Forget New Year’s Resolutions – They Don’t Work
“You can forget about making New Year’s Resolutions if you’re hoping for a successful outcome. Most aren’t worth the paper they’re written on,” says Vic Johnson, a leading goal setting and motivation expert.
Most New Year’s Resolutions have gone by the wayside before January is over and most won’t even be remembered six months later. And the reason is pretty simple. Most are made in response to something negative; a habit or situation that the person wants to change or end. And therein lies the problem – it’s hard to develop momentum from a negative response. It is always easier to move toward something than away from something.
Consider one of the most adopted goals — weight loss. No one can get excited about losing weight – it requires deprivation. It’s a negative response to concerns about appearance, health, etc. The results of weight loss New Year’s Resolutions demonstrate their weakness. A 1998 survey sponsored by Gardenburger found that more than three-fourths of all women between the ages of 25 and 54 make diet and weight-loss plans each year. Nearly nine of 10 respondents reported only occasional or no success, while almost half lost little or actually gained weight instead.
“The people who succeed at losing weight and maintaining the loss have usually been motivated by a dream much bigger and more positive than just losing weight,” explains Johnson. “They see themselves living a healthy lifestyle. They begin to act and think like people who are in good physical shape. There’s more of a radical change in a person’s thinking and actions than you see with most resolutions. It wouldn’t be possible to effect and sustain such a radical change unless the person is motivated by a big dream that is positive in nature.”
Another popular aim is to quit smoking. Johnson himself was a three-pack-a-day smoker until he celebrated a smoke-free New Year’s twelve years ago. “For over twenty years I had tried to quit many times using every tool and technique I’d hear about. But as long as I was trying to quit, I couldn’t break the grip. Instead, I developed a dream to become a non-smoker. I fell in love with the idea of breathing clean air instead of smoky air, of my body and clothes smelling nice instead of smoky. I thought about how wonderful it would be to taste food again. I decided to start acting and thinking like a non-smoker, and when the thinking took hold I simply quit smoking. In all the years since, I’ve never wanted another cigarette, never even thought about wanting one.”
According to Johnson, the best goal to set is one that calls for the individual to create a plan for their life based on a set of personal dreams. “Most people are in a free-fall through life, careening from one crisis to the next. If you were going to build a new house and you had this idea for a fabulous master bedroom suite, you wouldn’t rush out and start building the master bedroom. You’d have a complete plan before you started. When you approach resolutions and goals in the same manner, you end up with a much better chance of achieving success.”
For help in developing your life plan, see the new Goals 2006 offerings…
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December 24th, 2005 at 9:35 pm
My goals for 2006 are:
A closer walk with God
A happy God centered marriage
To be healthy and fit
To become the number one top producing sales rep in my company and receive the award for it at the yearly awards dinner.
December 25th, 2005 at 12:49 pm
That’s so true and I absolutely agree. Without setting any goals, the person will not become any better than he or she was before. To achieve goals one must visualize themselves having already achieving their goals and then act. I always make sure I have goals because one of my most important goals is self improvement in all areas and ways. To have that, I have to have goals in the first place. Goals are what makes ourselves better. Thank you for all that you do.
December 26th, 2005 at 4:19 am
This goes hand in hand with many of the other goal programs I have heard. Focus on what you stand to gain, not on what you stand to lose. Think in the positiive. Create a compelling future and so on. As Tony Robbings say’s, ” If you talk about it , it ‘s exciting, if you write it down it can happen, if you schedule it, it becomes real.” All great advice. In my personal journey for whatever reason I tend to get a full head of steam, following all of the advice given. I get passed the 30 mark where it is supposed to become a new habit and for whatever reason around the 90 day mark or so I go off track. It seems that I am an all or nothing type. Around the 90 mark I start working against myself. Don’t know why… Does this sound familiar to anyone else out there?
December 26th, 2005 at 11:51 am
Jon, your comment that “I start working against myself” sounds like self-sabotaging behavior. This type of behavior is usually tied closely to self-esteem and self-worth issues. Lisa Jimenez has a great book that addresses self-sabotage: Conquer Fear . Hope that helps.
December 31st, 2005 at 4:10 pm
A new years resolution can be a trigger but does for sure not help you going through the up and downs. Its your will that counts the most for any resolution. There is a will there is a way….:)
January 4th, 2006 at 1:47 pm
[...] I’d become so disillusioned with New Year’s resolutions that, in 2001, I wrote a polemic about their futility. After reading it, a friend asked me, "But don’t you believe in setting goals?" Actually, I do. It’s just that I no longer associate my goals with the arbitrary date of January 1. Vic Johnson, motivational speaker and author of the Goals 2 Go blog, seems to agree with me. (Update: And so, apparently, does Betty Baye in her commentary on NPR’s News & Notes with Ed Gordon.) [...]