel guilty after they’ve exhibited the disrespectful behavior, but that doesn’t stop them from repeating the exact same behavior the next time the opportunity presents itself.

People could realize that a specific behavior is not helping their cause and then make a decision to change it. In most cases, however, they’re not able to follow through if the behavior has already become habitual.

This particular disconnect between what people say, feel, or believe and their actual behaviors was of interest to researcher Dr. Wendy Wood, a psychologist at the University of Southern California (USC). “I became fascinated by why changing attitudes don’t always lead to a change in behavior,” Wood says. She continued: “One answer is habits - how they keep us persisting in old actions - and how people underestimate the role of habits in their daily lives.”

Dr. Wood, along with her colleagues and students discovered a few reasons why our feelings about a particular behavior may not translate to the changing of said behavior. One of these is the context under which the behavior is performed. One critical context cue they discovered was the location.

Change the location that brings the habits out of you and you’re well on your way to breaking the habit. For example, if I want to break the habit of stopping for coffee at a drive-thru each morning while driving to work, I need to change the location context, i.e. take a different route to work. If sitting on a specific couch in a particular spot of your living room is the context for a habit you're trying to break, sit somewhere else.

The same approach works for starting a new habit. Find a location that will be the context for the new behavior to take root.

Wondering if it’s that easy?

Well, breaking a habit that you want to change is never easy, but this gives you a very strong leg up.

Stubborn Weeds

In the middle of the United States where I live, the summer heat can be brutal. Most people who are not familiar with the midwestern part of the country tend to be surprised that we get the two extremes of temperatures each year.

It can be as hot as 100°F (roughly 37.8°C) in July/August during the peak of summer. Yet, roughly 6 months later during the coldest of winter, high daily temperatures can dip to 0°F (-17.8°C) or less. Factor in the wind chills and you could turn into a popsicle within a few minutes if you get caught outside in those frigid temperatures.

For those of us who live in the suburbs, our lawns usually take a beating during those summer months of insane heat. The luscious green turns into a field of dry, bristle brown grass. Last week, as I surveyed my yard, I couldn't help but notice a few patches of green in some spots. Closer examinations reveal what those green patches were.

Weeds!

I'm one person who is fastidious about ensuring that things stay where they belong. And I definitely don't think weeds belong on my lawn. So, I tend to follow a strict regimen of weeding and feeding my lawn each year.

But no matter how much effort I put into it, a few of the weeds would simply not go away. You get rid of them in one spot and they sprout up in another. The most perplexing of it all is that even during the summer heat when most of the grass is dying from thirst, the few weeds tend to thrive and blossom.

A few days ago, I went around the yard, manually uprooting the weeds within my field of vision. As I did this, I couldn't help but think about the ones I couldn't get to because of time. I hadn't planned on pulling out weeds at that time, I just couldn't stand the thought of leaving them there any longer.

I also wondered about how long it would be before they grow back.

Soon, this got me thinking about habits and how they're so difficult to get rid of once they are formed. Also, for some reason, it seems bad, unwanted habits tend to form easily, just like those weeds. They creep in unawares and before you know it, they’ve taken over your life.

Do you pay attention to those things you tend to do repeatedly without much thought? That's basically what habits are. And because we don't think really into those behaviors, we most likely do not recognize whether or not they're serving us.

My challenge for you this week is that you simply begin paying attention to your habits. I'm sure you've probably developed a few good ones. Do you know what they are? What benefits do they bring you?

Take stock and identify the benefits you get from your good habits.

What about the bad ones? Do you have any of those? If you can't think of any, I suggest you ask those closest to you - that's if you're brave enough. Most of us don't like others pointing out our bad habits. But I think you'll be doing yourself a world of good if you embrace this from time to time and ask those who know you best.

After all, you can't begin to change something if you don't know how it's impeding your progress. And I'm sure you don't want anything to cut short your life’s success.

Do you?

Your choices make you

Photo by Damian Siodłak on Unsplash

Photo by Damian Siodłak on Unsplash

When your wake-up alarm rings, you're presented with the choice to either get up right away, hit the snooze button to sleep a little longer, or not get out of bed out all. The choice you make could determine how the rest of that day goes.

Yes, I know that last option sounds ridiculous, but I'm sure you get the point. It's still a choice.

When you drive to work, there are multiple routes that could take you there. The route you choose to take could determine what happens on your way and how the workday goes.

At lunch, you have a myriad of choices about what to eat. What food you choose could have immediate or long-term consequences for you and your health.

At work, you have choices about the kinds of attitude you bring to your job. The attitude you choose could impact the quality of your work and thus have implications for your career.

Life is all about choices.

Every day, you and I are presented with a series of options. Most of the time, we're not even aware that our decisions and actions follow from the choices were make. We're not aware because many of our choices are automatic. We don't think them through. We just make them.

In many cases, we don't see the effects of our choices right away. But when you string many of those choices together over several weeks, several months or several years, the consequences of those choices become apparent. This is usually when most people recognize the effects of those individual choices they've made over a long period of time.

By that time however, your choices have become you. The choices you've made have made you - whether that's for good or bad; for better or worse.

So, why don't you resolve starting today, to become intentional about the choices you make. Think through each one before you make it. Don't allow the choice to be automatic just because it's what you've always done.

Extrapolate what the potential consequences would be over a period of future time. This can help you start a new habit. It can also help break an old one.

The great philosopher Aristotle said, "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act, but a habit." Your daily choices can lead you down the path to excellence. They can also lead you to mediocrity.

It behooves you to choose well.