A habit is a form of learned, automatic behaviour
that provides pleasure and comfort. A bad habit has long-term negative
consequences, but it still gives immediate comfort, and under stress the
automatic tendency is to revert to it. Why do people weaken on the
threshold of success? Physical cravings and lack of will-power play
their roles, but the major cause, experts now believe, is emotional
distress—anger, anxiousness, depression, boredom or loneliness.
At first the cravings seems close to overpowering. Gradually, however,
they fade with time. But there is always a danger of becoming a victim
of what psychologists call habit relapse. In habit relapse a person gets
the feeling that he or she may never be able to change their bad habits
such as drinking or smoking and they decide to enjoy it even more.
“Relapses,” says psychologist Saul Shiffman “are the bugbear of every
quitter.” And for good reason: 80 per cent of those who are trying to
break a habit will relapse within 90 days, according to G. Alan Marlatt,
a psychologist and co-editor of the book Relapse Prevention.
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Plan ahead. Face it –
Sometimes after swearing off, you’ll be tempted to light a cigarette,
take a drink or hog out on rich desserts. The urge is normal,
inevitable, and may come unpredictably and seem overwhelming. Marlatt
compares these urges to an ocean wave. You, the surfer, must be ready
for the wave in order to ride it out. Fortunately, the relapse urge
normally subsides in a short time—three to ten minutes, according to
Shiffman. Think through in advance what you’ll do when the “wave” hits.
Plan to go for a walk, do exercises, garden or talk with someone.
Rehearse your “surfing” techniques so that your action will be automatic
when the urge strikes. Since tension is so often the trigger, use
relaxation techniques. Picture yourself in a peaceful scene. Recall last
summer’s vacation. “What technique you use isn’t important,” Shiffman
says. “Any response is better than no response.” |
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Adopt new habits -
Your old habits may end; your emotional needs won’t. Set up substitute
activities that give you the same kind of satisfying, immediate results
your bad habit once provided. Establish an exercise programme. Dance
with your spouse. Practice deep- breathing. But don’t wait for the
relapse urge to hit. Get started on your new habits well in advance of
quitting—and practice them as regularly as you once smoked or drank. One
way to choose substitute activities is to recognize what attracted you
to the old habit in the first place. If you drank because it calmed you
down, try meditation. If cigarettes gave you something to do with your
hands, learn to knit or play a musical instrument. |
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Enlist Your Family and Friends -
For many, the most effective method to prevent relapse is to seek the
support of others. That’s why groups like Alcoholics Anonymous and
Weight Watchers succeed. Talking out your urges with someone who has
“been there” can help you overcome them. But you don’t necessarily need
an organized support programme. Family and friends provide strength too.
Tell them your plans in advance, which will also make you feel more
committed. Remind them that you may be irritable and tense during this
difficult period and ask them to help you through it. |
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Avoid high-risk situations –
If you always smoked a cigarette with coffee, switch to tea or soft
drinks. If office tensions triggered lunch- lime shopping sprees, sign
up for an aerobics class. Skip tempting social situations if overeating
is your problem. If you always went out for cocktails with certain
companions, concentrate on other friends. |
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Set realistic goals -
Alcoholics Anonymous says it best: “one day at a lime.” Quitters often
mistakenly set objectives that are too far off to visualize. One man
promised himself a new car with the money he lived by not drinking. He
had accumulated only a few hundred dollars when he returned to the
bottle.
Aim for a short-term goal first, psychologists advise. A few days or •i
week of abstinence is a realistic time frame. Look at the period
immediately ahead and plan for it: “There’s a dinner party on Thursday
night. If I go, I’ll be tempted to eat too much. How will I handled
that?” After you’ve reached your first goal, review what you’ve
achieved, review what you’ve achieved, set new goals and gradually
lengthen the prescribed period.
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Give yourself rewards -
When you were overeating or drinking, you probably thought of a snack or
a cocktail as a well-earned reward. In fact, one reason many ex-drinkers
relapse is because they convince themselves, “I deserve a drink.” In
subduing the urge to relapse, you need substitute rewards. They needn’t
be large; “If I stick to my diet for a week, I’ll buy myself a new
dress.” Anticipating—and winning—a reward reinforces willpower. Each
success makes it easier to win the next round.
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Be honest with yourself -
“Accidents” or “mistakes” rarely just happen. An abstinent drinker,
warns Marlatt, may delude himself that he’s buying a bottle of sherry
“in case friends drop by.” Or an ex-smoker may convince himself that a
plane’s smoking section is “less crowded,” One Marlatt client moved
halfway across America to break off a love affair with a married man.
Now, she told the psychologist blithely, she had to telephone the man to
settle a phone bill. “The minute she hung up, she would have been on a
plane back to him,” Marlatt says. “But she couldn’t see that she was
kidding herself about her motives.” Try not to deceive yourself about
actions that set you up for temptation and relapse. Such insights aren’t
easy. Sometimes the perspective of a friend can help you clarify your
motives.
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Don’t let a lapse become a relapse –
If you yield to the urge for one drink or one cigarette, stop there.
Don’t choose the easy way out and decide that the whole game is over. A
lapse calls for emergency action. Say to yourself, “I’m in trouble here.
I’d better do something fast.” Stop and think why you took the drink or
lit the cigarette. What were the circumstances? How can you avoid
similar situations? “If you take a lapse in stride, analyse it and learn
from it” says Shiffman. “Then you’re more likely to recover and
succeed.” |
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