But how are you supposed to know what really works? By these three metrics:
- Your personal experience (what has worked for you before?)
- Science and research of how humans grow and change (how does change generally work?)
- Others’ experience (what has worked for others?)
Only you can know the first part, but I’m here to help out with
numbers 2 + 3. In my experience, and through all the research I’ve done
on neurological studies, and through all of the case studies I know,
these are the five greatest personal development strategies that
actually work!
But First, A Few Notes On The Fascinating Science Of Change
I’m basing my conclusions on science that I have also tested
successfully in my life. I’ve found the studies I mention here to be
accurate and I believe these methods will work for almost everyone. With
a few exceptions, our brains work mostly the same way.
Neural Pathways
Your brain has an amazing network of neural pathways. These pathways
are communication channels in the brain, or how the brain’s different
areas communicate with each other. From a scientific standpoint, habits
are simply thick neural pathways (i.e. strong neural connections).
If every morning for the last 18 years, you have woken up at 6 AM, grabbed the newspaper, and fixed coffee, you will have a thick and strong neural pathway to tell you to do that exact routine on year 18, day two.
Neural pathways operate like muscles. They get stronger with use and
weaker when neglected. Changing a habit is nothing more than
simultaneously weakening one pathway and strengthening another (perhaps
new) pathway.
It helps to visualize your habits in this way because it gives you an
accurate mental image of what’s really happening in your brain while
you’re trying to change.
Some people believe they can change overnight or in a short amount of
time. Generally, it won’t work, and it’s clear why not. If it’s a bad
habit you’ve strengthened over many years, you can’t just drop it. Your
brain has been well-trained to execute that habit when triggered by the
environment or an internal thought.
Or if it’s a good habit you’re trying to start, you’ll have to strengthen it methodically over time just like your biceps, baby.
Then there is the prefrontal cortex, which I’d say is the “manager”
of your brain. It manages your short term memory and current thoughts.
Why are these important?
Together, they form the entire potential of your ability to change.
When you want to change something about your life or grow in an area,
you either need to change the basic framework of how you operate
(habits) or change your decisions (prefrontal cortex), or both.
Example: You want to become a better guitar player
Habit Solution: Make guitar practice a daily habit
Prefrontal Cortex Solution: Think of playing guitar as a bigger life priority and decide to focus on it.
You can see how the two are related. If you think of guitar as a priority, it will be easier to do it daily and make it habit. Unfortunately, habits are automated processes, so you can’t directly change them (that would be like hacking directly into the brain and rewiring it…cool!).
What you have to do is use your Prefrontal “manager” Cortex to make the right decisions that will gradually change your automated behaviors and preferences. As they change, it will become easier to behave the way you want to.
The more times you do something, the less resistance you’ll have to do it again.
But this information isn’t enough. You need strategies that will
allow you to conquer the mental blocks and habitual urges that keep
people locked out of positive change paradise.
So here they are – the best five strategies you can implement to change your brain, and your life, forever.
1. Start small
Every success story in history can be traced back to a small initial step.
In Usain Bolt’s case, it literally started out that way. The next
time you see Jamaica’s favorite lightning bolt race at unparalleled
speed, picture him as a baby taking his first, small, unbalanced step.
Even he had to learn how to walk before he became the fastest man in the
world.
Did you know that Apple – the most valuable company on planet earth
with a $419 billion market capitalization – was never intended to be a
company? The Steves – Jobs and Wozniak – were making computer boards for
fun, and that wasn’t even their first project. Their first “big” sale
was to the Byte Shop, a contract for 50 assembled machines.
Yeah but, what about personal development?
At the end of last year, I created The One Push-up Challenge,
a challenge built around the concept of starting small. It has helped
many people, including myself, successfully overcome their
habitual hesitation to exercise. The minimum requirement of doing one
push-up per day beats anti-exercise habits because it is so easy
to start.
I bet I know what you’re thinking, because I thought it too at first.
“One push-up isn’t much on it’s own, so how does it bring results that matter?”
Look at this email I received:
“We recently applied the principles from your one push-up challenge to get us back on the ‘workout train’…We started the ‘Insanity’ workout and our first goal was to just get thru the warm-up…we are now onto our 4th week and getting stronger and stronger day by day. Thanks for the inspiration!” (emphasis added)
As you can see, starting small makes you very likely to start, and
good things happen when people start. This couple wanted to exercise and
get into shape, but maybe they were psyched out by the difficulty of
the program or the amount of effort they’d have to exert. Once they
started, however, they worried less about the obstacles and focused on
the benefits and excitement of really doing it!
This One Push-up Challenge wouldn’t even exist if not for the small
decision I made two years ago to purchase the domain deepexistence.com
for $10. At that point, I had no idea my blog would become such
an meaningful part of my life and even win some awards. It wasn’t
planned.
What project or habit have you been stalling on? Start small and you’ll be amazed at your mindset change.
2. Step small
Starting is critically important, but so is finishing. And the best
way to finish and grow along the way is to take small steps. It’s making
sure that your successful small start doesn’t end prematurely.
The key benefit of small steps is consistent progress. If you’re not
moving forward, you’ll be acutely aware of it, and when you go a while
without making progress, you’ll get discouraged. And the neural pathways
you started to build might weaken and die out.
The power and effectiveness of taking tiny daily steps towards a goal should not be underestimated.
Long distance running becomes psychological than physical. At some
point, you have to focus on taking that next step, because if you think,
“Oh man, 11 miles to go and I’m so tired,” you’ll give up. 11
intimidating miles is merely a lot of small unintimidating steps.
In my one push-up challenge, I like to set “micro goals” during
push-up sessions. Every time you set a goal (even a micro one!) and
complete it, you get a motivation boost. Break up your projects into
tiny bite-size pieces and take advantage of this.
Writers: Set the goal of one sentence, or one word. Then set another goal. If you do that enough, you’ll have a book!
Entrepreneurs: Set the goal to think of one new business idea, or one new idea to improve your business.
Bloggers: Connect with one person. Write one email. Help one blogger. Send one tweet to an important person. Create one small product or a tiny part of a bigger one.
Every one of these things can be built off of. The repetition of
completing these small steps will build your confidence, increase your
motivation, and most importantly, give you real results.
2 more push-ups. Done! Ok, now 3 more push-ups. Finished! Ok, now 2 more…
If you only tried to form good habits and unlearn bad habits, your time would be well spent.
David T. Neal, Wendy Wood, and Jeffrey M. Quinn from Duke University
ran a diary study using students as well as the general community. They
found that 45% of participants’ behavior “tended to be repeated in the
same location almost every day.” In other words, 45% of the behavior was
due to habit, not active decision-making. (source)
Habits are the framework our lives are built upon.
Many people suggest 30 days to form a habit. That is false
information, and it’s common sense as to why. Would it take 30 days to
get into a habit of drinking one glass of water per day? Of course not,
because it’s simple and easy. Would it take 30 days to make 200 push-ups
per day a habit? Of course not, because it is extremely challenging and
has to override a number of easier habits.
Starting small and taking small steps are key parts of making a new
habit. New habits are like 100 pound weaklings lifting weights. It’s
tempting to pick up the 70 pound dumbbell habit, but it’s not the best
strategy. Use your prefrontal cortex to prioritize habit-making as very
important, and start out with one habit you know you can complete, even
if it takes 67 days to establish.
You know something is a habit when it’s more difficult NOT to do it than to do it.
There are few things that feel better than successfully establishing a
new habit. And once you learn how to do it once, guess what? You can do
it again and again until your habits form a solid framework for a happy
and successful life.
4. Trial And Error
Say you want to quit smoking, so you try running whenever you get the
urge to smoke. But later you find out that having to run stresses you
out and makes your craving to smoke worse, and you cave in. That’s trial
and error. You have an idea that might work, and try it to see if it
works.
Yeah, I sound stupid talking about something so obvious, but why
doesn’t anyone do it? Why do we spend 30 years strategizing about how to
get in shape instead of trying every idea that comes to mind and seeing
if it works?
Of course, this isn’t to say that strategy doesn’t matter, because it
does. And you can employ smart strategies with trial and error to get
the best results.
One important aspect of trial and error is to figure out why a
particular solution did not work. When you learn why, you can improve
your strategy for next time. Even those who have no strategy can succeed
with a brute force trial and error campaign. Most of us are simply too
scared about the error part of the equation.
5. Focus
Focus is what ties all of personal development together. It allows
you to do what you want in life. My definition of focus is choosing one
path and deciding not to pay attention to anything that conflicts with
it. The world outside of it becomes a blur.
I’ll tell you why it’s important. Say you want to do the previous 4
steps in here. If you can’t focus, you won’t do them. You can have all
of the secrets of life, but without focus, it’s worthless information.
Focus is the ability to apply what you’ve learned. It matters most.
“There is clear and compelling evidence of one unit being maintained in focal attention and no direct evidence for more than one item of information extended over time.” Brian McElree, PhD – A New York University Psychology Professor
Studies on the mind always reach one conclusion – focusing on one
thing works best. As Professor McElree says, focal attention is
singular, and that’s why juggling too many ideas at once gets you
nowhere. I’m sure you’ve experienced this.
Any time you’re overwhelmed, it’s the result of your focus being
divided. It usually happens when trying to sort out a big project. But
you can get focused quickly to sort it out.
A focused mind knows the single best action (s)he can take right now.
It doesn’t matter if you have 35 papers due in one hour. There is
always a single best action to take (though you can choose wrong
sometimes, it’s no worse than freezing in place).
Decide, take action, and don’t worry about anything else.
Focus is necessary for any type of personal development because it allows for consistent progress in one area at a time, which is what your brain is best suited for. Focusing is playing to your brain’s strengths.
Trying to grow without focus is like trying to fill up four bowls,
each with holes in them. You can switch them out as fast as you want,
but you’ll never fill them all up. But if you hold one bowl underneath
with holes in it, the volume of water can still fill the bowl up as it’s
leaking, and then magical focus fairies will patch the holes up for
you.
Darn, I was so close with that analogy, but I had to call in the fairies.
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