Given Up on New Year Resolutions? Here’s How to Make Them Stick

While change is hard, there are things you can do to increase your chances of success.

Camilla Nonterah, The Conversation
Art and Culture
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While change is hard, there are things you can do to increase your chances of success.
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While change is hard, there are things you can do to increase your chances of success.
(Photo: The Quint)

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The beginning of every new year comes with resolutions and plans for behaviour change. Often the quest to improve health behaviours, such as losing weight, increasing physical activity or quitting tobacco, is short-lived. Estimates vary, but by some accounts, as many as 80 percent of people fail to meet their resolution by mid-February. One study followed 200 people with New Year’s resolutions and reported that 81 percent of them failed to maintain their health behaviours after two years.

The reasons vary. With the case of cigarettes, people are dealing with a highly addictive product. For example, about 95 percent of people relapse after six to 12 months of abstinence when they try to quit smoking on their own.

Regardless of the severity of your addiction or even if you do not have an addiction, change is very hard. People often have not explored their reasons for making the change or how ready they are. They also may not have come up with a plan. And, they may simply not realise how hard it is to change behaviour.

I am a counselling psychologist who studies and works with people trying to change their behaviour. Those who succeed have certain things in common. They are usually motivated to change, and they believe in their ability to engage in positive health behaviours. They also track their health behaviours and set goals.

What Psychologists Know About Behaviour Change

Biological, psychological, social and environmental processes influence behaviour change. One of the popular theories used to explain health behaviours is something called the transtheoretical model. This theory states that there are five stages of behaviour change.

  • Pre-contemplation. In this stage, the person is not thinking about making the change. Those who fall in this stage may be unwilling to admit they have a problem in the first place. They are unlikely to respond to nagging from others to stop smoking, for example. This could be attributed to the fact that the cons for changing their unhealthy behaviour outweighs the pros.
  • Contemplation. This happens when a person acknowledges that he or she has a problematic behaviour but is not ready to adopt a healthier lifestyle. Successful behaviour change even during this stage is unlikely. However, people in this stage are thinking about making a change within the next six months.
  • Preparation. In this stage, an individual starts making plans for the change. For example, a person who wishes to quit smoking may set a quit date and plan to purchase their last pack of cigarettes the week before the quit date.
  • Action. This is when behaviour change starts to occur. In this stage, a person who wishes to stop smoking quits using cigarettes and may start using smoking cessation aids. Or someone who wants to lose weight will start eating fewer calories or start going to the gym. This stage requires the most effort and commitment.
  • Maintenance. This usually occurs after six months of uninterrupted continuous efforts to sustain the changes they have made and to prevent a relapse. It is not uncommon for relapse to occur after a person has been successful with incorporating the new behaviour. This usually happens during the action stage and can also happen after maintenance given that it is difficult to sustain behaviour change. Most people are not successful with behaviour change after a first attempt, especially when changing an addictive behaviour. People with New Year’s resolutions can make about five or more years of continuous attempts to change a behaviour before they are successful. Unanticipated barriers such as stressful life events can cause a relapse.
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While it is normal to experience negative emotions such as guilt and embarrassment after a failed attempt, these feelings can make a person lose hope in their ability to change if they persist for too long. The good news is that after a relapse you can learn from your mistakes and try again. Research shows that a person’s odds of success with positive behaviour change increase gradually with time, after unsuccessful attempts.

Why Do You Want to Make a Change?

It helps to start with a thorough understanding of why you want to change. Without that, it is hard to stay motivated, especially when barriers arise, such as getting stuck in traffic on the way to the gym, or a family member getting sick and needing your care. State of readiness also affects behaviour change.

Part of your preparation stage should be developing a realistic plan. It should incorporate the reality that behaviour change is hard. Studies have shown that just setting a goal does not lead to the desired results. Ambiguous goals, such as saying you want to lose weight in the coming year but not thinking of specific health goals are associated with unsuccessful results.

Setting goals that are too challenging, such as going from complete inactivity to trying to exercise seven times a week, often results in failure. Setting several goals also can be overwhelming and result in failure.

Factors That Affect Behaviour Change

Even with good goals in place, stress lowers a person’s ability to achieve successful change. Stress lowers our inhibitions, making it more difficult to achieve one’s goals. For example, the stress of the loss of a job would likely challenge a smoker’s ability to abstain from cigarettes. Depression and anxiety, when unmanaged, can have a negative effect on a person’s motivation and derail efforts to change. A lack of self-efficacy, a person’s belief in their ability to exercise successful change, has been associated with unsuccessful behaviour change.

Biological processes can also affect behaviour change. One of the difficulties associated with weight loss is that we inherited traits from our ancestors that cause our bodies to store fat. This was good for our ancestors when food was scarce, but it is bad for our current well-being, given that food is easier to access.

Also, studies suggest that our bodies have a certain set-point at which they are most comfortable and have a natural weight thermostat that adjusts our metabolism and eating. This set-point keeps our weight within a certain genetically determined range. This makes initial weight loss easier given that the individual’s metabolism is higher as a result of having more weight. However, it becomes harder to lose weight over time as one’s metabolism decreases.

The environment in which we live also influences behaviour change. The majority of our foods are highly processed and contain high fats and sugars. Without the appropriate nutritional knowledge and with limited access to healthy foods, successful weight loss becomes challenging. The food environment coupled with a sedentary lifestyle has a negative impact on a person’s health.

People who live in neighbourhoods without sidewalks, parks or those who reside in dangerous neighbourhoods are less likely to be active. Certain cues in our environment also affect our ability to maintain change. For example, a person’s attempts to stop smoking may be hindered by living with other smokers, especially if they have certain rituals around smoking, such as sitting on the porch together at night to chat and smoke.

How to Improve Your Odds of Success

While change is hard, there are things you can do to increase your chances of success.

  • Change for the right reasons. Change for a desire to improve one’s health, to be a better example for your family or to prolong your life, are more likely to motivate positive change.
  • Set both short-term and long-term goals when executing change. Researchers have found that these goals should be specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and timely, or SMART. Weekly SMART goals help in making progressive steps towards a long-term goal.
  • Track and monitor your behaviour. This enhances positive behaviour change. You can accomplish this by journaling and note-taking. Many people find that free fitness apps are helpful.
  • Get help. In some cases, behaviour change may be most successful with the help of a professional such as a licensed clinical health psychologist. Trained professionals can provide services such as motivational interviewing, cognitive-behavioural therapy, and acceptance and commitment therapy.

(This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)

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