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Give up smoking for the new year - New Year's
Resolutions
How to keep up with those New Year's resolutions,
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In the next few weeks, millions of people
will venture down a well-traveled path paved with bold
and sometimes hastily conceived New Year's resolutions.
Want
to find out the top ten New years resolutions?
It is a route covered with promises to exercise more,
lose weight, stop smoking, cut down on
alcohol, eat a healthier diet and make new friends. All
of these are not necessarily broken promises. According
to a new University of Washington survey, 63 percent of
the people questioned were still keeping their number one
1997 New Year's resolution after two months.
< Buy a book about New Year Resolutions |
The study, conducted by Elizabeth Miller, a UW doctoral candidate
in psychology, and Alan Marlatt, director of the university's
Addictive Behaviors Research Center, sought to understand the
factors that best predict success in keeping New Year's resolutions.
The researchers focused on health-related resolutions because
these types of pledges are the most common and 60 percent of
Americans die from illnesses connected to behavior such as overeating,
lack of exercise and smoking. In addition, little is known about
the process by which people make successful behavior changes.
"The keys to making a successful resolution are a person's
confidence that he or she can make the behavior change and the
commitment to making that change," says Miller. In addition,
the study indicates that "resolutions are a process, not
a one-time effort that offer people a chance to create new habits." Even
if people are successful, they need to follow-up on their behavior
over the years, she adds.
To be successful with your own resolutions, Marlatt, who has
studied the subject for more than 20 years, suggests:
- Have a strong initial commitment to make a change.
- Have coping strategies to deal with problems that will come
up.
- Keep track of your progress. The more monitoring you do and
feedback you get, the better you will do.
Sure-fire ingredients for setting yourself up for resolution
failure, include:
- Not thinking about
making resolutions until the last minute.
- Reacting on New Year's Eve and making your resolutions based
on what's bothering you or is on your mind at that time.
- Framing your resolutions as absolutes by saying, "I
will never do X again."
Data from the new study was largely collected over the Internet,
with 264 subjects filling out questionnaires in early January
and again in March. The majority of subjects, 90 percent, came
from the metropolitan Seattle area, with the remainder coming
from across the United States. Fifty-four percent of the respondents
were female, and the age range of all subjects was 18 to 66.
While the study focused on primary resolutions, most people
made several resolutions, with 67 percent making three or more.
Increasing the amount of exercise was the most common primary
resolution, being made by 37 percent of subjects. It was followed
by: increasing the time devoted to study or work, 23 percent;
increasing the consumption of healthy food or decreasing the
amount of unhealthy food, 13 percent; reducing the use of tobacco,
alcohol, caffeine or other drugs used, 7 percent.
People made significantly more resolutions to start or increase
a behavior --222-- than to stop or decrease something -- 42.
Only 65 percent of subjects made their resolutions between Dec.
28 and New Year's Day. The rest made pledges they considered
to be New Year's resolutions as early as May and as late as the
end of January.
Miller also said that persistence can pay off. Of the people
who successfully achieved their top resolution, only 40 percent
of them did so on the first attempt. The rest made multiple tries,
with 17 percent finally succeeding after more than six attempts.
As final words of encouragement to resolution makers, Marlatt
has these suggestions:
"Take credit for success when you achieve a resolution,
but it is a mistake to blame yourself if you fail. Instead, look
at the barriers that were in your way. See how you can do better
the next time and figure out a better plan to succeed. You do
get to try again and can make behavior changes throughout the
year, not only at New Year's."

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