21 Feb 2008 06:18:55 | Gordon Bryan
Habits are hard to break and easy to form.
Is that true?
Well, to an extent, yes.
The longer we keep a habit, the more it becomes part of our
subconscious, and breaking it does indeed take a lot of hard
work from the conscious mind.
The hardest habits to break, and the easiest to form, are
usually the ones which make us feel good!
The hardest to *form* and *easiest* to break, are the ones which
we impose on ourselves to try and change our lives.
This is because they usually involve sacrifice of some sort.
It might be effort to exercise, it might be missing out that
slice of cake, and it might be saving some extra money instead
of treating yourself.
Our subconscious won’t like these habits, and at the slightest
opportunity, will drop them like a stone, and march us straight
back to the old habits.
Fear of change also plays a part in this, our old habits are
comfortable, even if we know they are unconstructive to our
lives.
When it comes to self-improvement, I see and read it so many
times, that people feel great when they read a book or go to a
seminar, and make changes in their life with great intentions.
However, once the initial enthusiasm wears off, or they don’t
see immediate results, they go right back to how they were
before, and eventually get cynical about the self-improvement
industry.
Obviously you are not like this my friend, or you wouldn’t be
reading this little old article!
I have 2 points about getting round this problem of motivation
wearing off.
Firstly, read some sort of self-improvement message every day,
and this can be a message you write out on a card that you keep
by your bed, and can read before and after sleep. This is
powerful for programming the subconscious.
Incidentally, most people that ‘poo-poo’ an idea like this, have
never tried it!
Secondly, imagine one of those ‘Strongest Men in the World’
shows on TV, where a huge mountain of a man is trying to pull a
50 ton truck with his teeth.
His eyes are popping, veins bulging on his neck, but the truck
doesn’t move.
Then the truck wobbles, and slowly begins to edge forward. The
crowd cheers, and the strongman starts to walk forward, grunting
like an elephant.
If he stops, he is in trouble, because he has to start all over
again with the eye-popping, but if he keeps going, it gets
easier for him, because the truck picks up momentum, and begins
to move by itself.
The man still needs to pull, or the truck will stop, but the
man’s effort has been reduced to keeping up the movement, and
nothing more.
This is due to the laws of physics, and can be applied to goal
achievement and life change.
You need to keep going until your life picks up the new
momentum, and even then, you need to keep putting in the effort.
Intention to form new habits is great, taking action to form new
habits is even better, but it won’t amount to anything unless
you accept that you need to keep working until the momentum
kicks in! (It *always* does eventually!)
About Author :
**************************************** Gordon Bryan’s new
book, ‘Transform Your Life in 21 Days!’ has been described as ‘a
must read’, ‘awesome’, and ‘a true gem’. If you liked this
article, see the book for yourself at:
http://www.transformyourlifenow.com
****************************************