Resolute Ways to Keep Those Resolutions
If the New Yearâs resolutions you made with firm resolve on Jan. 1 have bitten the dust, psychologist Donald Dossey isnât surprised.
By the end of February, 95% of us have broken our New Yearâs resolutions, Dossey said, because we donât know how to make them in the first place.
âNinety-nine percent of the people make New Yearâs resolutions because everyone is talking about them and they feel they should make them,â said Dossey, founder of the Westwood-based Phobia Institute and a specialist in treating phobias and anxiety disorders. âOr they donât make them for themselves, but for someone else. That doesnât work.â
After 19 years of study, Dossey has found that âkeeping resolutions is a lot like curing your phobias. Thereâs a certain way to do it . . . steps that have to be followed in order to succeed with resolutions or goals.
Changing Behavior
âFear of change, tropophobia, is the biggest fear we have,â he said. âTo cure a phobia, you have to change your behavior. You also have to change it if youâre going to keep a resolution youâve made. Some people fear change so much that they donât make any resolutions.â
Dossey also has found that there are trends in resolutions. âIn the early â80s, people were making a lot of resolutions about quitting drugs and drinking,â he said. âBut now, popular resolutions have to do with fitness and relationships. Itâs the spirit of the times.â
After studying psycho-neurolinguistics in 1968-69, Dossey said he began to apply a communications theory to his psychological treatment, examining how certain words make impressions on how people behave.
He discovered that most people make resolutions ânegatively, saying âI wonât do this or that.â What follows the negative will be an unconscious and behavioral level, as if it were a deep hypnotic command, to respond exactly the opposite way. If you resolve âI wonât do this,â you will.â
Instead, Dossey recommends making resolutions or goals in positive, specific terms: âI want to be fit and trim and at a certain weight,â or âI would like to have a smoke-free life and have healthy lungs.â
Broken Resolutions
Another reason most New Yearâs resolutions are quickly broken--50% last no longer than two weeks, according to Dossey--is that âwe try to do it only once a year,â he said. âWe shouldnât just pick one day of the year, but we should implement them throughout the year. Make every day a new year.â
Dossey, 53, born and raised in the San Joaquin Valley, opened his Phobia Institute in 1981 and now has several branch offices.
A former clinical psychology instructor at Pepperdine University and a consultant to the National Institute of Mental Health in conceptual psychiatry, he is practicing what he preaches: He just stopped drinking coffee a week ago.
âI was up to a half-gallon a day,â he said. âI was a caffeine addict and I just had to stop. One cup of caffeine will quadruple the amount of adrenalin in the body.â
Using his own techniques, Dossey has, in the past three years, also given up alcohol and smoking, separately.
Acknowledging the Problem
âI was using (alcohol) as a medication, but I was in denial,â he said. âThatâs the biggest part of the problem, acknowledging it. I was not practicing what I was teaching my patients. I was smoking 2 1/2 packs of Shermans a day and had a hacking cough and was close to emphysema. Fear of dying motivated me to quit both.â
Having also lost 45 pounds over 1 1/2 years, Dossey sticks faithfully to a diet he calls âNo CATS in San Franciscoâ (Coffee, Alcohol, Tobacco, Sugar, or Salt or Fat) which he also recommends to his patients.
âThree Pâsâ lead to failure, he added: âPerfectionism, which leads to procrastination and then to paralysis,â all of which affect peopleâs goal-making processes, whether they are trying to keep a resolution or cure a phobia.