Posts tagged behavior change
Embrace Your Potential

Mr. Lutz was my broad shouldered, silver haired vice principal who had an affinity for John Wayne, and also, weirdly, Mariah Carey.

But he also had a propensity for spewing positive quotes, much to the chagrin of the entitled, snot nose teenagers who roamed the halls around him. For every quote he offered, we responded with at least two eye rolls and a bombastic side-eye.

His favorite quote, which was included in daily announcements and eventually painted on the wall of the high school cafeteria was “believe to achieve.”

As a high schooler, I thought it was stupid.

As an adult with a fully developed, though neurodivergent brain, I’ve realized that not only was he right, but believing in yourself is the foundation of all behavior change. Because as that old Henry Ford quote goes “whether you believe you can or you think you can’t, you’re right.”

I have worked with clients who struggle to believe that they can change because years of trying has led them to believe that they can’t. My response to those clients is always the same. I’ll believe it for you until you can believe it for yourself.

So even though you and I have never met (unless the only people who buy this book are friends and family), I’ll offer the same sentiment because I think it’s so important. As a coach, I believe that everyone is capable of doing what they want to do. So I’ll believe it for you until you can believe it in yourself.

When it comes to behavior change, we often mistake knowledge as the missing component of execution. If we could just figure out what to do, we’d be well on our way to saving more money, losing weight or managing our time better.

Then, we acquire the knowledge, and sooner or later find ourselves in that valley of despair from page 14. What follows is the phrase most of us know all too well.

I know what I need to be doing, I’m just not doing it.

What comes between the knowing and the doing?

Resistance. And resistance comes in many, many different forms, including a lack of self-confidence.

Research confirms* that when we don’t believe we have the capacity to change, we don’t make as much progress implementing the change. Too often when I ask people what is getting in the way of their progress, they say the same thing.

“Me. I am the problem.”

“I can’t get out of my own way.”

Of course you think that! For those of us who feel like a hot mess most of the time, there is never a consideration that the system is broken because everyone else knows something that we don’t and everyone else is right. The system isn’t the problem, you are.

Except that’s one of the big lies that many of us believe.

You’re not the problem, I promise.

However, if you believe that you are the reason behavior change isn’t possible, then it can be difficult to believe that you have the capability to solve the problem. After years of floating back and forth between the starting and the valley of despair, you might give up on the idea that you can ever make anything different than it is.

So before you can get anywhere in this journey of making sustainable change, you have to believe that you are not your own problem, but your own solution.

Unfortunately, I can’t wave a magic wand and suddenly make you believe in yourself. But there are a few places you can start.

 

1.     Make a list of things that you’re good at.

Recently, I heard the term borrowing confidence. While there are a lot of different uses for the phrase, in this context, I want you to take a long look at the things that you’re good at. As someone who always thought of myself as a train wreck, this exercise was really important. While I struggled with organization, time management and list making, I was good at creative thinking, putting clients at ease, and writing. So pull out a piece of paper and make a list. What are you good at?

Are you stuck already? I know – sometimes it can feel really difficult to come up with positive attributes about ourselves. We think it makes us conceited or uppity. You know, I thought I’d get an error message when I typed uppity, but I didn’t. Who knew? Anywho, if you’re really stuck, ask your closest friend to tell you five things you’re good at. Think about what people say when they pay you a compliment. Think outside of the box.

I never thought my ability to connect with people was a skill or an attribute. It’s just something that has come naturally to me, especially as I’ve gotten older. But the tricky thing about our skillsets is that we don’t think of things that come easily to us as attributes. Because we don’t have to work as hard as other people at some of these skills, if we are paid a compliment, we are mostly likely to shrug it off and say whatever, it’s just what I do.

Yes, it’s just something you do, but it’s a skill that not everyone can do. When you learn to recognize your skills for what they are, you can begin to tap into some of that confidence you’re looking for.

2.     Comparison is the thief of joy.

It’s also one of the quickest ways to minimize whatever it is that you are doing. We all have people in our lives who are overachievers. They were probably voted most studious in high school. You and I were likely voted messiest locker (ok, that was eighth grade…).

Making comparisons is natural, in fact, social comparison theory suggests that people value their own personal and social worth by assessing how they compare to others. But if you’re not careful, that comparison can rob you of your own confidence because nothing you do is ever going to be enough. Most of us don’t have to look far to find someone who is doing some part of life better than we are. In fact, that comparison is often a huge contributor to why we feel like train wrecks compared to the mom who makes birthday cupcakes from Pinterest for her kid’s birthday while we sent our kid in with runny no bake cookies.

You have to focus on what is happening in your lane, and in your lane only.

3.     Be kind to yourself.

If you follow my brand, you know that my tagline is be strong, be kind. Most folks wonder what the hell being kind has to do with fitness. Well, self-compassion is an essential part of recognizing your human-ness. Self-compassion means that when you do make a mistake, and when you do come up short, that there is nothing fundamentally wrong with you and you are not broken.

For many of us, it’s habit to automatically shame ourselves whenever we make a mistake. And when it comes to making personal change with habit change, many of us have had periods of time where we’ve made progress, but we also have come up short. It can be very easy to let these previous efforts let us think in absolutes. That we will never have success, or that we can’t workout in the morning or learn to food prep.

Not true.

4.     Practice Positive Self-Talk

Ok, let’s just get this out of the way straight up. Everybody of my generation who had any access to Saturday Night Live in the early 90’s is permanently, at least somewhat, ruined on the idea of positive self-talk.

Al Franken’s brilliant character of Stuart Smalley, who spoke with a lisp and looked in the mirror while reflecting the daily affirmation of “I’m good enough, I’m smart enough, and doggone it, people like me” spawned a generation of people like myself, who struggle to take daily affirmations seriously.

However, the longer I’ve been in the coaching game, the more I’ve recognized negative self-talk as one of the primary reasons that people, and many women specifically, struggle to see lasting results.

Negative self-talk disrupted me and my progress for a long time. The thing is, I didn’t recognize what I was doing as negative self-talk.

Because humor.

Specifically, self-deprecation. Ain’t nothing that can crack a room full of people up quite like making fun of yourself. It’s a great way to break the ice, and it does make for an interesting title for a book.

But that humor comes at a cost.

And that cost is the ability to really, truly believe that you are capable of not always being a train wreck. Because while you might think it intellectually, you won’t actually be able to make change if you don’t truly believe in your bones that you are capable.

This one word needs to go.

My high school math teacher was quirky. 

Actually, quirky doesn’t even begin to describe Mr. Solomon. He lived for the precision of Algebra and Trigonometry, pinched the bridge of his nose when we exasperated him (which was daily), and carried his love of details over to our homework and class structure.

I once got a negative two on a test because, in addition to not knowing anything about Trig, I also did the heading wrong. We were graded on our headings. 

Details. 

Mr. Solomon had any number of pet peeves about math and life, and among the highest on his list was the use of the word "just."

He taught his class by demonstrating some trigonometry theorem crap, and then assigning us problems related to said ridiculous theorem. The next day we came in as a class and put all of the problems on the board and then took turns explaining how we solved those problems. We were required to use a pointer stick, because our fingers weren't precise enough.

One day, I took my turn with the pointer stick and tried to explain the problem on the board. 

Me: “Then you just take the five and...”

Mr. Solomon. "You what????"

Me: "Um...you just take the five..."

Mr. Solomon. "You don't just do anything!!!"

He said it with flair and disgust and I was mortified as the attention of the class was focused on me and my mistake. Then I completely forgot what I was saying because I didn't really understand trig in the first place. What I've never forgotten, though, is the use of the word "just." 

And if Mr. Solomon were still alive, he'd be shocked to know that the more I coach, the more I've come to agree with him on using the word "just."

Almost every day I have some version of the following conversation with a client.

Me: How can we be helpful with your nutrition goals?

Client: I know what I need to do. I just need to do a better job. 

The word ends the conversation. “Thanks coach, but there’s nothing you can do, it’s all on me. I’m going to go home and struggle my way through another night of eating and hope for the best.” 

No. No. No. No. And as a coach, I won’t let that slide anymore.

"Just" minimizes what you are trying to do. You are trying to change your behavior. Do you know how hard that is?  

You heard it here first. If you tell me you just need to do a better job, I will not let that slide.

First of all, you’re going to take the word “just” out of the sentence. 

"I need to do a better job."

Ok. With what, specifically? Choose just one behavior. Get specific. 

"I will not have a snack tonight after dinner." 

Let someone else help to hold you accountable. Did you have a snack last night after dinner? No? Great. Let’s build on that. Yes? Ok, let’s talk about that.

Whatever the goal and whatever the circumstance, let's find a way to work at it.

Because I don't just want to help you hit your goals.

I want to help you hit your goals. Period. 

What are your goals? What are your struggles? I'd love to hear from you. Comment below, or email me at kim@kimlloydfitness.com