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How Guilt Undermines Your January Resolutions
Use guilt judiciously. If the guilt you are feeling forces you to re-think your schedule, your priorities, even your values, and then to change your behavior, your response to this emotion is constructive. But let’s say you skip breakfast and eat a bag of potato chips, or miss your regularly scheduled exercise time. You may feel so guilty that you say to yourself, “Oh, what’s the use. I just don’t have any self-discipline.” So you throw your program away and eat badly for the rest of the day, or assume that you can’t exercise at all that day, since you missed your regular time. Guilt can be fatiguing. It can narrow your thinking so you believe you have no other choices. It can make you feel so bad that you give up your quest for better habits. Notice that you made a mistake and why, then forgive yourself and get back on track. You can start to eat more healthily at lunch, and you may be able to get in a quick walk in the evening. And often our unconscious thinking goes like this: “I’m not____ (fill in the blank: exercising enough, eating wisely, getting enough sleep), and I feel like a bad person. But I know I’m not completely bad, because at least I feel guilty about it!” This idea that a “good” person will feel guilty allows us to keep making the same mistakes over and over because we have exempted ourselves from believing we are really bad. And guilt often drives us into performing the stressful action over again. This misuse of guilt is stressful and draining. Use guilt well as a motivator to do better, or give it up. Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com Lynette Crane, M.A.(Psychology) and Certified Life Coach, has more than 30 years' experience in the field of stress management. She currently works to provide stress and time pressure solutions to harried women, those women who seek "Islands of Peace" in their overly-busy lives. Visit her website at www.creativelifechanges.com/ to see more in-depth articles and to view her programs. |
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