Do
you make New Year's resolutions?If so, please remember this: If you
ever feel like you've failed with them, think again. Not only is
discouragement bad for your health and bad for your ability to succeed, but at least some of your negative assumptions are very likely to be mistaken.
A
therapist once told me he had a client — I'll call him Dirck — who's
wife didn't feel loved. The therapist helped Dirck find out what his
wife needed to feel loved. She craved physical demonstrations of affection: Hugs, touches, kisses, holding hands. These were things that meant the most to her.
Dirck had been telling her
how much he loved her without doing much physical demonstration. So
although she "knew" (intellectually) Dirck loved her, she didn't feel loved.
The therapist coached Dirck on how to demonstrate his
love with physical affection. Dirck returned a week later to say, "It
worked!" His wife felt loved! He was now living in a happy household.
Six months later, Dirck was back. His wife didn't feel loved any more. The therapy apparently hadn't succeeded like he thought.
But
with some careful questions, the therapist found that Dirck had stopped
doing what he was doing before and was merely professing his love with
words again!
As stupid as that sounds, it is not
uncommon. We've all made similar mistakes. You have a problem, you
decide what to do about it, you do it and it works, and then you forget
all about it and stop doing what was working, and the problem returns.
You "relapse." Then you explain it to yourself. Dirck's explanation was:
"The therapy didn't work."
If you have failed with
your resolution, you have already explained it. Your mind will not allow
you to go on without explaining the setback. "I guess I don't have any
self-discipline," you might think. Or maybe, "I am weak and lazy."
In all likelihood, your explanation is wrong (read more about explaining setbacks here). The explanation for your relapse may be simply: It's hard to notice the absence of a negative condition (except immediately after it goes away).
When things go wrong, it is very noticeable. When things get better, it is less noticeable. You might notice
at first, but even then you quickly get used to it. And you won't feel
much motivation to continue solving a problem that doesn't exist any
more. Your life may be better, but you will soon take your new
condition for granted. So you stop doing the work, and for awhile
everything is great. And then the problem slowly begins to appear again.
Been there? Yeah, me too. But all is not lost. Not by a long shot.
If
you feel you have failed with your resolutions, try this new
explanation (it is hard to notice the absence of a negative condition)
and start doing again what worked before. That's what to do when you
relapse.
Read more: Powertool For Personal Change.
Adam Khan is the author of Antivirus For Your Mind: How to Strengthen Your Persistence and Determination and Feel Good More Often and co-author with Klassy Evans of How to Change the Way You Look at Things (in Plain English).
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