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Blog > 7 Steps to Kick Your Bad Habits for Good

7 Steps to Kick Your Bad Habits for Good

If you’re starting to see the impact of your bad habits on your life, it’s not too late to eliminate them. Here’s a seven-step process to eradicate your self-destructive bad habits for good.
7 Steps to Kick Your Bad Habits for Good - Break Bad Habits Building Blocks

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Do you tend to fall into the same old bad habits and the same old self-destructive routine? Maybe you procrastinate on all of your work projects. Perhaps you abandon your healthy lunch in favor of fast food. While these bad habits might seem harmless at first, the consequences have a way of catching up with you. Bad habits often lead to other bad habits, for example. If you have a bad habit of drinking too much, you may also eat fast food after drinking, which is another bad habit. The keystone habit (drinking) acts as the soil from which other bad habits grow.

If you’re starting to see the impact of your bad habits on your life, it’s not too late to change them. It is possible to turn things around by using the right tactics and rewiring your brain’s response to your environment.

Although many people resort to willpower to fight their bad habits, using an intentional process to eradicate bad habits will set you up for success. Here’s a systematic approach you can use to eradicate your routine of self-destructive bad habits.

  1. Identify Your Triggers

First things first, you’ll need to identify the triggers for your bad habits. What are those experiences and environments that cue you up to engage with negative behavior?

Maybe you can’t stand being bored, so you end up using a quick and easy behavior to alleviate that boredom, such as scrolling through social media for hours. That keystone bad habit leads to other bad habits—such as comparing yourself to people you see on social media. The key to stopping the keystone behavior isn’t just deleting your social media apps. Instead, it’s preventing your trigger: being bored.

  1. Be Specific About Your Habits

After identifying your triggers, be specific about how you want to change your habits. Before you can reach any goal, you have to be very specific about what that goal is. Specifically describe the bad habit you want to eradicate in as much detail as possible, and then describe the good habit that will replace it.

Using the example above, if you want to eradicate your bad habit of scrolling through Instagram for hours, you might want to identify how long is too long for scrolling, your exact triggers, and a good habit with which you’ll replace the bad habit. Instead of scrolling through Instagram when you are bored, for example, replace that social media use with a walk.

  1. Replace Your Bad Habits

Once you decide to pick a specific activity to replace your bad habit, you’ll want to choose a new habit that’s going to provide a similar reward or benefit—otherwise, the replacement won’t work, and you’ll be left feeling dissatisfied and tempted to return to the bad habit.

If your bad habit is reaching for a sugary candy bar when you’re hungry at your desk, replace the candy bar with a sweet—but healthy—item, such as Medjool dates or an apple. You’ll get the sweet flavor without filling your body with refined sugars.

  1. Measure Your Progress

Once you’ve gotten specific about your habits, you also need to be clear about how you’ll measure your progress as you eradicate them. How else will you know when you’ve reached your goal, after all?

When it comes to a goal like losing weight, measurement is easy. You just look at the scale. But when aiming to eradicate a bad habit, measuring your progress can be a little more difficult. Decide how you want to measure your progress and, again, be specific. Quantifiable measurements are always best if possible.

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  1. Increase the Pressure

Decide what kind of pressure you need for your best performance. Do you need self-inflicted pressure by way of checklists, daily scorecards, and tracking apps? Or do you need outside accountability, such as competition with others, accountability buddies, or a life coach? Choose whether you need external or internal pressure, and then add that source of pressure to your habit-changing efforts.

You can also increase pressure by implementing a reward and punishment system whenever you meet or fail to meet your goals. If you fail to meet your goal, you get a self-inflicted penalty, such as not getting to go out with friends. If you meet your goal, you get a reward, such as a trip to the spa or your favorite meal.

  1. Plan, Plan, Plan

Before you even embark on eradicating your bad habit, create a pre-situation plan for success. How will you respond? How will you achieve that success?

Likewise, put together a plan for if you fail. How will you respond? How will you ensure you get back up on the horse?

  1. Write it Down

Lastly, make sure you write your plans down. In fact, write down all of the above. Don’t just keep all of the specifics in your head. You will want a detailed record to come back to in both the events of successes and failures. That way, you will know what path to take no matter what happens, and you also won’t end up abandoning your efforts at the first sign of potential failure or temptation.

The Bottom Line

Although many people resort to willpower to fight their bad habits, using an intentional process to eradicate bad habits will set you up for success. All of the steps above are easier said than done—we know— so if you need a little help from an external source, a life coach may be the perfect fit for you.

Arootah’s life coaches help professionals from all walks of life realize their goals by systematically eradicating bad habits and building good ones. Learn more and schedule an introductory coaching session today.

Will you try these seven steps to kick your bad habits? Let us know in the comments!

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not intended to be and should not be taken as professional medical, psychological, legal, investment, financial, accounting, or tax advice. Arootah does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, completeness, or suitability of its content for a particular purpose. Please do not act or refrain from acting based on anything you read in our newsletter, blog or anywhere else on our website.

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