Copied from: http://addicted2success.com/success-advice/6-ways-your-brain-attempts-to-sabotage-your-goals-for-success/
By Joel on August
2, 2012
This is an article by Gregory
Ciotti, founder of Sparring Mind.
Now we know that you should never make excuses for not sticking to your
goals, and we understand that from time to time you will have your valid reasons,
but what if it is not really you to blame for your failures and that your brain
is actually out to sabotage your hopeful plans?
Well this article here explains the 6 ways that your brain plays tricks on you to sabotage your goals
and dreams.
1.) Your brain can hurt your goals by fantasizing too much
Would you believe that fantasizing is
the #1 way your brain can unintentionally ruin your
goals?
It seems unlikely, right?
The thing is, the proof is in the
pudding (or in this case, the research): psychologists have found that while
positive thinking about the future is broadly beneficial,
too much fantasy can have disastrous results on achieving goals.
Researchers tracked the progress of how people cope with four different
types of challenges.
As an example, in one of those challenges (trying to find a fulfilling
job), those who had spent the most time fantasizing performed the worst in a
variety of critical data points:
·
they had applied for fewer jobs
·
they had been offered fewer jobs
·
if they were able to find work, they had lower salaries.
Why?
Why could fantasizing about a positive end take a turn for the worse?
Jeremy Dean, a psychological
researcher at UCL London and the owner of PsyBlog had
this to say about the researcher’s conclusions:
The
problem with positive fantasies is that they allow us to anticipate success in the here and now. However, they don’t
alert us to the problems we are likely to face along the way and can leave us
with less motivation—after
all, it feels like we’ve already reached our goal.
It’s one way in
which our minds own brilliance lets us down. Because it’s so amazing at
simulating our achievement of future events, it can actually undermine our attempts to achieve those goals in reality.
Our poor brain is thus a victim of itself.
Again, this is not to say that visualizing goals is necessarily a
haphazard strategy for achieving them, it’s just that we need to be aware of
the dangers of excessive fantasy.
Instead of being entranced with what
the future may bring, we need to learn to
love the work here and now.
Enjoying our day by day progress and realistic ‘checkpoints’ is a much
more practical way to create our future; getting lost in grandiose dreams that
focus on the ultimate end is not.
As they say, don’t give up on your dreams, but don’t fall under their
spell either.
2.) Your brain procrastinates on big projects by visualizing the worst
parts
Procrastination, of all of the things on this list, is likely the most
recognizable: everybody realizes that they procrastinate from time to time, and
it’s something we are forced to battle with every day.
How can we fight this persistent opponent?
Interesting research from Russian
psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik (of whom the Zeigarnik Effect is
named after) reveals to us an interesting tidbit about the human mind: we are
better at remember things that are partially done.
Ms. Zeigarnik came to this conclusion by testing the memory of folks
doing simple “brain” tasks like puzzles or crafts.
She then interrupted them and asked them to recall (with specific
detail) the tasks that they were doing or had completed.
She found that people were twice as likely to recall more detail about the
tasks they had been interrupted in than in the tasks they had completed.
What does this have to do with
procrastination?
Before we get to that, know this:
in a study by Kenneth McGraw,
participants were given a very tricky puzzle to solve with an “unlimited”
amount of time.
The thing is, all of the participants were interrupted before they could
finish, and then told that the study was over.
Guess what happened next…
Despite being told they were done,
nearly 90% of participants continued working on the
puzzle anyway.
What both of these studies teach us
is that when people finally manage
to start something, they are much more inclined to remember the task and
finish it.
The Zeigarnik Effect and the
subsequent McGraw study assure us that the best way to beat procrastination is
to start somewhere… anywhere.
Our brain has the habit of envisioning the impending huge workload of an
upcoming task.
It also tends to focus on the most difficult parts or sections, and this
is where procrastination begins to set in: as we try to avoid the “hard work”,
we find ways to skate around it and trick ourselves into thinking that we’re
busy.
Just starting though,
triggers our brain in a different way.
It’s the same way that cliffhangers are utilized to keep us
coming back to our favorite TV shows; we’re primed to remember the last episode
because the story was interrupted, and our brain wants a conclusion.
It’s the same with your tasks: start, and your brain will overcome the first hurdle.
This seemingly small milestone appears to be the most important one to
overcome if you wish to defeat procrastination.
After starting a task, your brain will be more enticed to finish it to
it’s “conclusion.”
You also tend to see that it’s not as big a mountain as you initially
imagined, and that the work involved in completing this task won’t be so
terrifying after all.
3.) Your brain will “abandon ship” at the first sign of distress
Anyone who’s fought the good fight with dieting will likely recognize
this phenomenon.
Envision this:
You’re on a diet,
and have been doing well for about 2 1/2 weeks, but you know your defenses are
at risk.
To make matters
work, you’re having dinner with friends tonight.
Instead
of the healthy meal you could have made at home,
you’re forced to use a restaurant menu.
The
problem is this: At the bar
before dinner, you had a little “cheat” moment by ordering snacks and drinks,
after all, you’re with your pals tonight, right?
You know that those
drinks and snacks, combined with the bread you had before dinner, leave you
with one option to stay a bit over your caloric intake goals: you must eat a
salad.
The thing is, your
brain is yelling out “BURGER!”.
Instead of
finishing the day a tad over your 2000 calorie goal, you order the burger with
fries and don’t look back.
The crazy thing about this scenario?
It’s much more than a momentary act of weakness: psychologists have
observed that this is much more likely to happen as a result of
you missing a previously set goal.
Specifically, in research by Janet Polivy and her colleagues, people who
were actually on diets were tested with pizza and cookies.
In the study, two groups of participants (those on diets and those not
dieting) were told not to eat beforehand and then served exactly the same slice
of pizza when they arrived to the lab.
Afterwards, they were then asked to taste and rate some cookies (I’m
getting hungry already : )).
The thing was, the experimenters didn’t really care about the cookie’s
rating, they just wanted to see how many people ate.
This is because they tricked some of the participants into thinking that
they had received a larger slice than the others (using framing and false
information). This was to make them believe that they had most certainly
“ruined” their diet goals for the day.
The result?
When the cookies
were weighed, it turned out that those who were on a diet and thought they’d
blown their limit ate more of the cookies than those who weren’t on a diet.
This doesn’t paint the true picture
though: they ate over 50% more!
On the flip side, the dieters
that did think that they were in their caloric limit
ate the same amount of cookies as those who weren’t on a diet at all.
Truly, our brain is geared towards a
call of “Abandon ship!”, whenever we come short of our goals.
Don’t let this happen to you!
The best way to combat your brain from signaling ‘Mission Abort!’ after
you’ve missed a short-term goal is to re-frame what just happened.
Yes, you did fall short or maybe mess up this time, but remember the
progress that you’ve made.
With the diet example, you could look at all of the “good days” you’ve
accumulated thus far: even if you fell after only a few days of starting your
new diet, it’s still an accomplishment to have started one and to have set
long-term goals for yourself.
Short-term lapses in your end-goal
is not like a bad apple spoiling the bunch: you have
gotten things accomplished so far and you need to stay focused on the long-term,
not become distraught by a single mishap.
Research tells us that this is the best mindset to take for misfortune
and failure in general: your progress and achievements go so much farther than
that slip-up; don’t let your brain convince you that all is lost!
4.) Your brain loves mindless busywork disguised as progress
How fitting that this should be posted on a site that relates to social
media!
One of the ways in which your brain continues it’s trickery is through
busy work: work that gets “something” done, but not something that produces any
measurable results.
In fact, research by John Bargh and colleagues reveals that our brain just loves to become robotic and to even mimic people
out of habit.
I shouldn’t have to tell you that
this is disastrous to achieving long-term goals!
This busy work is often a mechanism
our brain uses in cohesion with avoiding big projects (mentioned above): instead
of diving into the difficult tasks we KNOW we should get done, we’ll instead
float around doing semi-related (read: barely related)
menial tasks to make ourselves feelproductive
without actually getting anything done.
Here’s the thing: you’re not going to build a thriving business
or a successful blog with that kind of busy work.
It takes doing the hard work and it takes deliberate practice,
there’s no way around it.
The thing is, your brain knows this,
that’s why you have to remind
it remind yourself that
the challenging stuff is often the stuff that produces the results you desire.
Also remember that you can fight that procrastination by
just getting started.
When you look back at what you’ve gotten done by the end of the day,
make sure you’re proud of what you got accomplished, don’t let your brain ruin
your goals by diverting you from what needs to be done!
5.) Your brain gives you a false sense of time.
Your brain says: “Relax,
you’ve got plenty of time for this project.”
The reality: You are straight-up terrible at estimating how long it will take you to finish tasks. You’ll almost assuredly underestimate the time you’ll need.
The reality: You are straight-up terrible at estimating how long it will take you to finish tasks. You’ll almost assuredly underestimate the time you’ll need.
When they started building the Sydney Opera House, the blokes in charge
were all like, “No worries, mate. She’ll be done by 1963 and this $7 million
budget should cover things nicely. Throw another shrimp on the barbie.” (Note:
I am paraphrasing here.) Then they proceeded to tear through the $7 million
faster than a kangaroo chasing a boomerang (fun with stereotypes!). The iconic
building finally opened in 1973—ten years late and $95 million over budget.
You tend to underestimate how much time projects will take for you to
complete. It’s called Planning Fallacy, and it’s why Afternoon-You looks at the
to-do list made by Morning-You and says, “Were you under the impression that I
am some sort of goddamn superhero or what?”
Psychologists think your overly optimistic planning is caused by a
combination of wishful thinking and how you view similar projects you’ve done
in the past, which is to say you subconsciously take credit for the progress
that was made but blame outside forces for delays. The last article took so
long to write because your computer crashed, your neighbor was playing “Rhythm
Is A Dancer” on his damned guitar again, and you got stuck in traffic on the
way to an interview. Those things weren’t your fault and won’t happen again,
you say. But they might. And if they don’t, other time-sucks will show up to
take their place.
Solutions:
·
Your brain isn’t as bad at determining how long it will take someone
else to complete a task. You’ll overestimate in most cases, but it’s nothing
compared to the wildly overoptimistic standards you’ll set for yourself. When
you need to determine a time frame for a project, imagine someone else will be
completing the task and your guess will be closer to the truth.
·
Planning Fallacy is going to tell you that writing your book will take,
oh, maybe two weeks if you stop for meals. As always, it lies. For a goal as
complex as that, the only way to get a remotely accurate estimate is to break
it into the individual steps it will take to achieve it. Besides, it’s scary as
hell to see “write novel” on today’s to-do list, but breaking it down into
steps like “research alpaca breeding standards for book” or “write chapter
seven” turns it into something that’s finite, specific, and easier to wrap your
head around. Make a list. Write down how long each step will take. Add ’em up.
·
Make a note of how long similar tasks have taken, but don’t adjust for
distractions or problems caused by outside sources.
·
Identify potential snags. Assume they’ll happen.
6.) Your brain is not good at “winging it” when it comes to planning…
ever!
Every night before I go to sleep, I like to write a simple “to-do” list
that I group into two categories.
I put some in category ‘A’ (must be done tomorrow) and some in category
‘B’ (must be worked on or done in 2-3 days).
I do this because when I sit down at
the computer to do work without a
plan, I tend to fall flat on my face.
My so-called “work time” turns into the not-so-productive “check email
time” or “browse Reddit” time; nothing of any importance gets done.
It seems that I’m not alone!
In research by Gollwitzer and colleagues, the subject of
“if-then” plans was discussed in relation to how we set and stay consistent
with out goals, and the results are not surprising but reveal a lot of insight
into how our brain reacts to planning (and even some great tips).
The thing is, researchers found that
not only do well laid plans seem to get accomplished more often, but planning for failures along the way (“In case of
emergency…”) helps people stay on task under duress.
Let’s continue our diet example from above.
Say you did have that lapse and go over your calories for
the day.
Instead of “winging it” and letting
your brain crumble to it’s likely response (discussed above), you should have
a backup plan ready to know what to do when failure
strikes.
This could be something like: “If I go over 2000 calories in a day, I’ll
finish the day as close to 2000 as I can, and then the next morning, I’ll go
for a 15 minute run as a ‘penance’, make sure I eat an extra healthy breakfast,
and then continue the rest of my day as normal.”
You are likely no stranger to feeling ashamed about getting off track,
we’ve all been there.
Having those “In case of emergency…” plans help us to have a game plan
in case we do falter, and including a small ‘penance’ like I discussed above
can help us get over it quicker.
If you failed on your diet for a day
and then ‘punish’ (again, just with a quick run) yourself by running in the
morning, you can go about your day knowing that you got what you deserved, instead of sliding down the
slippery slope of guilt through the rest of the day.
So remember to include an “If-Then” plan for your next big goal, you’ll
be able to beat back your brain’s guilt over slipping up now and then and you
won’t have to ever “wing it” in case something goes wrong!
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