Improve self-discipline: Take care of your brain and harness willpower and shame

Life is filled with temptations. Food, alcohol, shopping, social media use, television viewing time, and more. We don’t always do such a great job of mastering these temptations. They can then have a negative effect on our life or turn into full-blown addictions.

The self-disciplined, though, can navigate this environment a little more easily. Using a portion control strategy, they’re able to limit calories, alcohol, spending, social media use, and television consumption.

But what if self-discipline is not one of your natural abilities?

Most experts agree that you can learn it.  

Lack of discipline is one of those nature or nurture questions. Since self-discipline can be taught, it makes sense that environment plays a role—especially during childhood.

Interestingly, though, biology comes into play too. But even if lack of discipline is a personality trait and core to who you are, it doesn’t mean that you can’t move the needle in the desired direction to become a more productive individual.

For example, I’m an inherently shy person. I’ve learned, though, how to be less shy by putting myself outside of my comfort zone. Forcing myself to accept public speaking opportunities has helped as well as saying yes to as many social functions as possible. If introvert is one end of a range and extrovert on the other, I’m closer to the middle now.

The same is true with self-discipline, and there are techniques that can help those looking to improve that quality in their life. (NOTE: Always speak with a health care professional before implementing any diet, exercise, or lifestyle changes—especially those related to addiction or mental health issues.)

We’ve heard that it’s helpful to break a big but reasonable goal or project into smaller, more doable activities. One way for those wanting to improve self-discipline is to also delay gratification after those small victories until the larger goal is met.  

The reason for this approach has to do with dopamine, a neurotransmitter that plays a crucial role in the brain’s reward system. And it can be trained. To your benefit or detriment.

Healthy dopamine levels help us to resist impulses and to focus and work toward long-term goals. But too much immediate gratification throws our dopamine out of whack.   

Often, but not always, the person lacking self-discipline has some type of immediate gratification problem or addictive-forming behavior that’s unrelated to the task at hand but helps to explain why they’re experiencing difficulties in accomplishing what they want to do.  

Any type of frequent reward-centered or addictive-forming behavior will flood the brain with unnaturally high levels of dopamine. Too much dopamine over long periods of time make dopamine receptors less responsive. More of the harmful activity is needed in order to feel the same dopamine hit. At this stage, damaged dopamine receptors make it hard to resist impulses—to delay gratification found in the reward—in order to work at achieving a bigger goal or be industrious in other areas of life. It stifles self-discipline.  

The good news is that it doesn’t have to be a permanent state. Reducing or eliminating time spent with the reward or stimulant will eventually return dopamine to healthy levels. A return to being productive can happen.

In addition to identifying unhealthy habits that could be leading to a lack of self-discipline, there are supplementary behaviors that can help with dopamine. Eating foods high in magnesium and tyrosine (chicken, almonds, apples, green leafy vegetables, green tea, tomatoes, and turmeric), exercising, and spending time in nature all help to naturally regulate healthy levels of dopamine.

Next, for some, it’s better to stop hoping for the feeling of motivation to arrive. Sometimes we’re self-motivated and sometimes we’re not. Feeling motivated is just that. It’s a feeling.

Instead, put the word “willpower” into your vocabulary. Willpower more readily leads to action. Even if we don’t feel like doing something, we have enough willpower to complete the smaller chunk of the bigger goal we’re trying to accomplish. You might not be motivated to run a 26-mile marathon, but many times you have the willpower to walk 2.6 miles in a day. In ten days, you will have completed a marathon. If you’ve been living a very sedentary lifestyle and 2.6 miles per day seems like too much, walk 26 steps. The point is that you always have sufficient willpower to do something. That something will give you the confidence to do even more and put you on a journey to completing a larger goal.    

And if you’re really struggling with willpower, think of the most productive person you know. The one that you catch yourself saying, “How does he or she accomplish so much?” Imagine what he or she would be doing in your place at that moment.

In the Christian world, there’s the saying, “What would Jesus do?” It’s a moral compass to guide actions. In the world of willpower ask yourself, “What would Mr. or Ms. Productive do?” He or she might forego the dessert or the extra glass of alcohol, put the credit card and smartphone away, or get off the couch.

There’s the saying that the fastest way to make yourself miserable is to compare yourself to someone else. But sometimes, comparisons are fair and healthy. A little self-inflicted shame can be useful at times.   

It is possible to improve your self-discipline. Take care of your brain and harness willpower and shame.

They’re far better companions than the alternative—unachieved goals that are important to you.

Make winter your favorite season by breaking a bad habit and spreading kindness while doing it

Shortly after a large Thanksgiving dinner, many start to think about a New Year’s resolution. Thoughts of diet and exercise occupy space in our head after dressing and pumpkin pie occupies space in our stomachs. 

Statistically, though, resolutions don’t work. As few as 9% keep their New Year’s resolutions throughout the entire year.

If you have resolution fatigue, there’s a better approach. Develop a goal and then:

  • Admit that committing to that goal for four seasons and 365 days, followed by a desired lifelong change, is a bit intimidating and overwhelming.
  • Jumpstart your goal in an intense way for a shorter time period: the 98 days between Christmas and Easter—all winter months and only about a fourth of a full year.
  • Acknowledge that the winter season can be tough on us without some kind of positive intervention on our end.
  • Understand that helping others takes attention off of us and our many excuses for not accomplishing something.
  • Achieve a primary goal by implementing a secondary goal of a specific number of acts of kindness to be performed daily and feel your heart grow lighter during dreary, winter months.   

Most experts say it takes 21 – 66 days to break a bad habit. And it often takes a minimum of 90 days to turn the corner on a true addiction. The 98 days between Christmas and Easter, this year, is time enough to break a bad habit or begin the courageous journey of recovery from addiction.  

And by turning the season of winter into a season of kindness, the cold, harsh weather will seem warmer and more bearable.   

Acts of kindness are powerful, especially for the giver. It can even be therapeutic.

A therapist once instructed a recovering addict to perform 100 acts of kindness.

In a day. And the next day after that. And the next.

That sounds almost impossible. To both accomplish and track.

And that’s the point. It refocuses thoughts, energy and actions. It keeps the addict extremely busy with something other than drugs or alcohol. 

Mentalhealth.net frames the benefit of performing acts of kindness this way, “Your mind cannot dwell on two things at once. If you keep your mind occupied, cravings have less power.”

It also recommends counting and recording these acts of kindness—as many as possible—for at least 90 days. Another seemingly insurmountable task.

All day long, there are many opportunities for random acts of kindness: holding a door open for someone, being a generous tipper, smiling at someone who looks sad, giving a compliment, saying please and thank you, picking up a piece of litter, being on time for an appointment and respectful of others’ time, forgiving someone who wronged you, cooking a special meal for someone, reaching out to a friend or family member, donating your time, talent or treasure to a charity, giving someone the benefit of the doubt, and being fully present when asking, “How are you?”

That’s a lot of kindnesses to track.

Fortunately, there’s an app for that. There are a number of free “click counter” apps that can be downloaded to your smart phone. If you prefer the old-fashioned way, there are lots of five-dollar mechanical click counters that can easily slip into a pocket.

It seems a little drastic to do all this counting, but again, it keeps the addict’s attention focused. 

Addiction is a difficult thing, and kindness-clicking your way to recovery will likely not be so simple. But it’s one tool that can be used along with different therapies and treatments.

Performing acts of kindness are good for others, too.

If it takes an intense 100 acts of kindness on a daily basis to help a recovering addict, others can strive for 50 or even 25 acts daily to help overcome a bad habit or just help to make the winter season less dark and our hearts lighter and uplifted.

Keep saying yes to resolutions, even if they’re not for an entire year. And bring both intensity to your goal and kindness to others during the winter months.

It might even become your favorite season.   

Addiction and friendship

addiction

Image by Shutterstock.

What does it mean to be a good friend?

To an active substance abuser—the addict or alcoholic.

According to a 2016 Surgeon General’s report, about nine percent of the population met diagnostic criteria for substance use disorder for either alcohol or illicit drugs, or a combination of both. Nine percent of adults in this country translates into tens of millions of people. Of that number, only 10 percent receive any type of treatment.

The tragedy doesn’t end there.

Statista.com found that an average of 38 percent of adults in this country felt that alcohol, heroin, cocaine, amphetamines and prescription drug abuse was a serious problem in their community. To say that it’s a serious problem in one’s own community indicates that one in three individuals likely knows someone who is struggling with addiction.

And that someone could be a friend of yours.

Some substance abusers are high functioning. Others cannot function at all. There’s a sadness to all of it, though, and its ripple effect reaches friendships.

Over time, usually after several years, a substance abuser’s lies, disrespect and manipulation tactics will take its toll on friendships. Friends may willingly accept this treatment in order to keep the relationship going—hoping that if they’re present enough, empathetic enough, and selfless enough that it will all be enough for the substance abuser to become well again.

All too often, that’s not what happens.

Instead, a new addiction is created. An addiction to the addict’s or alcoholic’s needs. The addiction of trying to fix problems and rescue people.

And before long, the substance abuser and the rescuer become co-sufferers.

Author David Sheff writes in, “Beautiful Boy,”—a journey with his son’s meth addiction—of the hopelessness of giving a consuming attention to another’s substance abuse. What is hard on a friendship must be many times more difficult for a father-son relationship. He quotes writer Ha Jin who once said that for ordinary people, too much suffering can only make us meaner, crazier, pettier and more wretched. Sheff acknowledges that his own addiction of trying to make his son well led him to times when he felt meaner, crazier, pettier and more wretched.

It was only with an eventual and reluctant understanding that his son was the only one who could make himself well again that he could say, “…now I feel fine, at least much of the time.”

We come into this world on our own. We’ll leave it on our own. And while we’re here, we alone are responsible for how we live it.

Sheff says, “I am no longer preoccupied with Nic. This could change, but at the moment I accept and even appreciate that he is living his life his way. Of course, I will always hope that he stays sober.”

Back to the question of, “What does it mean to be a good friend to an active substance abuser?”

Sometimes in seeking an answer to a question, we find that we’re asking the wrong one. In unpacking the question of what it means to be a good friend, we arrive at the real question which is—“What more could I have done?”

The answer is that too much, probably, has already been done.

Practicing loving detachment is difficult. Setting healthy boundaries is hard. Focusing on living one’s own life takes effort.

And it may very well be the best you can do, as a good friend.