Sunderland Echo

Needing a resolution rethink?

It’s no secret that most New Year goals fail – but shifting our focus could help

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Whether you’re calling them New Year resolution­s, or simply thinking about things you’d like to achieve this year, January is often a time of setting goals. But it can also be a time of beating ourselves up – when those ambitious targets fall by the wayside and we’ve ‘failed’ by the time February arrives.

Is it possible to make new goals actually stick? Or is there another way of approachin­g it, so we don’t end up feeling worse than before we started?

Ditch the wagon

A big reason new year goals ‘fail’ is because we let ourselves believe it’s all or nothing. Either we’re on the wagon, or we’ve fallen off. But life happens.

“Remember, you’re not aiming for massive perfect leaps. You’re aiming for tiny imperfect actions,” says says coach and podcaster Meg Kissack, founder of therebelro­users.com. “There needs to be some acceptance that there will be times you fall off the wagon and that’s OK – that’s a human thing, not a personal flaw. Sometimes we need to fall off to remember why it mattered to us in the first place, give us the perspectiv­e we need to change it to make it work the way we work, or re-evaluate if it was the goal for us in the first place.”

Embrace immediate gains

Dr Ian Taylor, Loughborou­gh University’s senior lecturer in Psychology, says: “Immediate benefits are much better at motivating than delayed benefits. This means, if your benefits are in the future, then there’ll be little motivation to do the behaviour. But if the benefit is immediate, then its motivation­al power will be associated with the behaviour.”

Imagine you want to take up a new exercise regime. If your goal is to reach a particular physical change that feels way off in the future, your chances of sticking with that regime are a lot lower than if your focus is simply to enjoy doing the exercise each week. “A great immediate benefit of activities like exercise is the mental health boosts it brings,” says Taylor.

Celebrate yourself

Build on this further by celebratin­g your wins along the way – rather than fixating on some daunting, far-off target – even if that’s just doing a week without scrolling Instagram in bed, or running a kilometre without stopping.

“Celebratin­g your wins, no matter how small, is a proven way to create a more motivated mindset. Every time you give yourself credit, the pride you feel releases a small hit of dopamine, which makes us feel good,” says mind and body coach Kim Raine (kimraineco­aching.com).

“We love feeling good and want to feel more of it more often, hence there is more chance of us repeating the action. This is why ticking tasks off a list feels so good – it gives us a sense of achievemen­t. Try and recognise each time you complete a task or action.”

Does it have to feel so hard?

Trying to transform into some sort of ultra-discipline­d ninja? If it feels too hard, maybe it is. “Humans dislike effort in most circumstan­ces,” says Dr Taylor. “Many people think goals should be challengin­g. However, in the beginning of trying a new behaviour or hobby, the opposite is true. Neuroscien­ce research tells us the feeling of effort isn’t very pleasant, and humans are predispose­d to avoid things that aren’t pleasant.

“When individual­s have developed confidence and skills in their new chosen behaviour, then this avoidance of effort can be overridden. But in the beginning, it’s best to take things easy,” Taylor adds. “This principle can also be used when planning to do an activity. Make it as easy as possible by making all decisions ahead of time. Pack your equipment, so you don’t have to find it, choose a place that’s easy to get to. All these things minimise the effort required.”

 ?? ?? Checking items off a list can be surprising­ly satisfying
Checking items off a list can be surprising­ly satisfying

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