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Ockert J Möller

Your Brain Hates New Year’s Resolutions

Wanting to change yourself and better yourself is a beautiful and inspiring thing, I believe.
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And it turns out that’s also how most other people think: 80% of all people for example set themselves a New Year’s resolution.

That’s pretty amazing! What’s not so great is that according to the researcher Richard Wiseman, 88% of all those set resolutions from half all over the world fail. That’s millions failed resolutions and disappointed minds each and every year.

The sheer numbers of this really made me think. I wanted to understand better why we are so bad at keeping our newly set out resolutions and what we can do to actually make them stick.

Research suggests that willpower itself is inherently limited, and that our January promises fail in large part because the brain wasn’t built for success. New Year’s resolutions will seem so exciting and full of promise on Thursday 1.1.2015.

It turns out that’s also how most other people think: 80% of the population will set themselves a New Year’s resolution.
b2ap3_thumbnail_Blog-10-.jpgThat’s pretty amazing! Yet by the middle of next week, 88% of all those set resolutions and probably fail. People will have already skipped gym, eaten the big burger and been a big couch potato. No one said goal setting and New Year’s resolutions would be easy.

Are you ready to fail again?

Or can you use the mechanics of the brain to solve the problem?

Here is the actual science behind setting a New Year’s resolution and more science on how you can actually change yourself for the better:

Your brain can’t handle New Year’s resolutions – here is why

What we need to stick to our New Year’s resolutions is willpower. Your brain cells that operate willpower are located in the prefrontal cortex, which is the area right behind your forehead.

That particular area of the brain is also responsible for staying focused, handling short-term memory and solving abstract tasks for example.
b2ap3_thumbnail_Blog-11-.jpgNow, when you set a New Year’s resolution, an enormous amount of willpower is required. It’s an amount that your brain simply can’t handle. To put more scientifically, this is what’s happening inside your prefrontal cortex, best described through a Stanford experiment by Prof. Baba Shiv:
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A group of undergraduate students were divided into 2 groups. One group was given a two-digit number to remember. The other was given a seven-digit number to remember. Then, after a short walk through the hall, they were offered the choice between two snacks: a slice of chocolate cake or a bowl of fruit. What’s most surprising: The students with 7-digit numbers to remember were twice as likely to pick the slice of chocolate compared to the students with the 2-digits.

The reasoning of why this happens? According to Prof. Shiv, it’s very obvious:

“Those extra numbers took up valuable space in the brain—they were a “cognitive load”—making it that much harder to resist a decadent dessert.”
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So your pre-frontal cortex that handles willpower is like a muscle, that needs to be trained, as Tony Schwartz always mentions . If you decide to train that muscle at the start of the new year with a resolution to quit smoking, start going to the gym, or lose lots of weight, that’s the equivalent of a 300 pound barbell you want to lift without any previous training.

It’s no surprise that your brain can’t do the heavy lifting.

Resolutions vs. habits – why vague aspirations don’t work

“What a mistake – the whole idea around New Year’s resolutions. People aren’t picking specific behaviours, they’re picking abstractions,” says BJ Fogg from Stanford University.

The problem is clear: any abstract goal you have that is not tied to a specific behaviour is nearly impossible for your brain to focus on. Making it “instinctual,” which is the crucial aspect that will help you achieve any new habit, is missing in 90% of all New Year’s resolutions, which makes them so likely to fail.

Instead, the key is to make any goal a habit first. And most importantly, make it a tiny one. Here is a list of examples of how this translates to some of the 4 most common new year’s resolutions:
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Resolution: Quit smoking vs. Habit: Stop smoking that 1 cigarette you have every morning after breakfast
Resolution: Eat healthy food vs. Habit: Start substituting that 1 daily morning pastry for a banana
Resolution: Lose weight vs. Habit: Every evening after work, go for a 2-3 minute run or walk around the block.
Resolution: Manage stress vs. Habit: Meditate for 2-3 minutes every morning after you wake up.

By immediately breaking down each resolution and seeing what the smallest habit could be, your chances of succeeding will be 50% higher. There is nothing more. You make it so easy and simple for yourself to create that habit that there is almost no way you can fail with it.

Ok, but now enough of why the dark and gloomy reasons of new year’s resolutions don’t work. What can we really do to make them work?

The 4 steps to make New Year’s resolution stick

So if you’ve set yourself a few big new changes, here are the most important things to consider to actually change your behaviour for a better you:
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1. Pick only one resolution

As Stanford’s Prof. Shiv explained with her “cognitive overload” experiment, sticking to more than 1 New Year’s resolution is near impossible for your brain to handle. Instead, analyze everything you’ve thought about to change and pick the one thing that’s most important for you.

Then, let go of everything else, otherwise you’ll be picking the chocolate cake for every situation, instead of the choice that you set out to make.

2. Take baby steps – make it a tiny habit

Now that you’ve picked one resolution, make sure to break down as far as you can, to the simplest task possible. If your resolution is “going to the gym”, turn it into the tiniest habit possible that you can perform in under 60 seconds.

BJ Fogg from Stanford created a great application exactly for this, called Tiny Habits. It’s an awesome way to get started with any new year’s resolution you have in mind:
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3. Hold yourself accountable for what you want to change: Tell others or write it down

In a study from 2007 performed by researcher Evans, they found a striking correlation between increased social support and lowering blood pressure, heart rate and cortisol. What does that have to do with New Year’s resolutions?

Well, it has proven as striking evidence that the people around you can have a significant impact on your behaviour. So if you tell some of your friends and family about the new tiny habit you’ve created, you are much more likely to stick to it.

Another hint here is that writing it down not only makes you more likely to succeed with your new habit and on top of that, increases your overall happiness.
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4. Focus on the carrot, not the stick – positive feedback and rewards increase your chance of success

A powerful study from the University of Chicago outlines how clearly positive feedback on any of your new habits will increase the likelihood of your success with your new habits and resolutions.

Hand in hand with this goes the fact that rewarding yourself for advances with your habits with things that make you feel great are a sure fire way to increase your success rate, according to Richard Wiseman’s 59 Seconds: Change Your Life in Under a Minute.

So treating yourself to an unhealthy snack after a few days of successful diet habits changes is more than appropriate if you really want to make it through the other end.
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Quick last fact: Strong willpower is not a character trait

One very comforting and important last fact is that having strong willpower is not something we’re born with, as opposed to popular opinion.

“Research suggests that willpower itself is inherently limited, and that our January promises fail in large part because the brain wasn’t built for success.”

So just like your bicep has to be trained in order to grow stronger, so does the prefrontal cortex in your brain. The key is to make sure not to start lifting too heavy, as then we’re bound to drop everything on the floor with our new year’s resolutions.
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With all this info, the only thing that’s left for me to ask: Do you have any New Year’s resolutions? How are you planning on approaching them? I’d love to hear your thoughts on this in the comments

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