Thursday, November 21, 2019

Acquiring a new habit vs. quitting an old one

Acquiring a new habit vs. quitting an old oneAcquiring a new habit vs. quitting an old oneIf we take the literal meaning, its obvious quitting a habit is infinitely more difficult than creating a new one.You see, a habit is stored in your brain in the form of a neural loop. So, the only way to quit a habit is a lobotomy, which is pretty difficult compared to the development of a new habit.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moreIf we consider the common meaning of the expression to quit a habit, which is stop doing something we had been doing, it gets easier.To stop your habitual activity you need a traumatic experience or you need to painstakingly rebuild your habit.The Moment ofDecisionThe traumatic experience doesnt need to be sudden and painful, like a car accident. Im sure youve heard stories of people who quit smoking because their grandchildren asked them to do so and they felt l ike they want to be here for their grandkids. It welches the moment of decision that caused them to modify their behavior for good.However, engineering both life-changing car accidents or moments of decisions is close to impossible. I mean, those smokers who quit usually had their grandkids for a few years, as well as a decades-long smoking habit.It wasnt like they didnt know the facts. Nobody had to tell them their self-destructing habit would cost them their health and potentially years of life. Nobody had to tell them that their grankids love them and would love to have them around for decades to come.They needed enlightenment to spark the decision and we cannot procure the enlightenment. Thus, its impossibly difficult.Rebuilding aHabitIf you dont experience the moment of decision, you need to rebuild your habit from scratch.The best piece of free content on this topic is on Charles Duhiggs websiteHow Habits Work?- ?Charles DuhiggIt is a load of hard thinking and hard work. The b iggest problem with this strategy is immense resistance.The older your habit is, the stronger the neural loop is in your brain. You need inhuman focus to be aware of every time a cue for the habit activates to modify your behavior. Even though you instill a new behavior, if you let your subconscious keep the reins, the old behavior activates, because it is stronger than the new routine youre trying to develop.Resistance Against a NewHabitWhen you create a new habit, you need to overcome resistance as well. Its the resistance that comes from the status quo. If you are a couch potato, its difficult and uncommon for you to move your butt and jog or go to the gym.However, this resistance is nowhere near the resistance that comes from an old habit. When you build a new habit, you create a new trigger for it and there are no conflicting messages in your brain. It is the simplewhen this happens, I do thatroutine. The whole art comes to repeating the routine long enough and often enough for your mind to recognize the pattern and save it in your brain.You can screw that up by being inconsistent which gives conflicting signals to your brain. But you dont have to fight off a decade-long custom of yours.My ExperienceI quit a few bad habits and it was almost effortless for me. I just realized they dont lead me to the better life I desired. I starved them out instead of remodeling them. In a few weeks I quit playing computer games and reading fiction in excess.That was much easier than developing some habits of mine. It took me several months to create a writing habit.On the other hand, I have some habits Ive been struggling with for years, like going to bed too late. This habit seems to be insanely hard to change.In the same period, I was able to develop dozens of daily habits. Easy peasy.SummaryQuitting an existing habit is usually much more difficult than acquiring a new one. There are some cases when its not true, but they are the exceptions, not the rule.This article f irst appeared on Medium.

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