We're just days away until 2023, and that means many of us
are starting to think about our resolutions.
The New Year is a great time for a refresh.
Lots of us want to exercise more, quit smoking, or eat
healthier.
But many will abandon that resolution within a month!
News 12's Elizabeth Hashagen was joined by Dr. William
Sanderson for help on how to make, and keep, a New Year's resolution.
Creating New Year's resolutions is as much of a tradition as
the holiday itself - people hoping to bring positive changes to their lives and
habits.
Most popular: exercise more, eat healthier, lose weight.
Each of these goals has to do with making a change in behavior.
Behaviors can be increased (or established if they don't
exist) or decreased (or extinguished if that is the goal - e.g. smoking).
There are three pitfalls when picking a resolution:
It's a resolution created based on what someone else (or
society) is telling you to change.
It is too vague.
You don't have a realistic plan for achieving your
resolution.
Your goals should be SMART: An acronym coined in the Journal
Management Review in 1981 for Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and
Time-bound.
SPECIFIC: Your resolution should be absolutely clear."Making
a concrete goal is really important rather than just vaguely saying 'I want to
lose weight.' You want to have a goal: How much weight do you want to lose and
at what time interval?" said Katherine L. Milkman, an associate professor
of operations information and decisions at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania. "Five pounds in the next two months — that's going to be
more effective."
MEASURABLE: This may seem obvious if your goal is a fitness
or weight loss related one, but it's also important if you're trying to cut
back on something, too. If, for example, you want to stop biting your nails,
take pictures of your nails over time so you can track your progress in how
those nails grow back out, said Jeffrey Gardere, a psychologist and professor
at Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine. Logging progress into a journal or
making notes on your phone or in an app designed to help you track behaviors
can reinforce the progress, no matter what your resolution may be.
ACHIEVABLE: This doesn't mean that you can't have big
stretch goals. But trying to take too big a step too fast can leave you
frustrated, or affect other areas of your life to the point that your
resolution takes over your life — and both you and your friends and family
flail. So, for example, resolving to save enough money to retire in five years
when you're 30 years old is probably not realistic, but saving an extra $100 a
month may be. (And if that's easy, you can slide that number up to an extra
$200, $300 or $400 a month).
RELEVANT: Is this a goal that really matters to you, and are
you making it for the right reasons? "If you do it out of the sense of
self-hate or remorse or a strong passion in that moment, it doesn't usually
last long," said Dr. Michael Bennett, a psychiatrist and co-author of two
self-help books. "But if you build up a process where you're thinking
harder about what's good for you, you're changing the structure of your life,
you're bringing people into your life who will reinforce that resolution, then
I think you have a fighting chance."
TIME-BOUND: Like "achievable," the timeline toward
reaching your goal should be realistic, too. That means giving yourself enough
time to do it with lots of smaller intermediate goals set up along the way.
"Focus on these small wins so you can make gradual progress," Charles
Duhigg, author of "The Power of Habit" and a former New York Times
writer, said. "If you're building a habit, you're planning for the next
decade, not the next couple of months."