Sep 6

How Not to Change Your Life: Try For Too Much Too Soon

Posted in Techniques

This is the last post in the epic How Not to Change Your Life series. Next week, I’ll let you know more details about the upcoming book based on the series, and what’s going to happen next on the blog.

Today, though, I want to talk about trying for too much too soon, because it’s one of the classics of not changing your life.

Whether you’re trying to lose weight, get fit or build a skill, aiming too high to start with will reliably result in failure – and not always the good kind of failure, either. (The good kind of failure is the kind that you learn from and treat as education, feedback or a course correction.)

Thing is, when you have a great goal, when you’ve pictured it in your mind, when you’ve maybe imagined yourself in the future situation – which is a good motivational technique, done right – it seems closer than it really is. And therein lies the trap.

The sticky middle

Beginnings are fun. They’re fresh and exciting.

Endings are fun. They bring a sense of completion and achievement.

Middles? Middles are not so much fun. But if you’re going to do anything worthwhile, the middle is going to be the biggest part.

I have a fitness challenge. I’m in the middle of it. I started seriously in March, I think it was, and really seriously in May, and now it’s September and I’m still not there. I got the persistent cold that’s been going round this year, and it set me back from “almost at my first goal” to “not anywhere close”. I’m frustrated.

I have to work with that. I have to work with the fitness that I have and build on it as much as I’m able to – but no more, because that way lies injury and further months of being in the middle. I went for a run the other day, with the Couch to 5k iPhone app, which coaches you through a sequence of running and walking. (Over the several weeks it’s supposed to take, you gradually run more and walk less, until you’re running all the time.) I skipped the last run segment, because I could feel my body starting to protest seriously at the strain of its first run in a couple of weeks.

I wasn’t going to leave myself in pain for three days just to finish the day’s programme. There’s a time to persevere, and a time to stop.

Achieving anything worthwhile takes time

Look at advertisements for weight loss. I saw a billboard the other day advertising a six-week weight-loss programme (by the title, it also involved exercise). It put the words “six weeks” next to the illustration of a body that I am morally certain could not be achieved in six weeks by the average person, by any known means.

Why do people run these advertisements? Because they work. The products don’t work, but the advertisements work. Everyone wants a body like that in six weeks. Never mind that it actually takes at least six months if you also have, you know, a life (and if everything goes smoothly, and you don’t give up because you’re discouraged at your slow progress).

And that’s the real problem. Having created a false expectation, the programme or product fails to deliver the achievement you were after, and even though it’s delivering progress, you give up because it’s not what you expected.

Head in Hands
Creative Commons License photo credit: Alex E. Proimos

A crowded life is hard to change

The other pitfall in trying for too much too soon – apart from the inevitable disappointment – is that if you’re a serious-minded person, you’ll probably put in a lot of work trying to achieve the impossible. You’ll devote a lot of time and attention to it. You’ll leave yourself very little time for rest and restoration, or simple human being.

And simple human being is essential if you’re going to change your life in any positive way. (I’ll go into that in more depth in the book.)

Thing is, if you’re scheduling yourself solid and never leaving time to think, reflect and unwind, you may achieve external success, but your inner life, which is in many ways your true life, will remain profoundly unchanged – or even change for the worse.

It takes a lifetime to learn to live

I’m in a study group where we’re going through some booklets based on the teachings of Thomas Merton, the Trappist monk, mystic and poet. There are questions for reflection after the readings, and the other night, one of the questions was something like, “What would you tell a young person about learning to live more joyfully?”

We’re all similar in that we’re slowly overcoming a tendency to take ourselves too seriously, so we came to an easy consensus. We’d tell young people (like our younger selves) not to worry so much, that it was all going to come out basically OK in the end, and to do their best to enjoy the ride.

We’re mostly in our 40s. I don’t know what an older group would say, but that’s what we’ve learned so far about changing our lives. Treating everything as urgent and serious is a recipe for anxiety, but it doesn’t get you to a helpful place any quicker.

Striking the balance

You won’t change your life if you do nothing. But you won’t change it if you take on too much and fail, either. Somewhere in the middle (there’s that word again) is the Goldilocks spot, where you’re making consistent effort, doing consistent and regular practice, within your capabilities, in a way that grows those capabilities to where you want to be.

That place of balance isn’t a cruisy place. It’s challenging – but it’s not desperate. It’s near, on or maybe just slightly beyond the outer edge of your comfort zone. It’s stretching, but not agonising.

I recently joined Toastmasters, and because this is the time of year that competitions are held, before I’ve even scheduled my first speech, I’m in a speech competition. I had two choices: the humourous speech contest, or the Table Topics contest (where you speak for one to two minutes on a topic that you don’t know about in advance).

I was going to enter the humourous contest, but I changed my mind. From the meetings I’ve attended so far, I’ve discovered that I’m good at Table Topics (as I ought to be, having done a 10-week improv course and been a client-centred hypnotherapist for several years). I felt I had a reasonable chance of even winning that contest, whereas doing a humourous speech as my “Icebreaker”, the first-ever Toastmasters speech, was probably too ambitious.

I went for the more achievable option, because it was still challenging enough to be a growth opportunity, but one I was likely to do well in. Result? I won. I’m in the area competition next week. The club I’m part of is located in the central city, which means I’m likely to have some serious opposition – top corporate people with a lot more experience. And my feeling is, bring it on!

That’s striking the balance. Every so often, sure, it’s worth trying something that you know you might fail spectacularly at, just to have the experience. But you need to go into that with your eyes open to the likelihood of failure, and be prepared to go on anyway, whatever the result.

Don’t set yourself up for failure by trying for too much, too soon.

Well, that concludes our series on How Not to Change Your Life. Tune in next week to hear more about how it’s going to become a book, and what’s next for the Living Skillfully blog.

Sign up below to get early notification and a discount on my forthcoming book, How Not to Change Your Life.


Aug 30

How Not to Change Your Life: Be an Expert

Posted in Techniques

This episode in our continuing series is another one that’s aimed at me as much as it is at anyone else. One of my abiding temptations is to be an “expert”, and I’ll talk more below about a couple of ways that I’ve fallen into that particular trap.

There are three kinds of education (that I can think of), and three kinds of expertise that go with them.

Just the facts, Ma’am

There’s the kind of education that fills you up with facts but doesn’t give you much to connect them together into any kind of coherent whole – all too common in schools, so let’s call it “schooling” for short.

The expert with this kind of education is the know-it-all. He (or she, but usually still he) can bore you for hours with the details of his particular passion. Think of the character of Ross in Friends.

The problem with this kind of expert is that he doesn’t understand his chosen field as a whole, and, more importantly, can’t achieve anything with the knowledge he has. He’s substituted knowing for understanding and acting. And because he never actually knows it all, he can always use “further research needed” as an excuse to avoid committing to action – so he’ll never change his life.

math professor x 4 = pure excitement
Creative Commons License photo credit: peyri

Having been a know-it-all, I can tell you how I broke out of that particular trap. I started doing things based on imperfect knowledge, and discovering more as I acted. What I learned is that you can’t figure out everything in advance – and if you think you have (see the True Believer, below), you’re likely to take that as sufficient achievement and stop without having done anything with your knowledge.

So if you think you might be a know-it-all expert, here’s the cure: Do things. Learn by doing. Discover in the course of action. And leave theory and detailed knowledge to one side for a while.

I’ve spoken before about how learning tai chi helped me to start a virtuous cycle of self-improvement. That was partly because I didn’t approach it as a know-it-all. I struggled for weeks and months to learn something that had no words, that could only be learned by doing it, by practice. It broke me out of more than one rut. I’m sure it freed up my mental energy as much as my physical energy.

True believers

Secondly,there’s the kind of education that fills you up with opinions and only gives you one way to fit them all together. We also call this “indoctrination”.

The first thing I think of in this context, because I experienced it myself as a young man, is religious instruction in an orthodox (with a small o) community. But I’ve seen it in political opinions of every shade, in conspiracy theories, in the New Age movement, in the kinds of causes that young people adopt passionately – vegetarianism, environmentalism, minimalism – and even in health and fitness fads.

Now, I’m completely in favour of passion, and of at least some versions of most of the causes and commitments I’ve just mentioned (except the conspiracy theories). But the danger of being a “True Believer” expert is that you lose all ability to listen to anyone who disagrees with you even a little.

That’s a large amount of potential wisdom consigned to the outer darkness, and almost a guarantee that you won’t change your life. After all, you’re already right about everything, so nothing needs to change.

The Greek legend of Procrustes, who strapped travelers to a bed and either stretched them to fit it or cut off parts that hung over the edge, is the best metaphor I’ve ever found for the true-believer kind of education.

I’ve been a true believer as well, and here’s my recommendation for escaping:

  • Enjoy connecting with people and things as they are, without trying to fit them into your overarching theory of everything.
  • Let go of instant judgement.
  • Suspend yourself in that space where you don’t know the answer yet or have an opinion. Learn to enjoy being there.
  • And draw back from the specifics of your particular commitment – the ways in which it’s traditionally been implemented – and contemplate the principles that lie beneath. Is there another way of living out those principles? Look around for people who are doing that, and learn from them if you can.

It’s a slow process. It took me years. But the starting point is to consider: What if I’m not right about everything? What if other people have a point?

Exploring the principles

Speaking of principles leads me on to the third kind of education.

In the third kind of education, you learn principles – not “theory of everything” principles into which everything must fit, but what’s sometimes called “heuristics”, principles of exploration.

You learn skills, practical skills that you can use when you do things in the field.

You learn to observe – not so much in order to make fine distinctions and categorise (like a know-it-all) or in order to judge and discriminate (like a true believer), but in order to understand and decide on a course of action.

Because exploration and action are the two great methods of this third kind of education. Let’s call it “training”.

Obviously, I’m more in favour of this kind of education than the others. But there are still dangers to becoming an expert this way.

A trained expert (or master practitioner) has put in a lot of practice in the field (the famous 10,000 hours), and his or her brain is now structured differently. The complex patterns that a beginner needs to perform consciously have become built into the expert’s cerebellum, which looks after unconscious use of complicated patterns like movement and speech.

That means that the expert can act without conscious thought. More often than not, this produces the right result – after all, the expert has spent years learning what does and doesn’t work. But in a genuinely new situation, the beginner may have some advantage over the expert, because the beginner approaches every situation without knowing how to handle it, and has to figure it out.

Also, as you become an expert, a layer of sophistication starts to separate you from the simple, human responses that may have been what drew you to the field in the first place. It’s a rare doctor who can simply sympathise with a sick friend, and a rare ornithologist who can take simple pleasure in watching a bird and hearing it sing without naming, categorising and cataloging it.

Zen teachers sometimes talk about having “beginner’s mind”, the kind of fresh approach to any thing or situation that sees it as itself and not an example of a phenomenon.

In order to change our lives, you and I need to approach them with beginner’s mind.

How to be a beginner

In order to be a beginner, I need to let go of being a know-it-all and acknowledge that some things can only be learned when I do them.

I need to let go of being a true believer and acknowledge that I don’t have answers for everything, that some things have to remain mysteries to me.

I need to be prepared to explore, but explore thoughtfully, letting go of being a master practitioner, approaching everything as if for the first time. Even if it looks like something I’ve seen or done before, each time is different.

Because life is untidy and chaotic and provisional, and we can’t live it as experts. If I’m being an expert, I’m not really living. I’m just playing a role.

This post is part of a series, How Not to Change Your Life – which ends next week with Try for Too Much, Too Soon.

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Aug 23

How Not to Change Your Life: Stay Ignorant

Posted in Techniques

When you’re ignorant, you don’t know what you don’t know.

Think about a pool of ink dropped on a page. If the page represents everything that you can possibly know, and the ink represents what you actually know, then a small spot of ink will not only take in a small amount of knowledge. It will also have a small circumference, with limited contact with other knowledge – the things that you know you don’t know.

As the pool of ink grows, as you become more knowledgeable, so does the number of things you’re aware of that you don’t know yet.

spreading knowledge
Creative Commons License photo credit: billerr

So, what might be outside the inkblot that will keep you from changing your life?

Ignorance about needing to change

There’s ignorance that’s unintentional, and then there’s deliberate ignorance.

Deliberate ignorance usually comes out of arrogance or fear (if there’s a difference; arrogance is often a mask for fear of being wrong, after all). If you’re afraid to change, keeping a deliberate blind spot is one way of ensuring that you don’t feel the need to do so.

I’m going to assume that if you’re reading a personal development blog, your main problem is not that you’re carefully remaining ignorant of needing to change your life. You may be avoiding change in other ways, which is what this whole How Not to Change Your Life series is all about, but you’re aware that you need to change.

You may not, of course, be sure what about your life needs to change.

Ignorance about what to change

All too often, we feel a sense of unease about our lives. Something we can’t quite pin down. Something obviously needs to change – but what?

Should I change my job? My house? My partner? My appearance? What if I change all those things and the same sense of unease persists?

And even if I know that I need to change something on the inside… what, exactly? Do I need to be more confident? Less anxious? Deal with my stress better? Get on better with the people around me who irritate me? Do I need to care more about some things, less about others? Do I need to be more organised, more punctual and more motivated? And if I could just improve my memory and sleep better….

Often enough, a cluster of things come together, and we don’t know what to change first. Everything I mentioned in the previous paragraph could describe one person’s issues, and none of them are uncommon. (I couldn’t tell you how many of my clients would have ticked all of those boxes when they came in to see me.)

Where do you start? Is it even possible?

Ignorance that change is possible

All too many people don’t even realise that they can change. It seems too hard. Some other, really disciplined people might be able to change, but not me, they think. I’ve always been like this, and I always will.

I take an optimistic view of personal change. I think that anyone who wants to can change, with the right help. It’s definitely hard – I don’t mean to suggest otherwise for a moment. But it is possible.

People who are less intelligent than you, have less money then you, have fewer opportunities and less support and less education and less anything else you might use as an excuse, have succeeded in changing. I guarantee it.

OK, how?

Ignorance about how to change

This is where we start to get real. What are the steps you follow to change your life? How’s it done?

This is a big part of what I call the Missing Curriculum. It’s something we weren’t taught at school (unless you went to a very unusual school).

There’s a process of change, and although going through it takes dedication and perseverance, the concept is simple.

  1. Your motivation to change needs to be, at least on average, stronger than your reasons to stay the same.
  2. You need to pay attention to what you’re doing and what you want to be doing instead.
  3. You need to practice regularly.

That’s it, really. There are no more secrets to change than that. Except maybe, “What your imagination got you into, it can get you out of – once you know what to do with it”.

Almost everything I write is about the change process and how to facilitate it, so I’m not going to try to repeat it all here. If you want a concise summary of a powerful technique for change – which incorporates attention, imagination, motivation and regular practice – take a look at my Self-Hypnosis How To site.

Action Now

So, if you’re in that place of feeling discontented and unsure, of knowing you want to change your life but not knowing what you want to change or how to do it, here are some concrete first steps.

  1. Let yourself dream. Get yourself into a “daydream” state and listen to yourself say what you really want to do and how you really want to be in the world, no matter how crazy or unrealistic it sounds.
  2. Figure out what’s stopping you from heading towards that dream – however slowly and hesitantly.
  3. Find out how people change that. Once you’ve identified what you want to change, research. Discover how it’s done, how other people have done it. Browse this site, and my other site, How to Be Amazing. Write down keywords. Google them.
  4. Put a practice in place. Do something on a regular basis that moves you in the direction of the person you want to be. I can’t stress this one enough.
  5. Watch yourself change. See what works, what doesn’t work, what continually trips you up. Every outcome is an education.
  6. Keep up your motivation by celebrating small successes, by holding on to the dream, by thinking about how it will be if you remain as you are.
  7. Get help when you need it. I’m here, and there are lots of other people around who are trained in helping you change. Talk to us.

There’s no need to remain ignorant about how to change your life. Make use of the amazing resources you have that earlier generations never dreamed of.

And tune in next week, when I talk about the dangers of becoming an expert.

This post is part of a series, How Not to Change Your Life.

Sign up below to get early notification and a discount on my forthcoming book, How Not to Change Your Life.