The Paradox of Resolutions

By Gretchen Gibbs

What to make of the failure of our New Year’s and other resolutions? I would argue that when we resolve to change our behavior there is a basic paradox that makes it difficult. The harder we try to make ourselves conform to a goal we desire, the less successful we are likely to be. This is particularly true when the body is involved. That is, you may succeed in a resolution to stop seeing someone in an unhealthy relationship, but it’s unlikely that you could successfully resolve not to be attracted to that person.

Most resolutions, especially the ones that fail, tend to involve making a change in our bodies. The most common are to eat less, exercise more, or give up smoking or drinking. I would love to resolve not to be afraid of mice any longer. I can tell myself 20 reasons why mice cannot hurt me, but I know the instant I see one of those skinny tails a shriek will break through my throat. Think of how hard it is to make one’s self fall asleep, and on the other hand, how hard it is to stay awake when one is on the verge of sleep. The body has a mind of its own, so to speak. The more we try to diet, the more appealing that chocolate chip cookie is. It seems as though intentionality brings up the mind-body problem, and the body always wins.

This summer I took a 10-year old girl for a banana split. I began to think about how many banana splits I’d had in my own long life, and concluded it was about three. I made a resolution that I wanted to eat more ice cream. Now there’s an easy resolution, you are thinking. Well, I did get to the Bellvale Creamery in Warwick a few times, and my refrigerator contains a pint of my favorite Coffee Heath Bar Crunch, but in fact I didn’t overdo the ice cream. Something about making ice cream a “good” thing rather than a fatty, sugary weight gainer did the trick, and the body didn’t want it any more than a nice helping of broccoli. Now if I had resolved to give up ice cream, I would probably have eaten quarts more.

Psychologists define will power as the ability to give up the short-term goal for a more desirable long- term goal. In other words, with will power, one can eschew the chocolate chip cookie for the long-term loss of 10 pounds. Studies on will power began with children who were offered a small candy bar the day of the study versus a larger bar the next day. One thing this finding illustrates is that you need to have a really big goal to motivate the resolution. I might well take the small candy bar because I could stop at the store on the way home and buy as big a candy bar as I liked. A big goal for weight loss for many people, especially women, is a wedding. Women seem to find it easy to lose 10 pounds before a wedding even though the weight goes right back on afterwards. Looking svelte at a wedding is apparently an important long-term goal, and people can give up the small candy bar and the cookies for it. Similarly, many (though not all) people can give up smoking if they find out they will otherwise drastically shorten their lives.

If you are going to make resolutions, here are some pointers that you probably don’t want.

–Be sure you have a long-term goal you really care about. Otherwise, you won’t give up the cookies.

–Try to be specific. Don’t resolve to get more exercise; resolve to walk a mile a day.

–Break the resolution down into small steps. Try to find a way to measure it. A chart, perhaps.

–Make it as enjoyable as you can. What you really want is for the activity itself to become rewarding, so you don’t have to keep thinking about the long-term goal. When I want to lose weight, I don’t give up foods, I try to eat five or more fruits and vegetables a day. I like fruits and vegetables, and eating more is a pleasure, not a hardship. If you are going to walk, be sure you have a route you enjoy, and think ahead of time about how you will handle bad weather. Don’t say you’ll walk regardless if you know you won’t.

–Social support. Resolve to walk a mile a day with your friend Caroline – it always helps to have companionship and somebody else who knows it’s hard. Studies find just communicating one’s progress to somebody else increases the likelihood that you’ll carry out the resolution.

–Give yourself some rewards between short-term and long-term. It’s hard to walk a mile a day with a vague goal of better health and some weight loss coming in a year. I was inspired to write this about resolutions after reading Jeff Page’s Zest piece two weeks ago, in which among other resolutions he formed was the intention to give up Spider Solitaire. As a Spider Solitaire addict myself, I wouldn’t dream of trying to give it up. It’s too much fun. Instead, I try to use it as a reward. So, I might play Spider for the amount of time it takes me to walk a mile.

–Recent findings show that will power is strengthened by ingesting small amounts of glucose! So treats are good rewards for carrying out resolutions.

–Forgive yourself your lapses. If you fail, just start again. Everybody fails; that’s the paradox. No point in beating yourself up as well as having failed to complete the resolution. Studies show that we have a limited amount of will power and it runs out.

–Also believing in the power of one’s will helps it work. You can change your behavior and even your whole life if you want to, and avoid falling into the paradox of trying to rule your body with your mind.

6 Responses to “The Paradox of Resolutions”

  1. carole howard Says:

    Thanks, Gretchen. I know what you mean re “The harder we try to make ourselves conform to a goal we desire, the less successful we are likely to be.” I stopped making resolutions when I realized I tended to make the same one(s) every year: “I will be more ____________ (insert personal characteristic).” Lately, I work more on accepting myself for being the way I am. Not that I don’t try to improve in certain ways, but it just feels gentler this way.

  2. Diane Newlander Says:

    Great insight and suggestions, thanks.
    On the first Sunday in January at the Unitarian Universalist meeting we did an exercise on what we would like to rid ourselves of. I chose criticism. Since then, I’ve noticed how criticism just jumps into my mind automatically. It’s given me an opportunity to be mindful and notice how it just pops up.
    When I lived in Denver, I knew a woman who tried avoiding comparisons. I’ve often wondered if she conquered the criticism problem and moved on to comparisons.
    Hope I can stop criticizing myself for this and enjoy a day off.

  3. Richard Bennett Says:

    Good thoughts on resolutions. Bodily pleasures and pursuits are the default arbiters of behavior. We can overcome them but it is not easy. Better to work with them as you suggest.
    One of the problems with resolutions is that if they don’t involve something bodily and material we can easily fool ourselves into believing that we have achieved them. Changing ones mind without a change in behavior is hollow (Chris Christie saying he takes full responsibility for his aides wrongdoing for example).
    Here’s another thought on this topic that I was reading yesterday. Suggests that it is NOT efficacious to tell people about our resolutions until we have achieved them.
    http://sivers.org/zipit

  4. bennett Says:

    I could be wrong here, but on first thoughts it seems to me that a belief in “will power” presupposes a belief in “free will”.

    I, like everyone else, experience the feeling of having free will, but I don’t trust it. Instead, I believe that I discover my decisions rather than author them.

    I find it a most exhilerating and liberating mindset since learning who one is is a helluva lot stressful than constantly trying to engineer what one “should” become. So no resolutions for me.

    Flowing with the go.

  5. bennett Says:

    I could be wrong here, but on first thoughts it seems to me that a belief in “will power” presupposes a belief in “free will”.

    I, like everyone else, experience the feeling of having free will, but I don’t trust it. Instead, I believe that I discover my decisions rather than author them.

    I find it a most exhilerating and liberating mindset since learning who one is is a helluva lot less stressful than constantly trying to engineer what one “should” become. So no resolutions for me.

    Flowing with the go.

  6. Gretchen Gibbs Says:

    As several respondents suggest, acceptance may be more important than resolutions about change. Psychologists are beginning to recognize this, both in individual and couples work – rather than changing ourselves or our partners, try learning to live with who we or they are. I think that most of the wisdom in the world is contained in that prayer about changing what we can, accepting what we can’t and having the wisdom to know the difference.

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