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Tag : Habits

HomePosts Tagged "Habits"
blog-title-work-life-balance

What’s your response style?

by The Pipon 18 January 2017in PipCorporate, PipLife

Think back to a situation that made you angry in work. Perhaps you were treated unfairly by someone in a position of power, maybe your work was criticized in front of your colleagues or maybe you were snubbed at a group meeting for no fault of your own.

 

Now think about how you reacted. Did you challenge the person, attempt to fix the problem or silently mull over it for the rest of the day, week or even month?

 

Many of us easily fall into the latter approach. Sometimes unpleasant incidents are one-offs that do not merit much attention and yet they consume large parts of our attention, internally, for a long period afterwards. This type of repetitive, negative mulling over is called rumination.

 

Rumination is a type of maladaptive self-reflection in which you repetitively, passively think about the incident that upset you, and your feelings about it, without taking any action to fix the problem or change your feelings [1]. The trouble with rumination is that not only does it take up a large amount of your attention but it exacerbates the original emotion meaning that it can make you even more angry or even more upset [2]. People who have a strong natural tendency to ruminate are more likely to experience depression, anxiety and anger [1].

 

So what should you do when faced with an upsetting or angering incident? The catch-22 is that other types of self-reflection can be helpful because thinking over an incident with a view to understanding how or why it happened can lead to solving the problem. If, for example, you think over the meeting where your work was criticized you may conclude that everyone else’s work was criticised as well, that the criticism was not as bad as you thought, that you can improve your work in future or that your boss was reasonable but is not normally so and you should try to shrug it off if as an annoying but once-off incident. If, however, you find yourself focusing on how angry you felt at the time and how angry you still feel now and how angry you are likely to feel later you are probably not focussing on solving the problem but instead just making yourself more angry.

 

It can be hard to get to the stage of helpful self-reflection while still in an angry or upset mood so the first step to breaking out of a ruminative cycle is to distract yourself. Going for a walk, doing any form of exercise or doing something pleasant can clear your mind for a more rational and focused analysis of the problem if, that is, it requires it. Many studies have shown that even just thinking about emotionally-neutral things can temporarily distract someone enough to reduce anger [2]. Mindfulness, if followed correctly, can sometimes also help to reduce rumination because it allows negative thoughts to pass through the mind without judgement or getting caught up in the emotions. Cognitive therapies can also help as they challenge the types of repetitive negative thoughts that occur while ruminating.

 

There is a fine line between helpful self-reflection and harmful rumination and it can be hard to sort one from the other while emotion has too strong a hold. Some studies have shown that ruminators have more interpersonal conflict than non-ruminators and it is easy to see why if rumination means you are caught up in an emotion that should have already passed by [1]. If you catch yourself ruminating in work take a break, distract yourself and only then, if needs be, return to the problem with a fresh mind.

 

  1. Nolen-Hoeksema, S., B.E. Wisco, and S. Lyubomirsky, Rethinking Rumination. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2008. 3(5): p. 400-424.
  2. Rusting, C.L. and S. Nolen-Hoeksema, Regulating responses to anger: effects of rumination and distraction on angry mood. Journal of personality and social psychology, 1998. 74(3): p. 790.
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blog-title-eating-better

Covering the basics – Sleep & Eat better

by The Pipon 20 January 2016in PipLife

Remember how simple life could be as a child? Someone told you when to eat and what to eat, you went to bed at a set time and you jumped out of bed in the morning ready for a new day. As adults we may have the luxury or doing what we want and when but sometimes that leads us down the path of bad habits with irregular sleep patterns and poor food choices. If you want to start eating and sleeping better one of the best ways to start is to return to your childhood and get into a routine. Here we briefly outline some ways to start an eating and a sleeping routine that will get you back in balance in 2016.

Eating

One of the major challenges to healthy eating is a lack of time. When you come home at the end of a long day and find there is nothing worth eating in the fridge you turn to the take away menu, the ready meals or, at worst, the bag of crisps you found hidden at the back of the cupboard. The key to healthy eating is preparation. Choose a day of the week on which you can plan and shop for food for the next 7 days. Make a rough plan of the healthy meals you are going to eat for the week, write a list and do one big weekly shop for the ingredients you need. If you have time you can go one step further and prepare your food for the week in advance. Make Sunday afternoons your preparation day, stick on your favourite tunes and make big batches of meals that can be frozen in portion-size batches ready to defrost and reheat at the end of a long work day. If you make these steps part of your routine you will not only reduce food waste but you will find it much easier to stave off the temptation to graze on unhealthy snacks instead of eating balanced meals.

Sleeping

Sleep is a vital rejuvenator for the brain and the body. Too often we find ourselves calculating how many hours we have left to sleep and despairing when it is fewer than we think we need. One way to stop this is to start a sleep routine. Decide on the time you would like to be asleep at and set a cushion of half an hour or an hour around that. Your ‘bed time’ is the window of time during which you are preparing to sleep and your ‘sleep time’ is the time when you will actually be asleep check our blog on sleep habits. Use your ‘bed time’ as an electronic-free zone in which you relax, read a book or meditate. Try using the PIP for 10 minutes during ‘bed time’ to really settle your mind for sleep. If you it part of your routine that at, for example, 10:30pm you will begin preparing for bed you should increase the number of hours you sleep and the regularity with which you do so.

Incorporate your intentions to eat and sleep better into a firm plan of action by making your good behaviours routine and you will find it easier to take control in 2016.

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Top 5 tips for keeping your New Year’s resolution

by The Pipon 4 January 2016in Busy Lives, Health & Wellbeing, Jan-Cam, Mental Fitness, Psychology
[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Have you got a New Year’s resolution? Is it the same one you make year upon year and never manage to keep?" weight="400" style="normal" position="center"][/tw_heading]

[tw_divider size="waves-shortcode" type="line" position="center" text="" icon="" color="#dbdbdb" height="10"]

This year we give you the five steps to making a habit and finally keeping your New Year’s resolution.

[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Be specific" weight="50" style="normal" position="left"][/tw_heading]

Non-specific, general goals are hard to meet. If your New Year’s resolution is along the lines of ‘I’m going to exercise more’ or ‘I’m going to eat healthier’ you’ve lost already. General goals like this are hard to form a habit out of because there is too much variety. Instead of saying ‘I’m going to eat healthier’ make your aim ‘I’m going to eat a piece of fruit with lunch every day’. Replace ‘I’m going to exercise more’ with ‘I’m going to go to the gym on Saturday mornings’. The more specific you are the less likely you will be to wriggle out.

[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Set yourself a cue" weight="50" style="normal" position="left"][/tw_heading]

Our brains like cues. When we get into bed we feel sleepy, when we see the front door we take out our keys. These cues help us function without having to make a decision about every tiny thing. Set yourself a cue to form your habit. If your goal is to go to the gym on a Saturday decide on a specific time and set an alarm. If you do this enough times your brain will associate the Saturday alarm clock with the gym and you will automatically get ready to go [1, 2].

[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Reward yourself" weight="200" style="normal" position="left"][/tw_heading]

We’re simple beings. If we’re rewarded for something we’ll do it again. Make a calendar and mark it every time you do what you said you would do. You won’t need to keep doing this once you have formed a habit but it’s a nice little boost in the meantime.

[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Have a backup plan" weight="200" style="normal" position="left"][/tw_heading]

We are usually very good at keeping resolutions for the first few days then we start making excuses. Having a backup plan will get you through. For example, if it’s too cold to get out of bed on a Saturday morning to go to the gym leave your gym gear beside your bed so you don’t have to move too far in the cold. Or, time your heating to come on half an hour before you need to get up so that the room is warm. Encourage yourself by recognising and removing hurdles in advance.

[tw_heading size="waves-shortcode" text="Do it for 21 days" weight="200" style="normal" position="left"][/tw_heading]

This isn’t set in stone. Some habits take longer to form than others and people differ in how well they can form a habit [2]. The main message is to keep at it. The more you do a behaviour the easier it becomes to keep doing it. At the tipping point, it might be repeating it 20 times or it might be 80 times, it will become a habit.

If you have a New Year’s resolution this year make it specific, set some triggers, reward yourself, have a backup plan and keep doing it. Make your resolution a habit and you will finally have met your New Year’s resolution.

1. Neal, D.T., W. Wood, and J.M. Quinn, Habits—A repeat performance. Current Directions in

Psychological Science, 2006. 15(4): p. 198-202.

2. Lally, P., et al., How are habits formed: Modelling habit formation in the real world. European

Journal of Social Psychology, 2010. 40(6): p. 998-1009.

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blog-title-good-food-for-mental-health

Science behind forming new habits

by The Pipon 29 April 2015in PipLife

As we all know new habits are hard to form. You may have the best intention of running every day before work and you do, for the first day or two.  After that you start to make excuses, you miss a few days, you’re tired the next day and soon months have gone by since you ran. The key way to ensure that you keep doing something you want to do is to make it a habit. But how do we do this?

 

The good news is that we all make habits all of the time. For the majority of our waking hours we work based on habits. Habits allow us to head straight for the shower in the morning before we realise our brains have properly woken up, they allow us to make breakfast and get out of the house at the same time each morning to get to work. Without habits we would have to plan each of these activities and monitor ourselves as we did them. The advantage of having habits is that while part of our brain is engaged in automatically completing the mundane morning tasks, the rest of our brain is free to think about other, more important, things such as the complex problem that faces us in work or what to have for lunch [1]. We don’t have to fight with ourselves to shower every morning because it is a habit. We do fight with ourselves if we want to leave the warm bed to go for a run because that is not yet, for most of us, a habit.  To make a habit we have to make the behaviour automatic.

 

The basal ganglia is the part of the brain that is involved in the formation of habits [2]. When we first learn a new task there is a section in the front part of our brains – called the pre-frontal cortex – which is activated. The pre-frontal cortex is the part of the brain involved when we have to make decisions and plan things or when we have to remember many things at once, as we do when first learning a new task. When a behaviour is repeated multiple times, however, it becomes automatic and we can see this change happening in the brain as well. When people are given a new task to complete their pre-frontal cortex works hard but when they have learned this task, and repeated it so many times that it has become automatic– or a habit – the activity switches to further back in the brain – to the basal ganglia [2].

 

In order to teach our brain to make this change the behaviour we want to make a habit of has to be repeated multiple times in the same context with the same cues. Our environment is filled with cues which tell us what to do when. When we get into bed we feel sleepy, when our alarm rings we get up, when we see the front door we take out our keys. Our brain likes cues and so if we want our brain to make a behaviour automatic we have to give it the same cues [3, 4]. This means that instead of saying ‘I’ll go for a run every day’ you should say ‘I’ll run every day as soon I get up’. If you do this enough times then your brain will learn to associate your alarm clock with running and you will automatically get up and run.

 

You can do the same with the PIP. If you say ‘I’ll use the Pip for 5 minutes every morning before my coffee’, you will automatically reach for the PIP when you see the jar of coffee in the morning. The time taken to form a habit is different for everyone but the good news is that every time you repeat the behaviour it becomes a little more automatic [4]. And even better, you don’t have to berate yourself if you miss just one day because a recent study found that, as long as you consistently do the behaviour on most  days, missing it for one day doesn’t make too much of a difference [4].

 

  1. Wood, W., J.M. Quinn, and D.A. Kashy, Habits in everyday life: thought, emotion, and action. Journal of personality and social psychology, 2002. 83(6): p. 1281.
  2. Yin, H.H. and B.J. Knowlton, The role of the basal ganglia in habit formation. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2006. 7(6): p. 464-476.
  3. Neal, D.T., W. Wood, and J.M. Quinn, Habits—A repeat performance. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2006. 15(4): p. 198-202.
  4. Lally, P., et al., How are habits formed: Modelling habit formation in the real world. European Journal of Social Psychology, 2010. 40(6): p. 998-1009.
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