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  • April 19, 2017

Why goals succeed where resolutions fail

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By now school, work and daily routines may be ruling your week once again. And if you made any resolutions over the holiday season, chances are you’re probably slipping back into your old ways.

Don’t worry. Researchi has proven resolutions rarely work. Mainly because resolutions tend to expect us to change habits we’ve built over a lifetime, overnight. Psychology professor Peter Herman calls them the “false hope syndrome” because our resolutions generally don’t align with how we honestly see ourselves, and then we expect too much, too soon. As a result there’s a high chance we’ll fall short and feel discouraged.

The great news is that goals are different to resolutions. They’re a stake in the ground for what we’d like to achieve in life, not who we think we should be. They appeal to a part of us that’s aspirational, and aligns with our values.

And once a goal is made, if nurtured, the decisions we make consciously and subconsciously will help us achieve it. As the famous motivational speaker and author Earl Nightingale said ‘whatever we plant in our subconscious mind and nourish with repetition and emotion will one day become a reality’.

Setting goals is important to living a good life.