5 Easy Ways To Change Your Bad Health Habits for Good!

As you’ve probably experienced or witnessed, it’s hard to change bad health habits. Yes, some people manage to keep their health-related New Year’s resolutions or one day simply decide that from now on. They will, for instance, drink less alcohol (or stop altogether), cease being a couch potato, or eat vegetables instead of junk food—and they just do it, never back­sliding. Every year, millions manage to quit smoking, for example, or lose lots of weight and keep most of it off.

But such success stories are in the minority. Most attempts at behavior change fail sooner or later, and many peo­ple struggles for years to change, with or without professional help.

Why do some succeed and others fail? Are there ways to improve your chances? How do people transition from being “not ready” to “getting ready” to finally “ready to change”? Many behavioral psychologists and other experts have tried to answer such questions.

One well-known researcher in this field is James Prochaska, Ph.D., professor of psychology at the University of Rhode Island, who, more than 30 years ago, first explained the process of change as five stages, described below.

Some studies have found, for instance, that people coached in this “stages of change” approach. Improved their odds of quitting smoking, eating more healthfully, or complying with medication or other treatment for various chronic diseases.

Read below how to deal with bad health habits and ways to change them.

The five stages of change

Prochaska’s main point is that changing behavior is not an event but a process. His stages make the pro­cess sound orderly, but it’s often messy.

Some people progress steadily from stage to stage. Still, many others stall at one stage or slide back to earlier stages several times before they finally succeed.

1. Precontemplation. 

Unfortunately, many people never get further than this stage. For example, you may vaguely know that it’s unhealthy to be obese, but you don’t think about actually cutting calories.

You may feel fatalistic or hopeless or simply deny having a problem. If you attempt to take action, it may be because your fam­ily or friends push you to do it, but your heart isn’t in it.

2. Contemplation. 

You accept the fact that you have a problem and need to change. You may have some ideas or tentative plans to take action in the next few months and perhaps even do some research. Still, you aren’t really committed to taking action. Still, you have turned the first corner.

You are more aware of how your terrible habit harms your health and interferes with your life. You may be inspired by a friend who has successfully changed. You make a mental list of the benefits that would accrue if you made changes. Also, start believing that you can make the change, even visualizing the new you.

3. Preparation. 

You start planning a specific course of action and may set a date (not too far off) to start. Your belief in your ability to make the change becomes stron­ger; you may tell your family and friends about it.

If your goal is to exercise more, you may buy a gym membership and new athletic shoes or talk with friends about joining them for daily exercise.

4. Action. 

You walk the walk. You start eating at least five fruit and vegetable servings a day. You read food labels, shop for grocer­ies more strategically, learn to cook health­ier meals and keep only healthy snacks around.

You go only to restaurants that offer healthy foods; you quit the clean plate club and start taking extra food home. You stop buying or bumming cigarettes, perhaps using nicotine patches or gum. You may well slip back into your bad habit. Still, you remind yourself that most successfully changed people also suffered relapses. This isn’t a failure, provided you get back on track again.

5. Maintenance. 

This is often the most challenging stage. It may take months or even years, but your new healthy habit has become firmly embedded. Your old cravings occur less and less frequently, and you’re better able to resist them. Junk food may actually not taste good anymore.

You’ve learned to like exercise. You have strategies to avoid and deal with tempta­tions and relapses, but if you do slip up, you have the recovery skills gained from the previous stages.

This is the final stage for many people, where they remain for the rest of their lives. But Prochaska has added a sixth stage, called Termination, for the few who are no longer tempted by their old habits and don’t need to fear relapsing.

Hope these steps will help you to change bad health habits.

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