Thought Of The Week
Today, I want to talk about why dramatic change usually disappoints and you therefore shouldn't try to be too drastic with things you do. It's really tempting sometimes to overhaul everything in your life at once, but sustained progress normally only comes from measured steps. Does this sound familiar? You tell yourself that, starting today, you'll be someone new, or do something new. Or you promise yourself you’ll now do all the things you’ve been avoiding. However, days, weeks, months, and even years pass by, and you may find that you haven’t really changed anything. Think about the last time you tried something radical. More often, the dramatic approach crumbles under pressure, as it fights against natural habits. Even though you may have initially altered your behaviour, you usually discover you have just returned to your old ways. Counterintuitively, the problem isn’t willpower. Life has a rhythm to it. When we rush too quickly into drastic or significant changes, we overlook the delicate balance we've gradually built up. Moderation normally wins over extremism, which just exhausts. The truth is simple: incremental change sticks. Explosive transformation rarely does. Small adjustments also compound into remarkable results over time. Here are some examples: * Trying to go from zero exercise to intense daily workouts just leaves you injured and discouraged. Personal trainers joke about people who join gyms in January but drop out by the end of the month. Instead, start with just ten minutes of gentle exercise, three times a week. * Completely overhauling your diet overnight ends in failure, leaving you miserable. Cutting out all sugar and processed food too quickly also feels like punishment. However, if you swap one thing at a time, change is more permanent. By adding just one healthy habit each week, real changes unfold. * Quitting social media cold turkey just triggers anxiety and isolation, leading to loneliness, and you crave connection. Deleting everything completely backfires, leading to FOMO as well. But if you start using social media for just twenty minutes less per day, you wean yourself off any addiction. Gradually reduce screen time for lasting results. Some people always argue that radical action produces faster results, and sometimes it does. However, most people who go all in just end up right back where they started. Slow and consistent change over time has staying power, as how many radical transformations actually last in the long run? So today, remember to take steady steps forward, instead of leaping into transformation. Dramatic starts usually lead to dramatic stops. Sustainable progress is built on consistency, not intensity. Don't be too drastic - the story of the tortoise and the hare isn’t just a children’s tale!
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