5 Tips to Form New Habits that Stick – Train Yourself Like a Dog

You’ll work out one day. You’ll learn Japanese. You’ll start meditating daily. Or maybe you won’t.

Good habits have a bad habit of not sticking around. Maybe you tell yourself that you’ll just slip up for one day and that one day turns into a week, a month, never again.

Whether you’re just burned out or don’t have enough time, developing good habits can seem impossible.

Here’s the good news – we’re all animals.

We’re animals with limited willpower and time so we need to treat ourselves like animals when it comes to habit formation.

If you can’t rely on willpower to make a habit stick, what are you supposed to do? You train yourself.

Just like training a dog, you have to break down the training process into steps.

1. Start simple and easy with ONE HABIT at a time

simple-habits

First, you need to pick a habit. Just like picking a trick you want to train your dog.

Avoid teaching yourself multiple new tricks at the same time. Being able to focus on just one habit will keep your brain fresh and prevent burnout by trying to change too many things at once.

Start small, but keep a large habit in mind. If you want to work out, then make your initial habit one push-up, one sit-up and one pull-up per day, or maybe just a walk around the block. If you want to start meditating, then start with two minutes of mindfulness per day. Learning a language? Learn one word per day.

You’re starting to get the picture, I’m sure. The point is to create a very low barrier to entry when you start with any new habit.

Just like teaching a dog to sit, you shouldn’t care about the dog’s posture as long as butt meets ground.

2. Create a cue

Now that you’ve decided on a habit you want to develop and determined the simplest way to get started, it’s time to come up with your cue. My dogs will sit, shake, “down,” and stay on command. Here’s where you get to come up with your own commands.

Ideally, the cue will be something you encounter regularly. A bright post-it note on your fridge to remind you to exercise when you come home from work, an alarm on your phone, lighting a stick of incense, or anything you will definitely notice. The more cues you have, the more likely you are to actually notice them.

Anything will work as a cue as long as you recognize it. My cue for meditating is lighting incense. My workout cue is an empty coffee mug. I’ve built cues into my life. So can you.

3. Give yourself treats

Here’s the big one – the thing that will make your habit stick. You have to treat yourself.

The “good boy” (or girl) reward after you complete your habit is what sets it in stone so make sure you’re rewarding yourself frequently for completing your habit with something you actually crave.

My meditation habit is very closely tied to my morning coffee. I meditate, start my coffee, then enjoy my cup of life. I tell myself as I’m drinking “This coffee is my reward for meditation.”

Once the coffee mug is empty, it’s time to work out. Once my workout is finished, I’ll make breakfast as a reward for exercising. Again, I’ll tell myself as I’m eating, “This delicious sausage, Belgian waffle and protein shake is my reward for a good workout.”

Would you like to guess how long it has been since I missed a day of meditation or exercise?

See Also: 16 Easy and Effective Natural Mood Boosters for The Non-Morning Person

4. Increase difficulty over time

increase-difficulty

Eventually, you want to step it up once you’ve set up your cue, habit, and reward cycle.

Just like improving the dog’s posture or responsiveness to commands, you should start to push harder over time, so increase the difficulty, duration or consistency of your habits.

Start doing more intense workouts after a week of easy push-ups. Meditate for longer. Invest in a language-learning course like Rosetta Stone.

After you’ve increased the difficulty, keep rewarding yourself. Expect more from yourself, but keep the treats flowing. The satisfaction of completing your habit will eventually become a reward in itself.

5. Negative reinforcement aka punishment for failure

Here’s the part nobody wants to hear about. What to do when you skip a day.

Well, you have to have some sort of negative reinforcer when you skip your habit. I’m not saying that you need to go take a cold shower or hit yourself over the head, but it’s good to hold yourself accountable.

Jerry Seinfeld’s “Don’t Break the Chain” method works surprisingly well. Put up a calendar in your home and start marking an “X” on each day you complete your habit. If you miss a day and break your chain, you will disappoint yourself and your entire family (or roommates) will know. Failing publicly is a feeling you want to avoid.

My personal rewards are also potential negative reinforcement. If I don’t meditate then I don’t get coffee. If I don’t exercise, then I go hungry until lunch. It’s brutal, but effective.

Other options include donating to a cause you hate, having an accountability partner or uploading an embarrassing photo to Facebook if you fail. Get creative with your negative reinforcement. The more you dislike the idea of “skipping just one day,” the more likely you are to stick with it.

See Also: How to move from one failure to another without losing enthusiasm

Bonus – Figure out WHY

There’s one piece of advice that doesn’t really fit with the dog training theme above. You need to have a purpose for your new habit — the light at the end of the tunnel so-to-speak. A big “WHY?”

When you’re getting in shape to look good at the beach, think about the body you want to have. If you’re learning a language to travel, imagine talking to locals on your journeys.

Having a strong image of your future self will motivate you to move forward when you feel like quitting.

Good Human!

You have the toolkit to start training yourself to learn new habits already – so get started. Find your habit, create your cue, reward yourself, amp it up, and don’t let yourself fail.

It takes a bare minimum of 21 days to form a habit that lasts (usually closer to 66 days), and if you do it right – you could be on the fast-track to building several great habits and approaching your big “WHY” goal.

Let us know what your next habit is in the comments below. We’d love to hear what you have in store for yourself. Good human!

 

The post 5 Tips to Form New Habits that Stick – Train Yourself Like a Dog appeared first on Dumb Little Man.

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Viktor & Rolf shows two decades of work in first Australian exhibition

viktor-and-rolf-haute-couture-fashion-exhibition-national-gallery-of-victoria-melbourne-austrailia_dezeen_sqd

More than 35 haute couture pieces from the archive of Dutch fashion designers Viktor & Rolf feature in an exhibition at Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria.  Read more

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Gluck+ Designs a Stunning Beach House in North Shore, Chicago

House to the Beach by Gluck+ (15)

House to the Beach is a residential project completed by Gluck+. The home is located in North Shore, an affluent suburban area north of Chicago, Illinois, USA. House to the Beach by Gluck+: “Located in the northern suburbs of Chicago, this house sits opposite a unique object: a monumental temple, 135 ft. high of white stone, symmetrically spherical, and monumental. The street-side face of the house must negotiate not only..

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Job of the day: animator/visualiser at PriestmanGoode

Dezeen Jobs architecture and design recruitment

Our job of the day from Dezeen Jobs is for an animator/visualiser at London design studio PriestmanGoode, which recently revealed a design to tackle train overcrowding. Read more stories on PriestmanGoode or browse more architecture and design opportunities on Dezeen Jobs.

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AA Summer DLAB Program Applies Computational Design to Concrete


© Architectural Association

© Architectural Association

This year’s Architectural Association (AA) Summer DLAB program culminated in Weave.X, the final working prototype of three-dimensionally interwoven concrete structures. Designed and fabricated by 21 participants from 11 countries in July and August, the prototype explores computational design, geometry rationalization, material behavior, and robotic fabrication as applied to concrete and robotic rod-bending techniques. The result is a network of self-supporting concrete branches that envelop an amorphous enclosure.


© Architectural Association


© Architectural Association


© Architectural Association


© Architectural Association


© Architectural Association

© Architectural Association

The preliminary phase of the research involved using Grasshopper to generate a network of interwoven elements and developing an automated fabrication process to bend steel reinforcement bars to custom shapes. Participants analyzed established rod bending strategies to develop an approach that would reduce the mechanical parts necessary to control the process, ultimately arriving at a systematic coordination of a bending jig system and an intelligent robotic toolpath programmed with Python. The robotic bending protocols enabled more than 80 steel rods 1500 mm long and 16 mm in diameter to be bent within the program’s short time frame.


© Architectural Association

© Architectural Association

The rebar defined the form initial interwoven models, which were analyzed via finite element analysis. The resulting triangulated mesh was CNC-milled from Polypropylene sheets, which were then folded to match the rebar skeleton. Finally, a mix of concrete and fiberglass additives was poured into the steel and Polypropylene formwork, and could be cast and cured within several hours. The Polypropylene could then be removed, leaving the concrete with a reflective surface.


© Architectural Association

© Architectural Association

In past years, AA Summer DLAB has investigated the potential for computational design and concrete in a concrete dome shell and a doubly-curved wall element. In keeping with the objective of expanding the architectural possibilities of concrete with computational design and robotic fabrication, the continued research looks toward exploration with simple mechanical tools and cost-effective fabrication methods.  

News via: Architectural Association

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How I Went From Being Shy, Limited And Held Back To Confident, Bold And Out Going

“Forget all the reasons it won’t work and believe the one reason that it will.” – Unknown.

Better late than never

I had just turned 43 when I approached a woman for the first time and asked her out.  Every girlfriend I had and every date I’d gone on before that the woman had asked me out.   “What’s your secret, man? I wish I had things that easy,” I hear you saying.   There’s no secret, man.  And as you about to find out it definitely wasn’t as glamorous as it sounds…then.

first_date2I’m a good looking guy.  I’m what you would call tall, dark and handsome.  I encounter very few obstacles attracting the attention of beautiful women. Up until just recently, that’s all I did.  The old me was too shy to approach a woman, even when her interest in me was as subtle as a sledgehammer!

My struggle with shyness and the lie I believed

I’m not sure what had caused my shyness as I was always outgoing growing up.   It was nothing for me to make new friends or fit in as they say.  Maybe my shyness developed in my late teens.  It was around this time that my mother’s dislike for the world and everyone in it reached new heights.  I recall her telling me that most people are “evil” and all women are “hussies.”

Maybe my shyness stemmed from always having my mates ask a girl out for me.  I always wanted to ask the girl out, but it wasn’t the done thing.  Every guy, it seemed, had their mates ask the girl out on their behalf, so I just followed suit.   Going against the grain as a teenager, as most of us can relate, isn’t always a good thing, especially in social situations.

Wherever it came from my shyness became so intense it had a negative impact on all areas of my life, not just with women and relationships.  I found it hard to speak up at work and in meetings and when I did I would have a panic attack and beat myself up afterwards. “You idiot! Why did you say something? You didn’t have to. Everyone could tell how nervous you were,” and on and on it would go.  I avoided conflict, or should I say, ran away from it, struggled with  every type of social interaction, even with family, and made excuses not to attend social gatherings like parties, BBQs, and even just hanging out with friends.  As a result I stopped getting invites and became lonely, depressed and withdrawn.  I didn’t want to live like this so I took the first step and spoke to my GP about it. It was clear I needed specialist help so he referred me on to a mental health professional.  It took some time but I managed to get to a point where I could interact with people and go to social gatherings without feeling tense in the body and wanting to leave straight away.

There was still no way in hell I could ask a woman out, however, so I continued the pattern of having my mates ask women out on my behalf.  By this time most of the women had outgrown this type of ‘courting,’ so opportunities became less and less.  “Oh, well”, I thought.  “If a woman likes me she can ask me out.”

I spent a few years single, which is hard at any age, let alone when you’re in early twenties and in the prime of your life sexually.   I would never admit at the time but I became desperate.  I was willing to accept anyone who showed interest in me and so I did.  I spent eight years of my life in an unhealthy relationship with a woman I wasn’t attracted too on any level.   I broke up with her having found out she had cheated on me.

I spent many more years alone after this because I struggled getting over the relationship, despite it being emotionally and spiritually crippling, and because I still bought into the lies that women I am interested in will approach me.

Never happened.

What did happen was history repeated itself.   I got into a three year relationship with a woman I wasn’t attracted too because I was desperate.  And yep, you guessed it, I broke up with her having found out she had cheated on me.

Worse, I still believed the lies that a woman I’m interested in will approach me.  I kept telling myself “You’ve had two really bad relationships and spent many years in a ‘dry spell,’ but you will meet ‘the one’ and it will just happen.”

Never happened.

I hooked up with another woman who I wasn’t attracted too.  Actually, that’s not entirely true.  She did have a sexy body and she was definitely an upgrade on my previous relationships.  But she obsessed over me and would call or text me day and night and even ‘creep on me.’

I’m not kidding.

I would catch her sometimes outside my house waiting for me to leave and then she would follow me to wherever I was going.  She would bump into me and say “Imagine seeing you here,” or something similar.  I’d learned from my previous bad relationships and ended this one before it got way out of hand.

I continued going out to meet women, but was still too shy to approach the ones I was interested in.  And even though by now I had learned that they wouldn’t approach me, I still hoped they would.

Never happened.

On New Year’s Eve 2014 a woman I wasn’t attracted to approached me. I showed no interest in her but she kept persisting.  Her persistence paid off because in the early hours of 2015 I started to believe there might be something between us.  I remember her giving me a kiss good-bye and me breaking out in a cold sweat.  “Crap,” I thought. “She hasn’t asked me out. I’ve gotta do something here.”
“Hey, it was nice meeting you tonight,” I told her.  “I’ll send you a message on Facebook.”

Yep, I asked for her out via a Facebook message.

A few days later she sent me a message saying that she was too busy for any kind of relationship and that she just wants to be friends.
Because of my shyness I got put in the friend zone by a woman I convinced myself I was attracted to.

“That’s it,” I told myself. “Enough is enough.”

When the student is ready the teacher will appear

For the first time in my dating life I took responsibility for my actions and short comings. I made a commitment to myself to do whatever it takes to change things. I started devouring everything I could on becoming better with women and relationships and being my best version.  A lot of the stuff I came across in the beginning I thought was good advice, but the more I put it into practice, the more I learned that it was not.  Regardless, it got me out there approaching women for the first time in my life, so that in itself was a good thing.

I didn’t stop researching and testing out advice from dating and relationship ‘gurus’ and had mixed results.  Much of the information I found centred on ‘one night stands’ and ‘pick up’ routines.  This type of interaction served me for a little while, but I wanted more than that. I wanted to be able to approach women from a place of authenticity, honesty and vulnerability.  I wanted an incredible relationship with an amazing woman who knocked my socks off and vice versa.

While I looked for help and guidance in this area I kept approaching women and putting myself out there.  I learned a lot about women myself just from doing this and as a bonus I was becoming less and less shy around them.

Seek and ye shall find; ask and ye shall receive

My efforts paid off when I found the advice I was looking for. I stumbled upon experienced and highly skilled coaches who I could relate to because they had shared similar experiences to my own.  From their recommendations, asking questions, and my own research I found the resources to help me on my journey.  Out of all them Till. Gross’s Comfort Zone Crusher Challenge course helped me the most.  This is a series of social challenges that help you become confident, build up your self-esteem and develop a healthy relationship with fear by intentionally putting yourself in embarrassing or awkward situations.  Some of the challenges involved howling like a wolf in public, lying down on a busy sidewalk, asking a stranger for a sip of their drink and asking an attractive stranger for their number.

I did these challenges over and over and in under a year I’d gone from being shy, limited and held back to confident, bold and out-going.  I approach women I am interested in all the time now and they approach me.  Some even buy me drinks!  My dating life and life in general has gone full circle and is the way it was always meant to be: abundant, exciting, meaningful, fun, effortless.
But the best thing to come out of this is using my experiences to help others break free from being shy, limited and held back.

Have you or someone you know turned their life around late in life?  Have you ever been held back from shyness and self –doubt? If so, in what way? How did you break free?

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ID College and ROC Leiden / Mecanoo


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo


Courtesy of Mecanoo


Courtesy of Mecanoo


Courtesy of Mecanoo


Courtesy of Mecanoo

  • Architects: Mecanoo
  • Location: Leiden, The Netherlands
  • Area: 10000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Courtesy of Mecanoo
  • Development Partner And Contractor: GiesbersGroep, Wijchen
  • Client: ID College, Leiden
  • Structural Engineer: Croes Bouwtechnisch Ingenieursbureau, Nijmegen
  • Mechanical And Electrical Engineer: K&R Consultants, Apeldoorn
  • Advisor Acoustics, Building Physics, Sustainability And Fire Safety: LBP Sight, Nieuwegein

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

ID College and ROC Leiden offer secondary vocational training and education. The new build location in the historic city centre of Leiden accommodates the vocational education for students in healthcare. The complexity and historical nature of the inner city site required a thorough analysis in order to developed a design vision which reconciled these aspects within the brief. The integrated approach in which architecture, urban planning, landscape, interior design and engineering converge results in a unique design.


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Strengthening structure and identity
The design reflects the character of the site, whilst strengthening the structure and identity of Leiden’s historical centre. The new building for ID College and ROC Leiden has a modest appearance, befitting its context. Varying volumes and functions are unified behind a coherent brick facade. The former post office building has been integrated into the new facility and remains recognisable as an independent building. The various departments are connected by alleys and three courtyards, each with their own unique identity. There is a courtyard for the teaching staff, one for the students and a public courtyard in the form of an atrium.


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Part of the city
The new building is part of the economic and social fabric of the city of Leiden. A central alley runs through the complex, connecting the Breestraat to Boommarkt and passing through the atrium. During school hours, this alley is publicly accessible. The transparent facades allow passers-by to view practice rooms and other public functions from the street and the atrium. This orientation of views from public to private provides a safe atmosphere for the students and staff.


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Anticipating changing needs
The ID College facilities are designed with flexibility in mind and facilitate the latest developments in teaching methods. The building has been arranged to anticipate new forms of education and changing needs for space and layouts. The multifunctional layout can accommodate different individual and collective uses and includes workspaces for data collection, group work spaces, and common rooms for social interaction.


Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Second Floor Plan

Second Floor Plan

Courtesy of Mecanoo

Courtesy of Mecanoo

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💙 Hidden Cove on 500px by David Cobb, Mosier, USA☀ Canon…

💙 Hidden Cove on 500px by David Cobb, Mosier, USA☀  Canon EOS… http://ift.tt/1UiC46l

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@signordal Facing the beauty of nature!

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4 Ways To Open More Around Others

Do you describe yourself as strong willed, powerful or assertive? Do you consider yourself a leader, or knowledgeable in your field?

Then why is it that despite how strong we are, sometimes it is so hard for us to open up to others?

To some people, it is an act of defiance or strength. Many people shy away from discussing their issues with others because they do not want to look weak. Or it could be an issue of pride – refusing to talk to others about their problems because they are worried that they will look vulnerable, when they feel that their role should be to always seem strong and confident.

sexy_voiceEspecially with the latter group of people, this is an unfortunate problem because of course we cannot be strong and powerful all the time. Even those at the proverbial top need to have some reassurance and downtime when they need it. The problem for them is that they are too bottled up with their perception of their role as a leader that they have no way to turn it off when they need help; and when they finally fall, they have the hardest time finding a way to talk.

Some people are just too shy. We either don’t want to bother or burden others with our issues, or feel they are too insignificant to raise awareness about. All of these are just mind-crafted insecurities. If anything is ever an issue on your mind, it is of course worth discussion and there is no doubt millions of other people who are thinking the same thing.

Whether you put yourself in column A, B or C, here are a couple of ways to help yourself open up to others.

1. Decide on what the matter is

Before you feel like you need to talk to someone, see what you can discover about yourself first. I know this is a bit unprogressive because usually when people have something bothering them what happens is they in fact think too much and end up wracking their brain to destruction. However that is because your brain on anxiety is like a speeding train that can’t stay on the track. If you actually take the time to sit down, write everything out and actually discuss it with yourself, you may come to a few conclusions before you go racing into a social situation with your tragedies.

2. Find someone you absolutely trust to talk to

The main problem with being unable to talk about your issues is simply not having the right person to talk to. Not all of us have a parents nearby we can talk with, or a trustworthy friend who immediately has time for us. But they are they, and it might be someone you would never expect. Sometimes someone we don’t know as a good friend appears at the right time, and through a good heart-to-heart ends up becoming a good friend.

Undoubtedly however, you do have a good friend out there somewhere – and it’s OK to open up to them. It can even start as easy as explaining to them that you are nervous to talk about something, and go from there. People react positively when they are asked for helped, and if you go to someone while in a state of emotional despairity, they will think that you feel trustworthy of them, and they will reciprocate by giving you their time and attention.

3. Talk to someone anonymous

Anonymous helplines exist for a reason. When we are down and out it takes courage but it often feels much better to talk to someone who you don’t even know. It doesn’t even mean using a helpline. Perhaps you could talk to someone at work, or an acquaintance that you don’t usually connect with. Choose someone who has a good reputation and you think can respect confidentiality. It is refreshing for two people to bond over something unexpected, such as the need for advice.

If calling a helpline seems like a viable solution, remember that you may not get the personal response back that you would from a friend, but you do get the satisfaction of getting something off your chest with full anonymity, and the reply of a completely unbiased 3rd party. It’s a hard step to take, but it is there.

4. Be ready to accept assistance

The first step really is accepting that you need some help at all. We are oftentimes so stubborn and short minded that we feel like we have to take on all struggles and responsibilities on our own. The fact is, we don’t. We all have our own security needs and circles that can help us sort out our problems – friends, family or acquaintances.

If you open up once it will be easier to do it the next time and again and again. It will help you live your life with comfort and peace of mind, knowing that there are always people out there that can help you. It is an honest way to live and even binds people and develops new friendships. People always bond over feelings – when one person is in need, someone else will be happy to answer the call and be there; it’s in our nature.

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