Posted by 
Jennifer M. Ryan, M.Ed.
 on May 15th, 2009

 

The Process of Change
Creative Commons License photo credit: voteprime

The reason we don’t change is pretty simple when you think about it.  Habits, , thoughts, and “paradigms” all have a lot to do with it, but before we jump right in, let’s recap exactly how our belief system works:

  • Whatever we practice becomes a habit (or belief).
  • Habits () are rooted in our subconscious, where they function without our awareness or our permission.
  • Since habits () are alive, they will, like anything living, fight to stay alive.
  • We have learned to feel certain ways, out of habit (belief).

It may not seem fair, but what was created as habit years and years ago, still remains within the psyche today. Insisting on dessert after every meal, running late to work most days, drinking coffee in the morning, sitting in traffic on the expressway on the way to work (instead of taking the train), fighting with the spouse about money, feeling sad during the holidays – all habits! I could go on and on…

Habits are at work in all of us right now, whether we choose to acknowledge it or not. And because habits are so cunning and commanding, they get in the way of any positive life developments that are being made.

Three Ways We Avoid Change

When new information conflicts with our old habits, it throws us for a loop! We tend to opt for “outs” so we don’t have to embrace the new idea. Earnie Larsen, in his book, Stage II Recovery, explains three ways we use our “outs” to our detriment.

Out 1. We discredit the information

After reading or hearing something new, our instinct might be to think, “This is ridiculous! Who would ever believe this?” The new thoughts are challenging the old thoughts, and it doesn’t “feel” right.  New information heard becomes “untrue” simply because we can’t process something within our brain’s old way of thinking and believing.

Out 2. We discredit the source

When hearing or reading something not previously heard, and that something is not within our present way of thinking, we can quickly weaken the source that brought us this new thought. “That guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about. If he were walking in my shoes, he wouldn’t say such a stupid thing!”

The reality is, the source of information can be questioned almost anytime it’s presented. However, when what is heard doesn’t fit into our current way of thinking (our belief), it’s easy to discount the presenter almost without question or further inquiry and research.

Out 3. We remove ourselves from the source of the conflicting information

In other words, we remove ourselves from the group that is giving the information that we don’t like. The tendency is to say, “I’ll never go back to that group! None of them has their head on straight!”

As a Psychotherapist and Life Coach, these “outs” are rampant in the consulting room and it is the number one reason that clients quit. “Quit” is such a harsh word to use; however, only 10% of those who begin therapy actually end therapy because they feel they’ve received what they needed.  Ending feels like the natural (and desired) transition. The other 90% quit because they just aren’t able to fit the new information into their old way of thinking and believing (yet!).

Often, clients go to therapist after therapist or coach after was searching for one who is less confrontive and more in alignment with their line of thinking. 

If a client hears something from Therapist X that they don’t like (it doesn’t fit into their current belief system), they’ll move along to Therapist Y. When the going gets rough there, and they hear something that again doesn’t fit their current way of thinking (their current belief system), they’ll move on to Therapist Z.

Along the way, the client who can’t seem to fit the new information into their old way of thinking will use Out #1 by discrediting the new information given to them, Out #2 by discrediting the person who told them the new information and, finally, Out #3 when they say, “I’m out of here. This is quackery!” They move on to yet another new therapist or coach. And, probably, the cycle repeat.

Don’t Be a Cop Out

Embracing the idea that whatever we do over and over and over again, ad-nauseum, becomes habit, will make us aware that every single thing we do, say and feel is, in fact, a habit! Even this idea may be a new one for you, but don’t “out” it yet…

The reality is, if someone has been depressed for a very long time, the depression is now a habit – it’s engrained in the belief system. If we haven’t slept in the same bed with our spouse in 5 years, the behavior is now a habit – it’s just part of the pattern and life that is now engrained. When our physician tells us we now have high cholesterol and high blood pressure, then we still don’t start to work out or change our eating habits, it is because of what is engrained in us. These are our habits. These are our .

And, of course, we can use the excuse, “This is the way I am and I can’t change.” Not so! This is merely removing yourself from the source of the conflicting information (Out #3) by being in denial of a new (and challenging) reality.

What you DO is not the same as who you ARE.  Simply saying, “This is the way I am and I can’t change” is a copout.

Old habits die hard, but they simply must die if any real change is going to occur. The power of persuasion is huge and there is a constant battle between what WAS and what WILL BE. In the middle is habit.

As Alan Deutschman remind us in Change or Die, we are more likely to die than to change. But if we are to be one of those 10% who really WILL change, we must embrace, know and believe, no matter what, that the three ‘outs’ given above are real and true.

Popularity: 64% [?]

If you like it what you've read, please share... (*PLEASE!* =)
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • TwitThis
  • email
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • Digg
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Related posts:

  1. Twisted Thinking: How it’s Really Messing Things Up
  2. The Benefits of Therapy by Phone

One Response to “3 Reasons We Just Won’t Change”

  1. Brian Linville:

    Hey!

    We don’t change because our lives are too short and not very many of us think about the next generation, while we are too busy living our own lives!

    Also, some things are good to stay unchanged.

Leave a Reply

CommentLuv Enabled

Subscribe without commenting

Popular Posts by Category

  • 10 Characteristics of Authentic People (Part 1)
  • Getting Sweaty: Where Mindfulness and Exercise Intersect
  • (none)
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • One Way to Completely Shift Your Life and Business
  • 5 Ways to Reign In Job Dissatisfaction
  • 3 Reasons We Just Won't Change
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • How To Recognize Destructive Thoughts
  • How To Recognize Postpartum Depression
  • One Way to Completely Shift Your Life and Business
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • How to Stop and Smell the Roses
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • One Way to Completely Shift Your Life and Business
  • The Roles We Play and The Art of Balance
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • 3 Reasons We Just Won't Change
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • Personal Myths: How to Rewrite History
  • One Way to Completely Shift Your Life and Business
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • One Way to Completely Shift Your Life and Business
  • Positive Affirmations Made Easy
  • 36 Ways To Change Your Mindset (This List Might Surprise You!)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • What Fireflies Can Teach Us About Life
  • How to Access Your Spidey Sense
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • Meditation Made Easy (Part 2)
  • What Fireflies Can Teach Us About Life
  • Fight Truth Decay
  • 10 Characteristics of Authentic People (Part 2)
  • (none)
  • Four Anxiety Types and What To Do About Them
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • Does Compromise Mean Lowering Your Expectations?
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • How To Recognize Destructive Thoughts
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • The ABCs of Friendship, and Why It's REALLY Important
  • 21 Books Every Married Couple Should Have
  • Does Compromise Mean Lowering Your Expectations?
  • Relationship Rollercoaster: When to Stay and When to Go
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • The ABCs of Friendship, and Why It's REALLY Important
  • How to Stop and Smell the Roses
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • Giving Thanks for Unpaid Bills (and Other Acts of Kindness)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • Four Anxiety Types and What To Do About Them
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • 3 Reasons We Just Won't Change
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • Why Vacation is NOT an Option!
  • Four Anxiety Types and What To Do About Them
  • The ABCs of Friendship, and Why It's REALLY Important
  • Twisted Thinking: How it's Really Messing Things Up
  • How to Stop and Smell the Roses
  • Why Vacation is NOT an Option!
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • What Does it Mean To Be "Authentic"?
  • Meditation Made Easy (Part 2)
  • Meditation Made Easy (Part 1)
  • (none)
  • "It's Not My Fault!": Taking Personal Responsibility in Difficult Situations
  • Love For Sale: How an Unhappy Adult is Created
  • Children and Play: A New Approach to Blowing Off Steam
  • For Teens Only: How to Gain More Freedom and Trust at Home
  • Calgon, Take Me Away!
  • Does Compromise Mean Lowering Your Expectations?
  • Your Choice, Your Voice: Quality or Quantity: What’s most important for a healthy family?
  • Cracker Jack Parenting (Or, How Not to Parent)
  • Children and Play: A New Approach to Blowing Off Steam
  • 10 Ways to Raise a Happy, Healthy, Secure Child
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • The ABCs of Friendship, and Why It's REALLY Important
  • Your Choice, Your Voice: Quality or Quantity: What’s most important for a healthy family?
  • Cracker Jack Parenting (Or, How Not to Parent)
  • "Terry & Jen Plus 2" and The Acceptance Paradox
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • Your Choice, Your Voice: Quality or Quantity: What’s most important for a healthy family?
  • (none)
  • Celebration and Grief: An Unlikely Pair
  • When Do I Get Taken Care Of?
  • The ABCs of Friendship, and Why It's REALLY Important
  • Love For Sale: How an Unhappy Adult is Created
  • "Terry & Jen Plus 2" and The Acceptance Paradox
  • Everyone Wants to Be Somebody, Sometimes
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • Love For Sale: How an Unhappy Adult is Created
  • 10 Ways to Raise a Happy, Healthy, Secure Child
  • Why Moms Feel an Extraordinary Connection with Their Child (and What Happens When They Don't)
  • How to Increase Self-Esteem (and Other Emotionally Distressing Woes)
  • Everyone Wants to Be Somebody, Sometimes
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
  • (none)
    • About
    • I Choose Change Blog is dedicated to making the world a better place by helping people to lead happy, conscious and meaningful lives. Articles cover a wide range of topics, including self awareness, personal growth, fitness, health, parenting, relationships, gratitude and stress relief. Please visit my About Page if you would like to find out more.

    Copyright ©2008-2010 I Choose Change PLLC