When we expect a change in behaviour or circumstance to be reeeeeeally hard to accomplish, then guess what: it will be hard! We get what we expect pretty much most of the time. So expecting something to be hard means that we have set up resistance to accomplishing our goal before we even start! If this is what's derailed you turn this one around by either breaking your goal down into smaller chunks, then halve them again, and again, until they seem ridiculously EASY (eg. could you fit in an eight-minute walk each day? Sure you could. Good. Do that then). And then just START. Give yourself permission to start slow, but for the love of God, start! Build up as you go rather than putting yourself off by expecting too much too soon.
Not building in milestones and rewards
We can self-sabotage by turning positive change into a drudge or a chore. When it's a big goal (run a marathon, drop 15kg, learn how to windsurf well) it is much easier to keep motivated towards our goals by building in intermittent rewards for reaching key milestones along the way. When we build in these smaller checkpoints we can keep ourselves on track with the bigger goal and we are far more likely to accomplish it. For example a weekend away after losing the first 4kg, or running 10km the first time. Bribes don't just work on small children! Build yourself in some rewards to keep your motivation high.
Not choosing in favour of our goal in the moment
The biggest self sabotage of them all is when we don't choose in favour of our big goal in the moment. We choose in favour of what we fancy right then (chill on the couch, eating dessert) rather than what we have consciously chosen as our long term goal. Regularly reconnecting with the big goal is super important to make choices that support that in the moment rather than choices that self sabotage. Regularly recommit to your goal and remind yourself of the benefit of achieving it and how you will feel when you have made it happen.
- bite.co.nz