If you've had a hard time keeping Resolutions in the past take a long, hard look at how you keep personal commitments to yourself throughout the rest of the year. When only you and your bathroom mirror know about it do you keep your promises in a responsible fashion or do you find yourself re-negotiating, back-pedaling and making excuses?
Many New Year's Resolutions are born of disgust or exasperation after a year of failed attempts and procrastination. We make them in a punitive mindset of self-judgment. If you've been falling on and off of diets all year it may make sense to you to make a stern year-end commitment to empty your refrigerator and set the alarm for 5 AM to hit the gym.
But consider this. You just loaned $20.00 to your brother-in-law who made a commitment to pay you back on Monday. Instead he spent the whole week dodging you. How would you feel about loaning him an additional $100? If he hasn't shown any ability to keep the smaller commitment would you throw good money after bad? Perhaps you'd like him to demonstrate his responsibility before trusting him further. So the first tip to making New Year's Resolutions you can keep is:
1. Don't bite off more than you can chew. Set yourself up to win and commit, initially, to the minimum possible. This flies in the face of conventional wisdom that New Year's Resolutions should be BIG life changes. But is this realistic? Let's look at the weight loss scenario as it's a big one for many people. You make a resolution to trudge an hour each day on a treadmill and drop all fats and sugars from your diet when you haven't jogged more than a half hour a week until now. Exactly who are you trying to kid? Better to commit to 4 hours of exercise a week and salad lunches three times a week to ease yourself into your new lifestyle. You can always up the ante later. Choose a level of commitment that will stretch you but not overwhelm you.
2. Chunk it down. Chunking is when you take a large, difficult to manage project and break it down into more easily handled tasks. Don't make one Resolution for the whole year. Make a resolution for the month of January. On February make a second one. Move incrementally. On February 1st you can add in weight training and switch to only whole grain carbs.
3. Tap into your support system. Let everybody know what you're trying to do and ask for their help. Tell your spouse you've made a commitment to spend 5 hours a week learning new software skills and that you'll be doing this each evening from 8 PM to 9 PM. Ask him to hold you accountable and listen to him when he does. Tell your usual crowd you're trying to quit smoking, or cut down on the beer or lose carbs. Ask for their help and give them permission to bust you if they find you in the stockroom with a boxful of Krispy Kremes or a pack of Marlboro.
4. Write it down. Studies of small business people show that those who wrote their goals down were 20% more likely to actually achieve them. After you've written down your Resolution put it everywhere. Write it on each day of your daily planner. Post it on your bathroom mirror. Put it in your sock drawer and in your wallet next to your money. This will help you avoid ?going unconscious?. If you've committed to cutting way down on buying CD's it can be chastening to be reminded of this when you're reaching for the plastic in Tower Records.
5. Celebrate yourself when you reach your milestones. Most of us are hard on ourselves when we don't reach our high standards; we're brought up not to sing our own praises. If you set out to achieve something that is difficult and important to you it only makes sense to pause and acknowledge your effort when you succeed.
Anyone else would show you a little more consideration than you show yourself. Your boss would take you out to lunch or give you a raise. Your students would send you thank you notes. Take yourself out to dinner or away on a weekend trip and appreciate your achievement. Tell everybody you succeeded and accept their compliments graciously without downplaying your accomplishment.
Happy New Year!
Mary Rosendale is a Writer and Life Coach. She is also one of a small number of Certified Constructive Living Instructors worldwide. C.L. is a unique, action-oriented educational program which combines the discipline and common sense of Eastern philosophy with Insight Meditation. Visit her on the web at www.TheConstructedLife.com
New Years Things To Do
The Human Quirk Index, which studies human behavior at their think-tank, did a major study of individuals in sixteen countries about whether they kept their New Year's Resolutions or not.
Of the 98.7 percent of respondents who said they made a New Year's resolution, a follow-up survey three months later found that a paltry 3.1 percent had actually done anything to keep their resolutions.
These dim statistics doesn't mean you won't be able to keep your New Year's resolutions. Just follow these guidelines:
5 Quick Tips to Make Your New Year's Resolution Stick
1. Prioritize.
When you get to work each day, take out the paper where you first wrote your resolutions down and write them again to impress your mentality and place them at the top of your day's priorities. Begin to eliminate behaviors that do not help you keep your resolutions. Repetition is the better part of valor, so encircle and repeat the steps that will keep you on the accomplishment track for y our New Year's resolutions.
2. Organize.
Every morning, create a "to do" list that lists two, just two, actions that will help you keep your New Year's resolutions. If you're on a diet, write down one form of exercise and one new, low-calorie recipe. If you want to change careers, write down and follow two tasks such as calling a mentor and then reading an article about a new career path..
3. Delegate.
Delegate tasks that are not vital to meeting your New Year's resolutions. If you want to exercise, think of how you can delegate tasks that keep you seated in front of a computer for a later time after you spend 20 minutes or 30 minutes power walking or running. Make watching television very low on your priority list and move it from your 'bad habit' list to non-existent. You can stand up while returning phone calls and you can even do stretching exercises at the same time as you are talking on the phone.
4. Simplify.
Keep the New Year's resolutions a high priority and don't let the less important ones keep you from staying on track. When you're planning your week, write your priorities down and encircle the ones that you know will accomplish your resolutions. For the others, find a way to erase them from your list or devote less time in your day to each task.
5. You can prioritize your life and make health and happiness your number one focus.
Integrate your New Year's resolution into your overriding goal: to be healthy and happy. Visualize how much happier you will be, and how much more emotionally and physically healthy you will feel if you beat the odds and make your New Year's resolutions stick!
Both Mary Rosendale & Ruth Klein are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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