Wednesday, November 13, 2019
This is how to kill bad habits with mindfulness
This is how to kill bad habits with mindfulness This is how to kill bad habits with mindfulness We all struggle with bad habits. Resisting them is hard. Changing them feels impossible.Now there are plenty of tricks from standard psychology on how to deal with bad habits. But what if there was a way that really helped you understand yourself better? Something that wasnât just a âlifehackâ, but actually led to a fuller way of living life?Yeah, thatâs a big fluffy promise. But this solution still comes from hard scientific research. Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Judson Brewer is the director of the Therapeutic Neuroscience Laboratory at the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.Heâs also the author of The Craving Mind: From Cigarettes to Smartphones to Love â" Why We Get Hooked and How We Can Break Bad Habits.He does a lot of work with addiction psychiatry - and letâs face it - thatâs what bad habits are. Addictions. He founded the Yale Therapeutic Neuroscience Clinic and wanted to help people conquer one of the toughest bad habits: smoking.What tool did he use? It was that âmindfulnessâ thing everyone is always blabbing about.He was hoping mindfulness could match the results of the âgold standardâ for treating cigarette addiction, a system called âFreedom From Smoking.â But mindfulness didnât match itâ¦It crushed it.From The Craving Mind:When the data came back from our statisticians, the participants in the mindfulness training group had quit at twice the rate of the Freedom From Smoking group. Better yet, nearly all mindfulness participants had stayed quit, while many of those in the other group had lost ground, yielding a fivefold difference between the two!Weâre often told that you canât get rid of a habit; you can only replace it. Heck, even Iâve said that.But mindfulness didnât replace smoking with anything: âO ur data showed that mindfulness decoupled this link between craving and smoking.âSo heâs really on to something here. Something you can use to beat your bad habits. (And something I can use to stop checking Instagram while writing blog posts.) So howâs it work?First, we gotta ask the question nobody usually bothers to ask: why do we have bad habits in the first place?Bad Habits Are Coping, Not FixingYou feel stressed. Or anxious. Or sad. Whatever. Point is, youâre feeling not-good. Naturally, you want to feel good. So you do something that has made you feel good in the past.Maybe itâs checking Facebook, maybe itâs meth. Same difference to your brain.From The Craving Mind:We each have stress buttons that get pushed, and what they are largely depends on how we have learned, in a reward-dependent manner, to cope (or not cope) with life⦠Itâs the standard habit model: Trigger, Behavior, Reward. And after you do it enough times, itâs a reflex. Youâre instinc tively reacting, not thoughtfully responding. Youâre on autopilot. Youâre a puppet.But the real issue with bad habits is while they scratch the itch, they donât fix the underlying problem. Being worried about your bills might lead you to check Facebook, but that doesnât make Mark Zuckerberg pay your mortgage.In fact, bad habits not only donât fix your problems, they often make them worse.From The Craving Mind:We have conditioned ourselves to deal with stress in ways that ultimately perpetuate it rather than release us from it.And checking Facebook is actually a perfect example.From The Craving Mind:Leeâs research team found that a preference for online social interaction correlated with deficient mood regulation and negative outcomes such as a diminished sense of self-worth and increased social withdrawal. Let me say that again: online social interaction increased social withdrawal. People obsessively went on Facebook to feel better, yet afterward felt worse.But since youâre reacting instinctively, you rarely notice your bad habit is actually making the problem worse. And thatâs where mindfulness comes in: noticing.Noticing is at the heart of mindfulness. But what is mindfulness? Donât worry, Iâll make it simple⦠Pay Attention. Donât Judge. When youâre stressed and engage in a bad habit, youâre usually not paying attention. And if you do pay attention, youâre probably frustrated. Frustrated that you feel this way. Frustrated that youâre doing something you know is bad.Take a step back. Pay attention. Donât judge.From The Craving Mind:(Mindfulness is) âThe awareness that arises from paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally.â As Stephen Batchelor recently wrote, this definition points toward a âhuman capabilityâ of âlearning how to stabilize attention and dwell in a lucid space of non-reactive awareness.âBy really watching what you do, noticing how you feel, you can start to realize the bad habit isnât helping fix the problem. You donât really feel any better. And that realization is key. Thatâs what will break the cycle.From The Craving Mind:Seeing what we really get from our habits helps us understand them on a deeper level, know it in our bones, without needing to control or force ourselves to hold back from smoking. This awareness is what mindfulness is all about: seeing clearly what happens when we get caught up in our behaviors and then becoming viscerally disenchanted. Over time, as we learn to see more and more clearly the results of our actions, we let go of old habits and form new ones. The paradox here is that mindfulness is just about being interested in, and getting close and personal with, what is happening in our bodies and minds. It is really this willingness to turn toward our experience rather than to try to make our unpleasant cravings go away as quickly as possible.Cravings fade with time - but you usually donât pay at tention to that part. When the internet goes out in your house youâre initially frustrated⦠but then you find something else to do.But when you immediately give in to bad habits, you reinforce them. The Dark Side of The Force gets stronger.But that leads to the million dollar question: how do you cope with that awful discomfort until the craving fades?(To learn the 4 rituals neuroscience says will make you happy, click here.)You can use the same four-step mindfulness process that helped people quit smoking. Brewer calls it RAIN: Recognize, Accept, Investigate, Note. Hereâs how it worksâ¦1 â" RecognizeYouâre feeling stressed. Youâre robotically headed toward habit-modeâ¦Recognize it. And donât you even think about rationalizing it: âOh, but I just happen to feel like checking Instagram for the fiftieth time today.âNo. No, you donât âjust feel like it.â Realize what youâre doing. Youâre trying to cope with some discomfort by engaging in your ba d habit. Recognize the craving.This next part is trickierâ¦2 â" AcceptAccept it. That doesnât mean âgive in.â Just accept that the craving is there. Donât beat yourself up for wanting it. Donât try to ignore it, or try to distract yourself, or fight it.The good news is: you donât have to do anything just yet.The bad news is: itâs hard to do nothing when youâre uncomfortable and want to scratch that itch.Brewer recommends acknowledging your acceptance in a small, active way. Nod your head or think âhere we go.âNow hereâs where things get interestingâ¦3 â" InvestigateNormally you deal with bad habits by trying to get away from them. Mindfulness does the exact opposite. Get curious.As the craving grows, notice how you feel. Specifically.From The Craving Mind:Investigate it as it builds. Do this by asking, âWhat does my body feel like right now?â Donât go looking. See what arises most prominently. Let it come to you. The key here is ânonidentification.â Remember: you are not your thoughts. Your brain thinks all kinds of crazy stuff. That doesnât mean those thoughts are you. If you broke your arm, youâd say âmy arm is brokenâ not âI am broken.âSo investigate your feelings as if you were looking at an animal in a zoo. Check it out. Watch things unfold. Pay attention.And hereâs how we make the itch go away without scratching itâ¦4 â" NoteMake mental notes of your feelings. Use a single word or a short phrase to put a label on what you feel.From The Craving Mind:Finally, note the experience as you follow it. Keep it simple by using short phrases or single words. For example: thinking, restlessness in the stomach, rising sensation, burning, etc. Follow it until it completely subsides. If you get distracted, return to the investigation by repeating the question, what does my body feel like right now? See if you can ride it until it is completely gone. Sounds silly but itâs actually extremely powerful. Youâre using some bleeding-edge neuroscience here. Noting reduces the impact of emotions.Via The Upward Spiral:â¦in one MRI study, appropriately titled âPutting Feelings into Wordsâ participants viewed pictures of people with emotional facial expressions. Predictably, each participantâs amygdala activated to the emotions in the picture. But when they were asked to name the emotion, the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex activated and reduced the emotional amygdala reactivity. In other words, consciously recognizing the emotions reduced their impact. Donât dodge the feelings. Investigate them and note them. The craving will subside. Itâll be hard at first, but with time it will float away just like every thought - good or bad - eventually does.Checking Facebook isnât going to solve your problems. But now that the craving is gone, you can focus on what will.(To learn how to stop checking your phone, click here.)Alright, mindfulness maven, weâve learned a lot. Letâs round it up and get the answer to how this all leads to a better lifeâ¦Sum UpHereâs how mindfulness can kill bad habits: Bad habits are coping, not fixing: Checking Facebook didnât pay your bills. But it did make you jealous of your friendâs new car. Pay attention. Donât judge: Notice what youâre feeling. Being worried about being worried just makes you super-worried. Recognize: Dealing with something is quite hard if you donât realize thereâs something. Accept: Did you really think I was going to recommend denial? Câmon. Seriously. Investigate: You are not your thoughts or feelings. They are things that are there. Examine them. Note: When you give a feeling a name, your brain calms down. (Unless that name is âGodzilla.â) Okay, this all leads to a very simple two-step formula for a good, mindful life: Feeling good? Pay attention.Feeling bad? Pay attention.When you feel good and pay attention to it, itâs a wonderful, happiness-boosting thing called savoring. You really appreciate the good moments instead of taking them for granted.When you feel bad and pay attention to it, you donât succumb to bad habits. You can realize where the feeling is coming from. You can learn about yourself. And then do something that will fix the problem.Most of us are pretty good at enjoying the happy feelings. But thereâs plenty to learn from the bad feelings. Donât distract yourself or engage in bad habits to avoid them.Life is rich and varied and has much to teach you.Donât ignore half of it.Join over 295,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.This article first appeared on Bakadesuyo.comYou might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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