The Mel Robbins Podcast - Build Amazing Habits: Simple Steps to Break Bad Habits & Make Good Ones Stick
Episode Date: October 12, 2024If you struggle to make new habits stick, you are not the problem.You've just been missing the right tools and strategies to make real change happen. In this episode, you’re going to learn the simp...le ways to break bad habits and form new ones.Mel is revealing the 3 biggest mistakes you are likely making when trying to change your behavior and why it’s not about willpower.She is breaking down the science of habit formation so you can finally understand why your bad habits keep holding you back—and how to flip the script.This is a comprehensive toolkit that will help you apply the research to your life and take the exact steps you need to make lasting change.This episode will help you beat your next urge to doom scroll, snack, smoke, or self-sabotage. This is the breakthrough you've been waiting for!If you want more science-backed hacks for more confidence and productivity, listen to this episode next: 4 Habits for Energy, Productivity, & Happiness That Changed My Life (Science-Backed)For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s new free 26-page workbook, What Do You Really Want, to finally answer that question and redefine your future.Watch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Alright, today we have one of the most important topics ever.
No matter what your goals are, you need habits to help you achieve them.
And you're lucky because you've got a friend named Mel who happens to be one of the leading experts in the world on behavior change and the strategies that you can use to break bad habits and replace them with new habits.
And so I want to tell you something right now.
If you've had a hard time changing your habits or trying to achieve your goals, I want you to hear something loud and clear before we jump into the foundational science, okay?
You're not the problem.
I'm gonna say that again.
If you've had a hard time achieving your goals
or changing behavior or changing the way you think,
you are not the problem.
You want to change, me too.
You're frustrated that you can't break those old habits,
me too. Here're frustrated that you can't break those old habits.
Me too.
Here's the problem.
You haven't had the simple science-supported strategies and systems that help you create
new habits and make them stick.
That's it.
You know, when it comes to the science of habits, this is one of those topics that when
you have somebody break it down for you, you have this epiphany where you're like, are
you kidding me?
This is all I needed to know?
Why did I make this so hard on myself?
That's how I felt when I learned everything that you're about to learn today.
Because my goal today is very, very simple.
I am going to break down the complex and overwhelming topic of habit formation.
And I'm going to give you the simple tools, takeaways, and techniques
that you need in order to break bad habits that hold you back
and create the positive new habits that are going to help you achieve your goals.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to a life changing science packed episode of the
Mel Robbins podcast.
No matter what your goals are, you need habits to help you achieve them.
And we're going to cover a tremendous amount of material in today's episode.
And I also am going to unpack all of the foundational research
for you. And here's the other thing that I've done for you. This topic is so important.
And while it might be like, is this going to be boring, Mel? I'm not really up for some sort of
psychology university lecture. Don't you worry. This is not going to be boring. I freaking love this topic. This is the missing piece, so to speak. You want to be happier? Of course you do.
You want to make more money? Hell yes Mel Robbins. Want to get healthier? Absolutely.
Great. You just need to use science and hack your habits. Because the secret that you need
to learn is that habits are neither good nor bad.
Habits are just patterns of behavior.
And I believe that most of us are basically a middle schooler stuck in an adult body.
That the habits that you have are habits that you've had for a very long time.
They are in place.
And here's the truth, everyone. Habits repeat unless you replace them.
I'm going to say that again.
One of the reasons why behavior change is so difficult is that
when you're dealing with habits that you've been repeating for
years, whether it's a habit in terms of how you think or it's
a habit in terms of your behavior, those
habits by design will repeat forever unless you find them and you replace
those habits with something new.
And so as we dig into this, I'm going to teach you how to do that.
And behavior change is going to become very simple
because again, you're not the problem.
The problem is that you have not created simple systems
to help you replace old habits with new ones.
That's it.
It's so exciting.
Wait, wait till you see what we're gonna dig into.
So there are three mistakes that we've all made.
And these mistakes are grounded in research.
Mistake number one, you and I think we know how habits work.
And the truth is, this comes from Dr. Wendy Wood.
Dr. Wendy Wood is the mother, genius,
professor, doctor of habits.
I love that it is a woman. She is a professor at USC,
Dr. Wendy Wood. I don't care what book or article you have read about habits, I
promise you absolutely everybody is basically spinning off of her work.
Atomic Habits is all about Dr. Wendy Wood. The power of habits, Charles
DeWig, Dr. Wendy Wood. And Dr. Wendy Wood's research says that even those of
us that throw the word habit around, like confetti, and we think we understand it,
we don't. Even those of us that are kind of confident enough to say that, ah, I
know what habits are. 80% of, ah, I know what habits are.
80% of us think that we know what habits are, but the truth is, let me ask you this.
Can you easily change your behavior and make it stick?
No.
In areas of our lives where we're struggling to change,
we are not applying the science of habits.
And that's where this gets really important for you to understand habits because half of your day, 44% of your waking actions
are automatic. They're habitual. You don't even think about it. Now, the second thing
that I want you to understand is that habits matter way more than you think. And this was
really important for me to understand,
personally, and I'll explain why in a minute.
See, there's this big myth that you and I see somebody
that's really successful or they're like super ripped
or they have like a lot of discipline on the outside.
And we think that people with success have more self-control.
Not true.
Dr. Angela Duckworth, who's at UPenn, with success have more self-control. Not true.
Dr. Angela Duckworth, who's at UPenn,
she wrote that New York Times bestselling book on grit.
She is also a major studier of human behavior and habits.
She has proven that people that are successful on the outside,
they don't have any more discipline than you and me.
You know what they have?
They have better habits.
They have systems in place that support their habits.
That people that are successful
or that appear more disciplined,
they're not white-knuckling their way through life
the way that I used to.
In fact, do you wanna know who she is describing in my life?
She's describing my husband, Chris.
So I love Chris, but there are parts of Chris that drive me absolutely crazy.
And one of the parts about Chris that I am incredibly jealous of is he has this very
steady methodical way of just sticking to his habits.
It's so annoying.
Like, there's no drama. He just rolls out of bed.
He just consumes his gallon of water a day. He gets in his workout or two.
He gets in the ice bath.
He journals every morning. He meditates. Like it's just, I'm like, what?
How is it that I'm married to a human robot?
I'm like, what? How is it that I'm married to a human robot?
Well, what I've come to learn as I've looked more and more
into the research of habits and as I study human behavior
is that Chris is actually thinking
about this stuff all day long.
On the outside, he appears very disciplined.
On the outside, he is very successful.
But on the inside, what Chris is focused on
are the systems that make him successful.
So for example, the gallon of water,
the guy fills up his water the night before.
He puts it on the kitchen island the night before.
So that when he walks into the kitchen
after getting up and meditating and journaling,
what's right there?
Oh, the bottle that he needs to drink.
He's made it easy.
And so that's why we're gonna keep coming back
to systems and strategies.
You don't have to use willpower.
In fact, you shouldn't.
You don't have to white-knuckle your way
through behavior change.
There is an easier way to do this.
See, this is why you're not the problem.
I personally think maybe we're just really smart, you and me.
That's why we're over-complicating everything.
We don't believe that this could really be that simple.
But you must start to embrace this notion
that, oh, it's not me.
It's that I'm not getting serious about systems and tools
and tactics to make these new behaviors easy.
And you already have habits.
And this is good news because when you start to recognize
that you have tons and tons of habits
that you don't think about,
you realize, oh, I'm capable of doing this.
So for example, let's think about a habit
that most of us share.
The moment that the alarm goes off in the morning, you think, ugh.
And so what do you do?
You look at your phone.
Why?
Because the second you look at your phone, you feel a little better.
That's a little habit right there.
You don't even think about it.
What's another habit that you have that you don't think about?
You get out of bed, you walk into the bathroom, you brush your teeth.
And right after you brush your teeth, you feel a little better because the carpet that
was on your teeth is now gone.
Right?
You just brushed it off.
It feels better.
What's another habit?
Oh, you make a cup of coffee or a cup of tea.
You don't even think about it.
And the second you sip that coffee, you feel a little better.
You check your emails, you don't think about it.
Now you feel needed at the end of the day as you feel tired.
What do you do?
You just kind of slouch down on the couch and you automatically turn on the TV.
These are all things that you don't think about.
What's another thing that you do?
You zone out on the phone.
Why?
Because it's kind of fun to distract yourself by scrolling through social media or laughing
at videos on TikTok.
Now, the important thing here about habits is that you don't even think about those things.
You don't resist those behaviors.
Like, let's just take the example of making a cup of coffee or making a cup of tea.
Do you stand at the coffee maker in the morning and go,
I don't really feel like having coffee today.
I don't know.
This is going to be hard to push this button.
Maybe I'll just do it later.
It's raining outside.
No.
The power of a habit is it is hardwired into your subconscious brain.
You do it automatically, which means that resistance to doing
it is gone.
You have no resistance when you pick up your phone and you start
scrolling on social media.
Imagine if I could teach you how to create systems so that you
could remove the resistance you feel before exercising or working on the book you're writing
or picking up the phone and making a cold call
so that you can grow your business.
Imagine if we could use the three parts of habit formation
and all the science that people have done
and apply it to things that you want to be doing in your life.
See, you're not the problem.
The lack of systems and the lack of understanding about habit formation,
that's the only thing standing in your way.
And so I want to explain some more good news, okay?
And so I want to explain some more good news, okay? Another mistake that you and I make is that we have been told
that it takes 21 days to form a new habit.
That is complete bullcocky.
That is not true, okay?
And there's an important reason why it you got to understand that this is not something that
necessarily takes 20 days
either good or bad and that's because
we tend to hold ourselves to these impossible standards and then when we don't end up acting like a robot or
When we're human and we miss a day we we beat ourselves up. We get impatient. We
start to wonder why is the resistance still there? I've been exercising and
schlepping myself to the gym for 21 days. Why do I still hate this? Or I've been
trying to drink more water now for 34 days. Why do I still hate this? Well I
have this study right here. Let me grab it.
I have the study. You know we love our studies here. This one is so important and this is cited all over the place.
So this is from the European Journal of Social Psychology.
The study is entitled, How Are Habits Formed?
The lead researcher is a professor by the name of Philippa Lally
from the University College of London and what she basically did in this study
and this is so important for you to hear is they did this huge research study
about the process of habit formation in everyday life And they studied people who were trying to change a behavior
for 12 weeks.
And we're talking simple stuff on the surface, okay?
So things like, huh, I'd like to just drink a bottle of water
with lunch.
I'm going to do that every day for 12 weeks.
Or I think I'm just going to walk after dinner.
Or I'm going to try to get a 15-minute run in every day.
So we're talking simple behavior changes
that people wanted to make.
And here's what's incredible.
Basically what they found is it doesn't take 21 days
to form a new habit.
And what does that mean?
That means your resistance to doing it is gone because you have programmed your mind,
body, and nervous system to learn this new pattern.
That check this out, it took between 18 and 254 days.
That's how long it took this study of people.
And that's good news.
And you want to know why?
Because it means that every one of us is a little bit different.
And the amount of resistance that you feel when you try a new behavior change is going to be dependent on you.
It's going to be dependent upon the thing that you pick.
It's going to be dependent upon the systems that you have in place.
And so all of this is in your control.
And I think that's really important to hear because I personally, I get down on myself when things don't feel easy.
Knowing that it might take me, Mel Robbins, the stubborn learner, 200 days of pushing through this,
that's kind of empowering. And it may surprise you to hear that, you know, even the lady that invented
the five second rule, that is still not a habit. I still do it most days, but I still feel resistance.
And it's been 14 years.
Now there are other things that I've added into my life,
like drinking more water, taking the dogs for a walk
every day, that it took me more like 18 days
to lose the resistance.
So I think it's important that you hear
that the resistance that you feel and the automatic
nature of the behavior change that you're trying to make, it depends on you, it depends
on the systems, it depends on the activity that you're trying to take on, and the average
is basically 66 days.
And so I hope that you don't hear that as like, that's bad news.
I think it's good news.
And here's the other thing that Dr. Lally discovered
in this study that I think is also good news,
that missing a day does not materially affect
the habit formation process.
So let me say that again.
If you miss a day, let's just say you are taking on
walking 15 minutes a day and you're like, let's just say you are taking on walking 15 minutes a day, and you're
like, that's it, this is the year, I'm going to get healthy, I'm going to walk for 15 minutes
a day.
And you've got this stupid notion in your head that by 21 days you're going to be an
Ironman and this is going to be easy.
That's mistake number one because if 21 days hits and you're still having trouble getting
out the door, you're going to think you're a loser.
That's not the case at all.
Okay?
Second thing, if you miss two or three days, according to the research, you have not gone
back to zero.
It does not materially affect the habit formation process.
That's good news.
That means if you're a human being that has a normal life
and you cannot act like a robot and you miss two or three days
on something that you want to be changing, no problem.
With the repetition of the behavior, the automaticity,
that's the scientific term that's hard for me to say,
increases.
What does that basically mean?
It basically means that once you start pushing the new pattern through your
nervous system and your neural pathways, even taking a couple days and not doing
it, you literally have not damaged that process. It's still there waiting for you
when you pick it back up. What we're gonna talk about today are the three parts.
Because one of the other things that I think a lot about
that has helped me become way better
at breaking old patterns and creating new ones
is whenever something is taking longer
than I want it to take,
instead of beating myself up for being some loser with no discipline or being weak
or being like not successful or why is it so easy for Chris,
but it sucks for me, is I get curious about,
well, how could I make this easier?
How could I make this new pattern easier?
We're gonna talk about the three parts
of how a habit forms in your brain and how
it locks in as a new pattern neurologically and how dopamine plays a role in this in just a second.
But I need to go through these mistakes we're making because there's so much good news here.
And so how long the new habit takes to make is not the point everyone.
At some point your resistance will lower.
And even if it takes you 254 days to remove all the resistance
and make it automatic as automatic as making a cup of coffee
or automatic as brushing your teeth.
Imagine if going for a 10 minute walk every single day
was as automatic as brushing your teeth. Imagine if going for a 10 minute walk every single day was as automatic as brushing your teeth.
That would be cool.
It doesn't matter if it takes you 254 days
to make that a reality.
Because you will never get to that automatic 254 day habit
unless you commit to day one.
And so getting started is critical. Let's stop talking about how
long it takes. And let's just say, okay, great, I got it. I'm making a mistake. I
don't have the systems. I'm really excited. It might take me less than 21
days, might take me more. I can hack this. This is freaking awesome. Now let's talk
about mistake number three that everybody makes.
And when I heard this information, everyone, this was super relieving.
Because I used to think, okay, there's something wrong with me.
How can all these other people get six-pack abs?
How are all these other people finding all the time in the day and having so much discipline?
And I am literally as weak as a piece of wet spaghetti.
How can I become somebody that is like,
ooh, I got boundaries, I got this, I got that?
Well, this brings me to mistake number three.
I'll be waiting for you after this short break.
Stay with me. Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
You and I are digging into habits, what they are, how to break them, how to make them,
and how to create new ones that really stick.
And let me just summarize what we've covered because these three mistakes are the mistakes that everybody makes.
Mistake number one is telling yourself that you're the problem.
You're not the problem.
The problem is you're missing systems and tools and strategies to hack habits using all the science.
And so everybody gets habits wrong.
There's nothing wrong with you.
This is completely normal.
And it's not gonna happen to you anymore
because you now understand the signs.
Mistake number two is this notion
that it takes 21 days for a new habit.
And that is malarkey.
This is deeply personal.
You can expect that to be shorter or longer,
depending upon your resistance.
You can also start to get really curious.
Like if it's taking longer, don't beat yourself up.
There's nothing wrong with you.
But this is so important because the research, as you also learned,
has made it very clear that if you miss two or three days, if you miss a week,
if you miss a month, whatever, it's not not gonna impact all the progress that you've made.
And mistake number three, what you are not gonna do,
you're not gonna do this.
I make this mistake, you make this mistake.
I guarantee you, as you focus on what you wanna change
in your life, you're only focused on the behaviors
and the actions you need to take.
We're all guilty of it.
I'm gonna eat healthy.
So you focus on eating healthy. I'm gonna exercise. So you focus to take. We're all guilty of it. I'm going to eat healthy. So you focus on eating healthy.
I'm going to exercise.
So you focus on exercising.
I'm going to make more money.
And so you focus on the income producing activities.
That's not how you create a new habit.
You are not going to create new behavior, new thinking patterns and make them stick
if you simply focus on what you need to do.
There is science here and this is where systems and strategies and tactics come into play.
And this is why you're not the problem. The science of habits shows us that the real problem is that there are three parts to every habit.
And unless you get smart, which you are a smart cookie, you are capable of this.
And unless you get smart about all three parts and how they work together and how to hack them to make habits easy
and how to hack them to make habits stick,
if you don't focus on the three parts,
you are always going to have trouble changing your behavior.
I did for almost 45 years.
Seriously, I didn't know 45 years. Seriously.
I didn't know this stuff.
I didn't learn this in college.
I didn't learn this in law school.
This research is so exciting.
So there are three parts to every single habit that you have.
There is a trigger.
There's the behavior pattern. And there's a trigger. There's the behavior pattern.
And there's a reward.
And I'm going to break this down, don't worry.
But I want to give you an example.
How do you train a puppy new behavior patterns?
How do you train them?
You don't just yell sit because the puppy
has no clue what you're talking about. What we do is you raise your hand up, that's the
trigger signaling behavior, and you say sit. And then when the dog, the puppy finally does,
and you know, when you raise your hand up they look up at you and they tend to sit their rear end down.
When he does the behavior of sitting, what do you do?
You give him a treat.
You're aware of the behavior.
We work the exact same way.
See, most of us are screaming at ourselves, sit, why can't you sit?
Are you stupid? You weak?
Just sit.
Just don't drink that alcohol.
Just don't eat when you're sad.
Just get to the gym.
What's wrong with you?
Why can't you do?
Most of us are yelling at ourselves for not sitting.
And we have forgotten two of the three parts of the habit
that we need to focus on in order to make the pattern stick and be automatic.
You're not the problem.
The problem has been that you and I
do not have simple systems, tools, and strategies in place
in order to hack the trigger and the reward
that helps you automate the behavior pattern.
Habits, everybody, they're all about the trigger
and the reward.
And the reward is hugely important
for making the behavior in code.
So we're gonna focus a lot of our time today
on the role that rewarding yourself plays. Because what
research proves is that when you reward yourself, the reward triggers your brain
to release dopamine. And when the dopamine kicks in, that's that feel-good
motivation drive chemical in your brain, and here's what happens. A habit loop is what is formed in your brain
and your nervous system when the dopamine kicks in.
And what's fascinating about the research,
what's so cool is that when I or you or my puppy,
when you hear the trigger sit, your brain doesn't even think about
the physical action of sitting down. What does your brain think about? It jumps to
the treat and that's why the resistance is gone. That's what happens when you
create a habit loop. And so in any area of your life
where you would love to create new behavior,
where you would love to see new habits stick,
we either are missing a great trigger
to signal the behavior or more likely
you do not have a reward that is good enough to make you
excited to do the damn thing. And so I'm going to give you two examples that are
really really important and then I'm going to share a story from my own life
about trying to change my own behavior and the power of a reward. So I want you right now as
you're listening to think about either a habit you want to break or a new
behavior that you are so wanting to have it just become something that's
something you do. I mean it's just one of those things you're like why is it so hard for me
to eat healthy? Why is it so hard for me to drink my water? Why is it so hard for me to get out of
the house once a week and go work on my business? Why is it so hard for me to not drink during the week. And so first I'm gonna cover what it looks like
and a simple trick for stopping old behavior, okay?
And I'm gonna use the example of let's say
that you had a goal of wanting to either stop drinking
during the week or another one that's a very common one is you want to wean
yourself off caffeine and so you want to stop drinking coffee. So this is
something I'm working on right now. I'm not drinking at all and one of the
mistakes that I have made in the past is using willpower.
Like just being like, I'm not drinking.
I'm not drinking this week.
I'm not drinking.
And I've tried to do it with friends
so that I feel the peer pressure
and getting on the text chain really matters.
But let me tell you a really good hack
that helps if you're trying to stop drinking
or stop caffeine or stop emotional snacking.
Something where you're stopping old behavior.
So here is rule number one.
Do not go cold turkey.
And this is not what you think I'm going to say, okay?
Because let's talk about something you've already learned
Behavior patterns repeat unless you replace them
So if you're trying to break a bad habit
willpower alone is like torture an
Easier way to hack the science on this is to break apart the bad habit into the trigger, the behavior, and the reward you feel.
And then figure out what is something that you can do to replace that behavior.
And don't worry, this is covered in the worksheet that I'm going
to give you at the end of this episode so that you can unpack all this for
yourself and work through it because when you see it on paper it is so
fascinating. But let me just take making a drink at night. So for me the act of
making myself a cocktail at night or pouring a can of beer or whatever, let
me tell you the trigger.
The trigger is the time of day.
So there are five big triggers.
The triggers for everybody is time of day.
Other people can trigger behavior patterns.
Feelings are your emotional state, particularly negative ones.
I feel tired. I'm overwhelmed. I'm this, I'm that.
A place.
And you know the thing about places because think about when you go visit your parents,
all your habits fall right out.
You're in a new place or you go on vacation and all of a sudden you're like,
oh, I'm going to walk on the beach every day.
And yet you have not gotten out for a walk in a year in your own house.
So places can trigger.
And finally, proceeding actions.
A really good example of a proceeding action is when you get a notification.
When you get a notification on your phone, it triggers you to repeat a behavior.
What is it?
Check your phone.
And what's the reward?
You get a release of dopamine because you feel needed.
That's a habit loop, everyone.
Triggered by the action of a notification.
Don't even think about it.
That's why so many of us are like,
you got to turn your phone off if you want to work
because you have a habit of getting distracted.
You're not the problem.
You're not the problem at all.
You just have a system.
And the trigger is the notification.
And so we're going to use this to our advantage.
So let's go back to my example of I'm not drinking for two months.
So the trigger is the time of day for me.
So when I'm done working, I have just had a very full day, my brain is taxed and exhausted
and I have a behavior pattern of making a cocktail.
And what is the reward?
Well, oddly enough, the reward is not the alcohol.
The reward is the ritual.
The reward is the dopamine release that I receive because this act of muddling up mint and blackberries and then making a little cocktail with it.
It's an act that I do to signal it's time to stop working, it's time to relax.
And so if I were to say, that's it, cold turkey, not drinking, I'm just not drinking.
I am going to feel so much agitation at the end of the day because we know that patterns
repeat and so the trigger is going to be there, right?
It's 6.30 at night and I've programmed myself to repeat this behavior.
And the reward is relaxing, celebratory, winding down,
this sort of ceremony of the whole thing.
And so I'm gonna be yearning not for the alcohol.
I'm gonna be yearning for that ceremonial ritual
because it's a habit.
So one way that you can support yourself,
because remember, you're not the problem,
it's the systems, is when I break this habit down
that I want to replace on a piece of paper,
I go, oh, interesting, time of day.
I can't change time of day, but I can replace the behavior.
So what am I gonna do?
I'm gonna remove the alcohol for those two months,
and I'm gonna make the world's greatest mocktail bar
kombucha non alcoholic beer
juices
sodas seltzers, I'm going to keep my wine glasses there and I'm going to replace
the old behavior making the drink
with a new behavior, but I'm going to get the same reward.
Because the trigger stays the same,
the behavior changes, and the reward and the dopamine is,
I'm doing the ceremony, I'm having the ritual,
I'm unwinding, and I'm making it special,
because that matters to me.
And so when it comes to coffee, make tea.
Make decaf coffee.
Make something else in the morning.
Make, you know, the switchel.
My grandmother drank that her whole life.
That's the farmer's brew.
The apple cider vinegar and the honey and the lemon and the hot water.
Replace the behavior.
Don't you just love that? I love that. You want to know what
else I love? I love the sponsors of the Mel Robbins podcast. So we're going to take a quick pause,
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Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for being here with me today.
I love the topic of habits.
So let's pick up where we left off.
Let's say you want to stop biting your nails.
I did this huge study with people about biting their nails.
And most people, believe it or not, who have a habit of biting their nails, do you want
to know what the trigger is?
If you really analyze it, the trigger is the trigger of the nail.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is.
So you want to know what the trigger is. So you want to know what the trigger is. So you want to know what the trigger is. So you want to know what the trigger is. So you want to know what the trigger is. And most people, believe it or not, who have a habit of biting their nails,
do you want to know what the trigger is?
If you really analyze it, the trigger is emotional discomfort.
You're either bored or lonely or nervous.
And the pattern of chewing on your nails distracts you from that feeling.
And the reward that you get is a little bit of dopamine on your nails distracts you from that feeling.
And the reward that you get is a little bit of dopamine because you no longer feel bored or lonely or scared.
And so the only thing you need to do in that instance
is if you can identify the trigger,
you basically just say to yourself,
what am I feeling right now?
Oh, I'm feeling tired.
Instead of chewing my nails, what could I do?
I could take a nap.
I could do something else.
And so again, you're going to use this worksheet
to identify the bad habit,
the trigger and the reward,
and to replace it, okay?
Okay, so here's the most important takeaway, everyone.
And this is where most of us really implode
because we don't have the systems and tools
and strategies in place.
Can we ever get rid of uncomfortable feelings?
Of course not.
There's always gonna be moments in your life
where you feel tired or lonely or scared.
And as a little kid, you learned to cope by chewing your nails because it distracted you
from those feelings.
And it worked.
And what I'm saying is as an adult, you can never get rid of the triggers, but you can
replace the coping mechanism that you no longer want to be reaching for as an adult. Whether
that coping mechanism is eating a bag of chips or it's chewing on your nails or
it's zoning out in front of Netflix. That when you break this down using science
into what's the trigger and for a lot of us it's really negative emotions. Like my
trigger with the grabbing alcohol might also just be brain tired.
And so I'm reaching for this habit that feels celebratory, right?
And so when you unpack this on the sheet, this is super important because again,
you know, you hear that quote online all the time,
you can't control what's happening, but you can choose how you can respond.
Not unless you understand the trigger.
And not unless you understand the reward that you're receiving for continuing to repeat this pattern.
And when you really start to use the science of habits to your advantage, trigger, pattern, reward.
Trigger, pattern, reward.
Sit, physically sit, get a treat.
When you start to understand and break apart behavior
you no longer want, and you replace it inside this loop,
you're gonna make changing super easy.
Now let me explain an example
about creating a whole new habit.
So for me, a great example,
and this is where the power of the reward comes in.
And again, the reward is something that is really important
because the reward is what encodes the habit loop
into your neuro pathways.
And so this is a story from my life
about me trying to create a habit of exercising five days a week.
So this was 2019. I was a brand new talk show host.
I was living during the week at a hotel in New York City.
And it was really important to me because it was a super stressful job that I get exercise in every day.
And the job required me to be at CBS broadcast center
by seven o'clock in the morning.
And I worked most nights until at least seven o'clock
at night.
And so I was not gonna have the energy to exercise at night.
I knew that about myself.
And so what this meant,
if I had to be at the studio ready to go by 7 a.m. is I had to be
exercising by 5.30 in the morning.
Now I don't know about you, but I am not the kind of person that first of all likes to
get out of bed, the thought of being out of bed with my exercise tights on and standing
in an exercise class at 5.30 in the morning, this was a whole new Mel Robbins.
Because I knew damn well, I knew myself well enough that there was no way I was going to
get myself down to that gym at the hotel.
I needed to be in a class where somebody was yelling at me
if I planned on actually being there.
I also knew that I needed to sign up the night before
because if I had signed up, I would feel obligated to go.
And so here's where it gets interesting.
to go and so here's where it gets interesting.
So I find this location a couple blocks from the hotel,
set the alarm, I sign up the night before, I go to the class, I suffer through the whole thing
and if I hadn't got this next piece in place,
I never would have gone back.
It's the reward.
Because I'm not the kind of person who is motivated simply
because I feel good after I exercise.
It's just not enough for me.
For my husband, Chris, the sense of accomplishment is
enough of a reward to lock in the habit of
exercising every day.
Not Mel Robbins. No way. No how. I know that when I wake up at 5 o'clock in the habit of exercising every day. Not Mel Robbins.
No way, no how.
I know that when I wake up at 5 o'clock in the morning,
I'm going to feel better if I exercise.
I still don't want to go and I'm not going.
That's where the science of habits come in.
I am not the problem.
I am a normal human being who does not want to get up at 5 o'clock in the morning.
I am not the problem.
The problem is the systems, okay?
Now I've got the front end covered.
I've got the trigger, the alarms going off, the exercise clothes are on the floor, I've
already signed up, I know where I'm going.
I've triggered the behavior, but I was missing the reward until something happened.
I walked past a coffee shop that was super cool.
You know like those super cool coffee shops?
It almost looks like they don't really sell much of anything.
They're like super clean and they've got the big,
like Italian espresso machine thing
that literally is the size of a New York City bus.
And then they've got loads and loads and loads of pastries.
So I walk into this place and it looks almost like,
you know, a high end IKEA with a coffee shop in it.
And the barista, it's always somebody from Brooklyn.
Beard, there's leather on the apron.
You know the kind of place that I'm talking about.
The coffee smells amazing.
But more importantly, they had breakfast burritos.
And not just any breakfast burritos.
They had these delicious breakfast burritos
that had been dropped off by a woman
that makes them probably in her apartment.
They were soft and gooey.
And when you bit into it,
like the flour tortilla was sort of moist and chewy and then the eggs
were soft and there was cheese in there and sausage in there, it was an explosion of awesomeness
in my mouth.
My stomach just growled thinking about it.
So I get a burrito, I get a great cup of coffee, I go back to the hotel.
The next morning my alarm goes off at 5 a.m.
What do you think was the first thing that popped into my mind?
The breakfast burrito.
This is why the science of habits matters. When you have a reward tied to the new behavior,
your mind, the second that the trigger hits,
and for me the trigger for the new behavior of exercising at 5.30 in the morning
was the alarm going off and seeing my exercise clothes laid out on the floor.
was the alarm going off and seeing my exercise clothes laid out on the floor.
When you have a good reward, your mind skips over the behavior
and focuses on the reward.
This is such powerful science that when I would be walking
to that exercise class, you know what I was thinking about?
The burrito.
While I was doing abs and butt exercises
and sweating like crazy,
yeah, I was hating class,
but you know what I was thinking about?
The burrito.
This is neuroscience.
This is the power of breaking down the behavior
into trigger, behavior, and reward.
And so if you want to try something new in terms of a new habit, whether it is water
that you want to drink at lunch, or a walk that you want to take, or an exercise class that you want to go to, or
spending more time working on your goals or your side hustle,
please come up with a reward that really matters to you. And if we jump even deeper into the science here,
according to Dr. Wood,
the reward needs to either happen or you need to be moving toward it within two minutes of completing the behavior pattern.
It's really important that that reward happen in close proximity with the behavior pattern because we want the dopamine in your brain to drop in a close relationship with the behavior pattern.
That's what creates the loop.
That's what removes the resistance.
Because when your brain starts to associate 5 o'clock in the morning and exercise tights
on the floor with a big ass juicy burrito, there is zero resistance to exercising.
And you can use this science to hack habits
by focusing on the reward. And look, I wanna say something loud and clear.
The intrinsic, oh, it makes me feel good,
that's never been enough to motivate me, never.
I think if it were enough of a reward, knowing that, oh, well, when I'm done with my master's program, I'll feel good about myself.
That doesn't make me study. Oh, when I'm done with this class online, streaming a yoga class or a hit class, I'll feel much better.
That does not motivate me. I need something else and there's nothing wrong with you if simply knowing
that it's gonna feel good when you're done doesn't motivate you to do it.
That's okay. That's not enough of a reward for most of us and so I want you
to embrace who you are. This is why it's not a one-size-fits-all. This is why in
the biggest study around habits and how long it takes to form why it's not a one-size-fits-all. This is why in the biggest study around habits
and how long it takes to form habits,
it's between 18 and 254 days.
And it's also why I want to tell you
that if you're getting frustrated
or the behavior isn't sticking,
let's look at the reward.
Look at the reward first
because you don't have a reward that matters to you.
My husband does not need a breakfast that matters to you. My husband
does not need a breakfast burrito to get to the gym. Mel Robbins does. Either that
or an iced latte. I need something immediately following the exercise
because that's what makes the habit stick. It's what makes the resistance go
away and it just is what it is. Now this brings me to a question I'm sure you're thinking about,
which is if you've got a really big goal,
and you should have big goals and big dreams,
how do you use this science in order to keep your momentum up,
to keep the small actions going?
Let's just take a very common goal, which is losing some weight and getting healthier.
You cannot attach the reward to losing all the weight. You
have to figure out something that's awesome that makes it worth doing the
exercise or sticking with the healthy eating or staying positive or counting
your steps or whatever it is that the behavior change is,
you gotta come up with a daily reward.
And so let me give you one.
One of the things that at least works for me
is that if I take on a goal with a friend,
I love the reward of texting photos back and forth.
There is nothing preventing you from reaching out to a
friend or a family member or a colleague and saying, hey, do you want to like cheer each other on every
day? Like I'm going to take on this goal of walking or I'm going to take on this goal of drinking more
water. I'm going to take on this goal of writing and journaling every morning and just writing three pages
or writing five dreams down.
How about you and I send a photo of ourselves
each morning to one another doing it?
Just as a way to stay positive, connected
and to cheer each other on.
To me, that was a big enough reward
knowing that I was part of a bunch of people doing something
or just two of us doing something,
to keep me feeling motivated
and to remove the resistance to doing it
because I was looking forward to taking the selfie of myself
and putting it in the text chain.
And so it doesn't have to be a breakfast burrito.
It doesn't have to be something huge.
It could be something that matters to you.
And I think going back to the foundational research
that we covered early on from Dr. Laley
about how long does it take to form a habit?
18 to 254 days.
And if you're feeling like it's too much resistance,
but I want you to focus on the reward,
because I guarantee you the resistance is still there,
because you haven't come up yet with a reward that's made it worth it.
You're going to realize there's nothing wrong with me.
I've been trying to willpower this stuff,
and I'm still dealing with the triggers,
and I haven't replaced the behavior?
No wonder. Oh, I don't have a reward for this other than guilt. That's not a reward. That's
a punishment. There's nothing wrong. This is amazing. And when you stop beating yourself
up for what you need and you start supporting yourself for where you are, you will change.
And this is so... it's almost hard to find the words to explain how important
learning the science and hacking habits in your life is.
But let me just underscore it this way.
I want you to create a life that you just love. I want you to become
the person that you know you want to be. I want you to be happier and fulfilled because
you deserve that. And I believe profoundly in an enormous body of research called behavioral activation therapy.
Behavioral activation therapy is a very simple premise with decades of research behind it.
And that is, if you want to change your life, act like the person you want to become now. I'm going to say that again.
If you want to change your life, act like the person you want to become in the
future now. And I'll give you an example. Who doesn't love the rock? I love the
rock. So let's just say that the rock is my north star. I want to become more like the rock.
If that's true, one way that you can hack improving your life is simply pick somebody
who represents the kind of person you want to become.
And then as simple as it sounds, identify what are those persons' habits?
So, I would imagine the rock exercises every day.
I mean, I see him on Instagram doing it, so I'm assuming he's doing it every day.
I would imagine that the rock practices very positive mindset habits.
I would imagine that the rock has a pretty healthy diet.
I would imagine that the rock, like you can just start to kind of list these things out.
Then what you're going to do is you're going to use the simple science of habits,
triggers, behavior pattern, reward, to create systems to encode those new behaviors.
And when you do that, you are paving a pathway
to the future you envision for yourself.
And I'm gonna repeat one more thing.
Those folks that we all admire that are super successful
or seem like crazy disciplined,
they're no different than you and me.
They're not born with it.
They're not like, they don't have some superpower.
They just have habits.
That's it.
They have systems and tools in place
to remove the resistance and to encode new behavior.
And the pathway to getting absolutely everything
that you want is habits.
Act like the person you want to become right now.
Yeah, it's easier said than done, but my goal here is to empower you with this science
so that you can crack the code and you can start thinking about systems that are
going to help you hack the behavior change that you want and deserve in your life.
That's the secret to locking in new habits and making them stick.
Alright, I cannot wait to hear what you think about this and in case nobody
else tells you, I'm telling you I love you. I believe in you. You now have the science.
You got the pathway.
You know that between these triggers and these rewards,
you got the hackable way
to truly create a better life using science.
I love you.
I'll see you in the next episode.
I love talking about how you can make a difference
in your life.
I love talking about how you can make a difference next episode.
I love talking about how you can create better habits. And most importantly, I love seeing, okay, what?
Okay.
Thank you so much for still being here.
Not still being here.
What am I saying?
Still being here.
I just think that's super cool.
So let's keep going. Could you do one, so let's pick up from where we left off. Great. I just think that's super cool. So let's keep going.
Could you do one, so let's pick up from where we left off.
Great, I love that aim.
Oh, great, okay, great.
Gotcha, okay, great.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist,
or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.
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