|
|
Are You Ready for a
Change?
By Dr. Kevin Polk
Copyright 2000. All rights reserved.
"Change" is a word we use a lot. We use it
a lot because we
do a lot of it.
We even have a great saying for it, "The only thing that
doesn't change is that things change." We are constantly
bombarded with messages that we need to change. We are told to change
how much we weigh, how much we eat, what we eat, how we interact with
others, how we work,
etc. You need only to pick up a magazine, look at TV or listen to the
radio to be bombarded with messages about what you need to change.
The problem is that change is stressful. Being told to change is
stressful as well. There is a good reason we get stressed when we are
told to change. Where I am from we call it "being set in your
ways." It's only natural. Being set in your ways is a lot like
autopilot. That means you don't have to think much about what you're
doing. If you had to think
about every little thing you did each day, you would be exhausted in
no time. So we tend to keep things the same to save energy. This
tendency is useful until we really need to change.
A scientist named Dr. James O. Prochaska and his colleagues have
studied the stages people go through as they change. They have
found that there are five stages of change. Knowing what
stage you are in can help you get out of a rut and make the changes
you need to make. In my opinion it can also help you decide to pass up
the changes you don't need to make. Think about it. If you made all
the changes you are
told to make each day, you would do nothing but change.
Here are the stages of change:
1. Pre-contemplation: This can mean that you are not thinking about
that change you need to make. It can also mean you are thinking about
changing, but not for six months or more. For example, you did not
know you needed to lower your cholesterol level until you found it was
too high.
Maybe you are thinking about getting to work on lowering it...six
months from now.
2. Contemplation: Now you are thinking about making the change within
six months. For example, you know you need to lower that cholesterol.
You're thinking about doing something about it soon, but that's all
you're doing.
3. Preparation: Now you've thought about it and know you want to
change. Now you are putting the pieces together to make the change
within the next 30 days. You're close to action.
4. Action: Now you go on that diet, you start exercising, you take
your medicine, whatever. You are spending time each day doing the
change. You have been doing so for six months or less.
5. Maintenance: You have made the change and kept it up for more than
six months. In terms of cholesterol, you lowered the cholesterol and
have kept it low for more than six months.
Use these stages to help observe and analyze your self as you change,
or if you are like a lot of us, as you don't change. So are there
changes that you need to make but you are keeping them in
pre-contemplation? Are you just thinking about doing something and not
preparing? Maybe you keep preparing and don't take action. Maybe you
take action and
don't keep it up.
Whatever you do don't lose sleep over what stages of change you are
in. Treat this as another tool you can use to help yourself feel
better. You will probably want to use it when you are feeling stuck
solving a problem. Then you can determine at which stage you're stuck.
Maybe it will make it easier to get going. Maybe you will decide to
stay where you are. There's some comfort in knowing where you are.
Dr. Polk's self-help articles are published in hundreds of Internet
publications. Get his free course in Creative Problem Solving at http://www.timedoctor.com/signup022.htm
or send a message to
mailto:timedoctor@GetResponse.com?subject=REF022.
Related Articles:
Where's The Respect
With This Job?
Ever
hear, "Why
are you wasting your education?"
Staying
at Home I
can help one person stay at home with their child my mission is
accomplished.
HOME ALONE .... Being A SAHM
Guilt at being bored, guilt at needing help, guilt at
wanting time away. I noticed that the majority of these moms were
first time moms, coping with learning and exhaustion and reality.
|
|