Facing 2020 / Keeping new year resolutions
>> Monday, January 13, 2020
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
The Philippines faces
2020 with great hope according to a Social Weather Stations survey basing from 96
percent of people polled in the fourth-quarter.
The SWS said
this record high in a year-end survey was first achieved in 2017 at the end of
the first full year of the new Duterte administration.
It went down
to 92 percent in 2018, the year inflation – high prices — soared to 6.7 percent
in September. The nationwide survey on people’s hopes is now back to 96
percent, an affirmation, the SWS said, of the people’s view of life in the
Philippines today.
Despite
these, there is much that is happening in the world that may make Filipinos fortunate
to be living in this country. The news is full of endless street fighting in
many countries over a variety of issues.
In Hong Kong,
the street rallies protesting a proposed extradition law have continued as a
pro-democracy movement.
The causes
have been different in countries. Some are over economic issues, others political.
But all demonstrators, according to observers, have the sense that they are not
in control of their government or their officials.
Filipinos too
were driven by this sense of being left out when they gathered by the millions
at EDSA in 1986 in support of then Defense Secretary Fidel Ramos and Executive
Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile.
After days of
mass demonstration, then President Marcos yielded to the widowed housewife who
ran against him in a special election – Cory Aquino.
The same
sense of discontent must be driving people of so many countries to take to the
streets in protest demonstrations today.
Observers
point out the country shares many of the problems in these nations – poverty
for so many people, so many still without decent work, corruption in some
government agencies, inadequate government services.
Filipinos have
not taken to the streets yet as in other countries. They may want to ride out
another year despite many problems and strife the nation is facing.
***
(I would like to share this article by Eric
Jensen on how to keep new year resolutions this 2020):
Experts Amy
Morin, psychotherapist and USA TODAY best-selling author of "13
Things Mentally Strong People Don't Do," and Hal
Hershfield, associate professor of marketing and behavioral decision making
at UCLA’s
Anderson School of Management, agree success begins
with a specific goal. Staying motivated can also be a challenge.
Here's how to
stick to your New Year's resolutions:
Craft an
appropriate, measurable goal
Instead of
setting an objective of losing weight, prepare to be more specific. Set weekly
goals to lose a set number of pounds or go to the gym a certain number of
times, suggests Morin.
Hershfield
mentions setting both a low-end and high-end goal, like wanting to lose 12-18
pounds or running 2-6 miles per week. "If you set that sort of range,
that can cause you to reach the easier goal but then keep striving for the
harder one," he explains.
Join a gym
and New Year's Day does not need to be ground zero. It's better to hold off to
allow time to adequately prepare, according to Morin. That includes
contemplating any pitfalls, like a lack of motivation and temptations.
"A lot
of people set health and fitness goals, but then they forget (about) 'What am I
gonna do when my friends invite me out to dinner, or when everybody from the
office is going out to drinks, or when my kids have after school activities,
can I still go to the gym?' And just a little planning and preparation for
that," says Morin.
Make a habit
of your resolution
Hershfield
stresses the importance of making your resolution "automatic."
"Try to
relieve the pain points as much as possible," he says. If your resolution
is going to the gym, decide on a time – the same time every day – and lay out
gym clothes and anything else needed in advance. "The more and more
routine you make it, the more that will naturally become a habit over
time," he says, "coupled with making it less painful."
Maintain
motivation
Speaking of
making new habits less painful, Hershfield speaks of Katy
Milkman's work on temptation bundling, which he describes as
"this idea that you essentially pair whatever it is that you’re
experiencing some pain on and pair that with something that’s
pleasurable."
Morin warns
feelings of fatigue and anxiety can zap motivation. To combat that, she advises
listing your reasons for adhering to your resolution while still feeling
inspired, to be read on days when motivation is lacking. "All those
logical reasons of why you should do it can help counteract the emotional
aspect of your decision that will try to talk you out of it," she says.
Move on after
slip-ups
Appropriately
assess a backslide for what it is and what it is not – a flame-thrower to any
and all improvement. "Remember that you’ve made progress, and sometimes
progress is two steps forward and one step back," advises
Morin. "Know that every time you slip up is an opportunity to grow
stronger and get better, and you just have to learn from it."
Morin also
advises being aware of how you talk to yourself. "The tendency to beat
yourself up, or to be overly harsh on yourself, is gonna make things
worse," she says. "We know that self-compassion is the key to
changing your behavior, but most of us are so much harder on ourselves than we
are on anybody else."
Hershfield
suggests leaving room for mishaps using
"emergency reserves," which acts as a
buffer if goals aren't met. "The idea here is that it allows us some
sort of soft cushion to fall so that we can bounce back and keep going with our
goal rather than the psychological perception that we’ve just completely fallen
off the goal pursuit path," he says.
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