It’s a cold winter morning. Its 5 AM-
the alarm rings. You have set it to go for a 5 Km walk. Will you get up or roll
over and cover yourself with a blanket and continue to sleep- promising
yourself that tomorrow you will definitely go for the walk. You have been
invited to a party and you promise yourself you will go easy on the food and
drinks given that you are on a diet. Your friend comes to you and says hey this
is a party and you cannot diet at my home. One thing leads to another and you
have gorged on the fattiest of starters and drunk lots of sugar laced drinks-
promising yourself you will starve for the next whole week. You have promised
your spouse and children you will be on a Digital Detox programme to overcome
your Social Media addiction. You put away your phone but then get a call from a
friend. After the call you decide not to look at your phone. But you give in to
temptation and see that one last WhatsApp Message and that one last Instagram post
from your friend in Canada and then suddenly realize you have been on your
phone for an hour. I could go on and on and all of you are very familiar with
these situations. It has happened to all of us!!!
Self-Discipline is a topic that is
close to my heart and has also intrigued me- Why do some people achieve all the
goals that they set out to achieve? Why are some people able to delay
gratification? Why are some people unable to change the course of their lives
even though they know that they are on the wrong path? My personal journey with
Self Discipline has had it shares of up and downs, highs and lows.
I have researched the topic of Self
Discipline to understand what is that separates the winners from losers, the
great from the also rans, the healthy and happy from the unhealthy and
miserable. Like any topic of substance Self Discipline has simple attributes
that are easy to understand but difficult to execute.
We are what we repeatedly do.
Excellence is not an act but a habit-so said ARISTOTLE. Habits are the most important
building blocks of Self Discipline. How can I make a practice into habit? Let
me start with an example from my life- my battle with weight and losing and
gaining it. I have always been fighting this battle against losing
weight. I have enrolled with many nutritionists and have ended up losing weight
but the moment I am not accountable to anybody I end up going back to square
one. When I look at pictures of having lost weight -it’s not just about me
looking good but my journey and the fact that it’s possible. After a lot of
reflection, I realized everybody loses and then gains weight. The most
successful weight loss is achieved by developing the habit of Self Discipline.
Saying No, resisting temptation and pushing yourself out of inertia. The battle
against weight is just a metaphor but it is more about me being able to fight
and take on anything if I set my mind to it. This also makes me realize
that I can take on bigger battles in life and losing weight is just a symbol for
achieving something big. It is a building block towards success built on
the foundation of the Self Discipline Habit.
Let me take you through a recent
habit that I have built up during the lockdown- the habit of reading. I was
never one to read books. I am more of a doer than a reader. I like action.
However, during the lockdown I realized there is so much insightful thought
that has been written in books. If only I could start reading them, I could
begin to change my life for the better. How did I do it- 66 is the
answer. So, what does the number 66 have to do with me developing a reading
habit? 66 is the number of days it takes to develop a life changing habit-
research from the University of London. I read continually for 66 days-
sometimes just a few pages but I read without giving up.
So how does one go about building
a Habit Stacking Routine?
- Develop the habit of following the routine:
- · Write a simple routine in a To Do List and follow it.
- · Pick a time and location.
- · Build one routine at a time.
- · Start with small wins.
- · Create a logical checklist.
- · Have a reason: Why.
- · Be accountable.
- · Create small enjoyable rewards.
So what do you do once the Habit Stacking
Routine is in Place? We need to build the habit of Self Discipline.
Self Discipline is built on the back of a strong foundation of habits and it is
irreversible.
According to Marissa Pier, if we adopt habits and make them
our own, success will follow. She also mentions the four secrets to building
self-discipline:
- · Do what you don’t want to do first
- · Take action every single day in the direction of your Goals
- · Delay gratification; delay the reward
- · Praise yourself if you can see it you can achieve it.
· Despite what many people may think, Self-discipline is a learned behavior. It requires practice and repetition in your day-to-day life. A
routine will help establish good habits and break bad ones.
Robin Sharma talks about the habit installation protocol in a three Step Process:
Step 1: First 22 Days- He says the first 22 days are about deconstructing and letting go of old
habits and belief systems.
Step 2: The next 22 days are
about installation where you are installing the neural architecture of the new
habit you want to install.
Step 3: Last is Integration
where its starts getting easier -and the new habits becomes easier to do than
not do.
The world
needs more heroes and why wait for them when you have it in you to become one
of them -Become the hero of your own Life!!
Very well written Sahana
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot dimple!
DeleteWell written Sahana....
ReplyDeleteVery well said , Sahana.
ReplyDelete66..hmm, that's interesting and encouraging. Looking forward to reading more