Trouble Reaching a Goal? Get Out of Your Own Way

sidewalk closedDo you know somebody who is always on a diet but she keeps losing the same five or ten pounds over again, only to gain it back?

What about the person who keeps saying he needs to find a new job, who complains endlessly about his boss or coworkers, yet stays in those same conditions for years on end?

Is there something you keep saying you want to change, but you never seem to get to your goal? Maybe your goal is to quit smoking, save money, keep your home neat or to be on time. Whatever it is we’d like to achieve, why can it be so hard for us to just buckle down and do it?

The answer is self-defeating behaviors. Almost everybody has a couple of self defeating behaviors. These are habits that provide us with an escape hatch, a way to distract ourselves from feeling sad, overwhelmed or inadequate. We pick up these habits at a time in our lives when they help us cope with strong emotions or difficult situations, but over time, these behaviors begin to get in the way of our progress.

Recognizing Self Defeating Behaviors
When we find ourselves unable to achieve a goal that should be within our reach, there has to be something we’re doing instead that somehow rewards us. Rather than changing our behavior in order to move towards our goal — like stopping overeating to get thinner, we make it a habit of going for the reward (eating naughty food) that’s contradictory to our goal.

Many times we don’t know exactly how or why we sabotage ourselves, but if you have a goal that seems to be just out of reach, keep your ear to the ground. Next time you experience a failure, pay attention to what you do that’s counter to your goal, and figure out what reward you’re getting.

Here’s an example. You tell yourself that you are going to save money and you aren’t going to shop anymore. You have everything you need and it’s time for you to pay off your credit card. The idea of paying off your credit card and limiting your spending stresses you out. The mere thought of the balance and all that interest you’re paying every month makes you sweat a little. And you’re getting tired of the arguments that your spending causes. Maybe you even hide some of your spending from your mate, which you find even more stressful.

Ironically, shopping and spending money is the very thing that makes you feel good and gives you that high, a feeling of invincibility and elatedness. There’s nothing like plunking down that plastic on the perfect purchase, ripping the tags off a new dress and slipping it on to wear for the first time. You try to tell yourself NO MORE, but the next thing you know, you’re walking out the door of your favorite store with a shopping bag on your arm.

Of course the reward is obvious in this example, and so is the ultimate suffering it causes. But the point is, sometimes our brains seem to go blank when we’re breaking our own rules.

When we procrastinate, we escape from our responsibilities. When we overeat, we might enjoy the comfort that food affords us. If our chronic dieter doesn’t eat to console herself when she feels lonely or bored, then she might have to face the loneliness or boredom without the comfort of chocolate to soothe her.

Maybe the person stuck in the job he dislikes complains that he can’t find a new job when he is so busy in the current one. That’s silly. If he hates the job he has, then of course he can take time out of his schedule to find a different job. What’s the worst that could happen: he would lose a job that makes him feel miserable and trapped for years on end?

What does he get out of keeping the old job? Security, for one thing. He doesn’t have to face the fear and discomfort involved with interviewing, the risk of rejection. Or the fear of failure from taking a leap into the unknown at a job he’s untested at. He can complain all he wants, but there’s something comforting about staying in the old job.

Figure out for yourself what behavior you’re favoring over achieving your goal, and discover how that behavior is somehow rewarding you.

What’s the Worst That Could Happen?
Ask yourself what you think will happen if you stop the old behavior and cut yourself off from the reward. Your belief about the old behavior might even sound ridiculous when you discover what it is. Hint: you are usually trying to avoid some kind of emotional discomfort.

The spender might be afraid that the stress of dealing with her bills without the comfort of shopping to relieve her stress will be too painful.

The dieter might be afraid that she’ll have to endure hunger, loneliness or boredom without the ability to eat whatever, whenever. Or the dieter might be afraid of good old deprivation. If she sees delicious food, she might feel deprived if she won’t let herself have it.

The job hater might be afraid to apply for a new job because he would feel inadequate if he doesn’t get it. Or he fears that if he lands a new job, he might not be good at it and he’s supremely uncomfortable, maybe even humiliated when faced with his imperfections and inabilities.

Compare and Contrast
Once you’ve laid yourself bare and you are aware of your sabotaging behavior and the reward it gives you, let’s compare that current situation versus what you would get if you let yourself achieve your goal.

Do you really and truly value the self-defeating habit over your goal?

Does the dieter value overeating over reaching her goal of getting thin? Of course not. She might make the wrong decision in the heat of the moment due to subconscious fears around deprivation and loneliness, but she doesn’t truly value hanging onto unhealthy habits.

Does the shopper value mounting debt over her goal of saving money? And does the job hater secretly love his job? No. But they are stuck in patterns of thinking and behavior that are preventing success.

Challenge Time: Build New Habits
Let’s take on the shopper. All of the mental tomfoolery aside, what she’s left with is mounting financial worries and a bad shopping habit. What if she takes a baby step and challenges herself the next time she wants to break out that plastic to hold off instead. She might be waiting to see how uncomfortable it is to avoid spending, but what will actually happen is that she can wait for the urge to pass. If later on she notices that she didn’t spend and she didn’t die, then she can chip away at the belief that she must spend to relieve stress. She can avoid her bad habit more easily by adopting a replacement habit. Going for a walk and calling a friend are clichés for a reason. They might work when we actually DO them.

How about the dieter. Same deal here. She might be afraid of hunger or negative emotions, but the next time she wants to overeat she can turn to a different behavior instead. She can challenge her feeling that she has to eat to feel comfort. She can start the work required to break that habit of turning to food and find other ways to comfort herself. If she’s looking to get thinner so she can have more confidence, for example, maybe she can cut to the chase and look directly for opportunities to build confidence, like taking a dance class or trying out online dating.

The job hater can dip his toe into the job pool by trying out an informational interview with a company that interests him. That way he’s not putting himself at risk for rejection, but he gets to try out a low-pressure interview situation. He could also look into doing some pro-bono work to help brush up his skill set and get his resume up to date to feel more confident in his abilities.

The next time you find yourself engaging in a self-defeating behavior, ask what you could do differently next time. Chip away, and you will reach your goal while creating new and empowering habits.

Take Control of Your Life: Choose How to Spend Your Time

relaxing
Your life is only as good as what you spend your time on. So many of us feel vaguely dissatisfied with how we’re living, but we’re not quite sure what it is we need to change.

Usually this dissatisfaction occurs when we’re spending very little time concentrating on issues that relate to our innate values. We’re stuck in that rat wheel and getting no where fun.

Here’s a 5-step exercise you can do to figure out what your values are, your resulting goals and how you want to spend your time to get to where you want to go. I did the exercise in each section so you can see an example.

1. What are your values? Ask yourself: What brings you the most happiness and satisfaction. Your values might relate to a creative passion, friendships, spirituality, family, athleticism, simplicity, or a particular lifestyle that you’d like to live. Conversely, ask what is it you want to change about yourself and your life? What do you keep trying to change or keep thinking about changing?

My values:

  • Health: I have nothing if I don’t have my health. It’s important to me to stay capable, strong and energetic so that I can achieve my goals and do whatever I want to do with my time.
  • Family: I value feeling that love and connection, knowing that I am part of a tribe. I feel lucky every day that I have an amazing husband to spend my life with. There is no other joy like lying on the couch and trying to slap each other in the face with our feet.
  • Connecting With Others: I love connecting with people via writing, hence this here blog. It makes me feel good, simple as that.

2. What are your goals and dreams? Ask yourself: Based on your values, what would you like to achieve in your life? For your life to feel aligned with your values, what do you want to see happen?

Your goals don’t need to be glamorous; they just need to be focused on your values. Write a reason next to each goal so that you know what you get when you achieve that goal. If you know why you want to achieve a goal, you’re more likely to go after it.

My goals and reasons:

  • Health Goals: Maintain a healthy weight and level of muscle mass. I’ll have more strength and energy to do what I want and I’ll feel great.
  • Family Goals: Keep a stable, neat environment for our family to live in. Protect our welfare via financial order and responsibility. This means less worrying and chaos and more time for fun and relaxation.
  • Connecting With Others: Post on my blog five days per week about relatable topics. Be entertaining and informative in every post. When people come to the site, I’ll feel helpful and valued.

3. What’s stopping you? What habits and mindsets are currently in your way? How are you spending your time, and what can you clear off your schedule to make time for better habits?

Here are two examples of time wasters and attitudes that have stopped me in the past from forging ahead:

  • Screen Addiction: If you spend all day at work in front of your computer screen and then come home at night only to be glued to the boob tube or surfing the web every waking hour that you’re in your house, that’s where your time and energy is going.
  • Self Doubt: If you tell yourself you can’t, then you’re right. Change your self talk. Tell yourself that you can and you will. You deserve to live the life you want. If you don’t try, the worst case is that you stay stuck. If you do try, then the worst case is you might have to adjust tactics if the first try doesn’t work. No big whoop.
  • “I Don’t Have Time” – This is just another way of saying, “I don’t want to,” or “I’m not ready yet.” Find the time. You don’t need much. You would be shocked by what can be accomplished in just 15 minutes a day.

4. What habits do you need to develop to move towards your goals? In other words, what is it that you actually need to do with your time in order to align your life with your values?

Here are the habits I need to nurture:

  • Health Habits: Eat the right foods at the right times and in the right portions. Exercise most days of the week.
  • Family Habits: Neaten and declutter for 15 minutes a day. Keep the kitchen clean. Create and stick to a budget (a topic coming soon to swell easy living.)
  • Connecting With Others: Spending my leisure time writing for the blog.

5. Get Started! Look at one of your habits to nurture, the one that you think would make the most difference or help your mindset the most. Start small, spend 15 minutes a day and just do one thing.

When I was faced with the daunting task of starting this blog, looking at the whole project at once made me want to hide under the covers. I had to decide what was the first step. Choose a domain host. Then the next day I did the second step, which was to sign up. Then third: transfer my domain. I had to take babysteps for those first daunting and confusing tasks in order to build any momentum

When you take those first steps and tackle one item a day for 15 minutes, you build momentum toward your new way of living. Next thing you know, you’ll be flying along and living the life you want.

Find Your Motivation

gold stars

The Threat
Picture it: the holiday season, the year 2006. I had just moved from New York City to the DC suburbs to live with my boyfriend Steve six months prior. A dear friend of mine, a married person with a few rug rats, came to pick me up and bring me to a party.

As I climbed into her minivan, I was confronted with an alien landscape. An explosion of crayons, toys, baby books, sanitizing hand wipes, plus plenty of objects of childhood and parenting I couldn’t identify, covered every square inch of the ample interior of this family truckster.

I saw my future flash before my eyes. The scene presented itself as a very real threat. If I kept going the way I was going – never cleaning out my car, always feeling off-schedule, never getting into rituals and routines, this was going to happen to me, but way worse. Imagine the kids’ stuff, plus my own empty Red Bull cans, gym bag, work papers, and all the other random garbage I was collecting in my car jumbled in there together.

The Seed Is Planted
It was almost (but not really) cute as a single person to fly by the seat of my pants. I could see that this would be a hideous scene for me once I advanced down the road of my life towards marriage and parenthood. If I didn’t get my crap in order, I might as well make a carbon copy of that minivan, throw a whole lot more junk in there, and move into it.

Thus, the seed was planted. After Steve and I were engaged, that image popped into my head a few times. I told myself the jig is up. Time was ticking, and it was time to pull it together. Get up earlier. Start cooking. And I would, for periods of time, before lapsing into old habits. How would I make the change last?

The Window of Opportunity Gets Tiny
The answer is Urgency. Here I am, on the eve of parenthood. A bun in the oven and the minivan image looms large. I’m suddenly getting to work earlier, getting more done, cooking more often and becoming neater. The motivation is palpable.

What is it you want to change and where have you found your motivation? My motivation came fitfully, born of two separate events – riding in a minivan as a single person, combined with eventually getting pregnant years later. It just goes to show that motivation can drop out of the sky and smack you in the forehead when you least expect it, but you have to be looking for it.

I already knew that I wasn’t punctual. I knew my car was a mess. I knew I just plain didn’t have my act together, and that’s not to say that I do now – it just means that now I am working harder than ever to change.

Keep Looking
Unfortunately, a single motivation doesn’t last forever. Eventually old reminders get lost in the scenery, we find ourselves slipping and we need to find a new way to motivate ourselves. All this to say, keep your eyes peeled. You never know when your next bout of motivation could strike.

What do you want to change — and have you found your motivation? A mental image of minivan horror? A book? A web site? A friend who is a shining example of awesome? Or are you still looking? Let me know in the comments.