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Kicking the Dessert Habit

By March 6, 2012October 2nd, 2013114 Comments

You want to know whatโ€™s fun about being an editor? You get to live vicariously through people who are smarter, better traveled, and more interesting than you. Charles Duhigg is one of those people. Charles is an investigative reporter at The New York Times โ€” if you havenโ€™t been following his series on Apple, itโ€™s really worth your time โ€” as well as the author of a book I worked on, just published last week by Random House, called The Power of Habit. I know Iโ€™m not an objective source on this โ€” Iโ€™m probably closer to a cheerleader โ€” but the book was a total blast to work on and is full of ideas and stories and case studies that make you think about your life โ€” including the way you eat, exercise, shop โ€” in a different way. More than 40% of what we do in the course of any given day, it turns out, is not the product of rational decision-making; itโ€™s habit. And thatโ€™s scary. Charles was kind enough to take a moment from his all-out media blitz to guest-post for us today about a particular DALS weakness, dessert. Tell us how to be better, Charlesโ€ฆ

Let me be completely honest with you: I like dessert.

Not just a little bit. A lot. Basically, I would rather eat dessert than dinner. In fact, I have often had dessert for dinner. Iโ€™ve become accustomed โ€” scarily so โ€” to dessert every night. And it turns out Iโ€™m not alone.

This wasnโ€™t a big problem before I had kids. Now, however, I have a 3-year-old (or, as he points out, a three-and-three-quarters-year-old). And guess what? He loves dessert, too! And not just a little bit. A lot. What a coincidence! We once went to Costa Rica so that he could see some monkeys and a white sand beach, and all he remembers is the chocolate I let him have after dinner each night. I am not kidding: if you ask him about Costa Rica today, he will tell you itโ€™s a place where you can eat chocolate every night.

That isnโ€™t good.

So, a few years ago when I started researching the science of habits for my book, one of my goals was to figure out how get a handle on my dessert habit (and my sonโ€™s). Not to go all Official Book Summary on you here, but in the last decade, our understanding of the neurology of habit formation has been transformed. In particular, weโ€™ve learned that every habit has three components: a cue, which is like a trigger for an automatic behavior; a routine, which is the behavior itself; and a reward. Scientists refer to this as the โ€œhabit loop.โ€

When weโ€™re talking about dessert, the habit is pretty obvious: Thereโ€™s a cue (โ€œdinner is over!โ€) a routine (โ€œice cream time!โ€) and a reward (โ€œoh my god, this chocolate chip crunch tastes good, oh my oh my godโ€). What neurologists have learned is that habits are powered by cravings. In fact, if we could stick electrodes in my brain (which I wouldnโ€™t recommend โ€“ very messy), we would see that as soon as dinner is over, my brain starts anticipating โ€“ which is another way of sayingย craving โ€“ that chocolate chip crunch. And if the ice cream doesnโ€™t arrive? My brain gets unhappy, and starts giving off patterns that look a lot like anger โ€” or even depression.

Which brings me to my son. Once dessert became a habit for him, it was nearly impossible to stop. He would throw a fit if dessert wasnโ€™t delivered. He would scream and cry and throw himself on the floor. One night, after I denied him a cookie, my son told me โ€” before storming off โ€” that I was no longer fit to be his father. Superman, he announced, would be taking my place. I would be a bystander who happens to share his home. Which, to be honest, kind of hurt. (Would Superman spring for a Costa Rican vacation, kid? Doubtful. That guy is notorious for using the โ€œthereโ€™s no pockets in this leotardโ€ excuse to skip out on the bill.)

My wife and I knew we had to change my sonโ€™s dessert habit. But how? When I asked the psychologists I was interviewing for my book, they told me that you canโ€™t destroy or eradicate habits โ€“ you can only change them. The key, they said, was inserting a new routine โ€“ a new behavior โ€“ into my sonโ€™s after-dinner habit loop.

So we got to work. We realized that whenever our son talked about dinner, he always mentioned dessert. He had become habitualized to associate mealtime with sweets. We went to work on that cue. Now, when we talk about dinner with our son, we emphasize all the other important aspects: the togetherness, the chance to talk about our days, the fact (well, as far as he knows) that Superman got strong because he ate lots of vegetables.

And, most important, we found new rewards. If our son eats his dinner, he gets to read a story with me before bed. Every time he takes three bites of broccoli, we tell him a joke. (The knock knock banana one kills EVERY SINGLE TIME.) Itโ€™s not that we never let the poor kid have dessert โ€” we just vary it, and keep him guessing. Sometimes itโ€™s fruit. Sometimes itโ€™s one marshmallow. Sometimes it arrives after his bath, and sometimes it shows up in his snack, before dinner. Habits emerge when patterns are predictable โ€“ when our brains learn to crave a specific reward at a specific moment.

It has worked, too, and not just for desserts. If you play with cues and rewards, you can change almost any habits. Studies have shown that when people disable the buzzing on their smart phones, for instance, they stop checking their emails at the dinner table because the cue has been disrupted (and so the craving for the reward of distraction that email provides never materializes). Smokers who start drinking a double-espresso with their morning paper (rather than smoking a cigarette) are more likely to quit. Why? Because the caffeine provides a buzz that is similar to nicotine. The reward is still delivered โ€“ but the behavior has changed.

Speaking selfishly here, the best news is that I no longer gorge on dessert every night. I model better eating habits. Iโ€™m not saying I deserve a trophy or anything. But, on the other hand, have you ever seen Superman pass by the donut box without snagging a jelly filled piece of fried dough? I didnโ€™t think so. Take that, so-called โ€œMan of Steel.โ€ โ€” Charles Duhigg

P.S. GIVEAWAY!!! Comment below with a story about how you broke a habit (your own or your kidโ€™s) and be eligible to win a free autographed copy of the book.

UPDATE: A.E. Hoseth (#73) and Ali (#82) are the winners. Thanks for playing!

Illustrations and cover design by Anton Ioukhnovets.

114 Comments

  • Avatar Maria says:

    Oooh, I need this book. If the book itself is as engaging as the guest post, it should be a winner!
    My story about breaking a habit is, alas, about a habit I broke but seem to have picked up again. A few years ago when I got serious about losing weight, I started taking a strenuous walk with our dog in the evenings. My kids were just getting old enough that bath and bed time werenโ€™t taking so much out of me that I could only collapse on the couch after they were in bed. Without realizing it (though this post makes it clear to me now) I was not only starting the new habit of walking, but I was able to mostly overcome my terrible habit of munching away while watching tv in the evenings. After coming back from a brisk walk, it seemed easier to resist the snacks. I chalked it up to not wanting to undermine all that good effort by adding extra calories, but I can see now that it also effectively disrupted the expected routine for me.
    Unfortunately, a couple years later we moved houses, so I lost my habitual walking route, I also had twin babies, so the routine was disrupted again, but not in a good way. Iโ€™m back to my evening snacking. Your post gives great insight about how to start re-training myself once again! Thanks for letting us know about this book

  • Avatar Shelly says:

    With my 30th high school reunion approaching I needed to break my almond croissant habit. I rescheduled my student assessments for 9 am, when the pastries are delivered. The time spent chatting with my students and their parents filled that same need as catching up with a co-worker over a 500 calorie croissant. Although I still have days I would rather ditch both student and co-worker for one of those croissants. They are wickedly delicious (as evidenced by the straining buttonhole on my pants).

  • Avatar Kali says:

    I NEED to kick my habit of late night snacking! I am trying to lose weight so I can shave time off my next marathon (in May). I think I can do that by stopping the late night eating. The book sounds like it could really help. Thanks!

  • beth lehman says:

    I just listened to the end of an interview on Fresh Air about the book and was planning to go back and listen today to the whole thing. Iโ€™ve always heard a new habit takes at least 3 weeks to become habit. It seems like only 2 days for me to break a habitโ€ฆ Starting in January I started getting up at 5:30 to go to the gym. I just got up when the alarm went off instead of hitting snooze 47 times. It was a habit for January and into part of February (or it became one). Then a few days off became 2 weeks offโ€ฆ becameโ€ฆ Back at it this month, trying to make it a habit again.

    I canโ€™t wait to listen to the interview and read the book!

  • Avatar Meister @ The Nervous Cook says:

    Woah, this post made me realize how much of a habitual eater I am: Not always in a bad way, but definitely in a Pavlovian way, where an action or a time of day is followed by a mental โ€œDING! Time to eat X.โ€

    I might try some of these sneak tactics to work my way out of this routine!

  • Avatar Michele says:

    So true. In trying to kick my morning donut habit, emphasis on trying, I literally have to advert my eyes so I donโ€™t see the store as I pass by during my morning commute! Now all I need to do is remember to look away ๐Ÿ˜‰

  • Avatar Emily says:

    Iโ€™m also a habitual eater, and Iโ€™m finding that I stress-eat when Iโ€™m frustrated with my small children. So, Iโ€™m retraining myself to check email or listen to a favorite song in lieu of munching on chocolate chips.

  • Avatar Kristin Dennis says:

    I love drinking beer. A good IPA at the end of a long day is the best way to unwind. But this proved to be a problem when I became pregnant. So I broke the habit down into itโ€™s different components. I liked sitting on the couch, watching some TV, drinking a beverage. I like beer, not just because of the alcohol, but the carbonation. So I was able to replace my nightly beer with mineral water. Now that my daughter is 15 months old, I still buy more La Croix at the store than Goose Island.

  • Avatar Joyce says:

    We also had the โ€œI want dessert NOW!โ€ tantrums from our kids; we broke them by announcing that dessert only comes on birthdays, on Shabbat (weโ€™re Jewish), or on Very Special Occasions. Now the kids anticipate dessert once a week, which we think is just fine. However, getting to this point made for a rough few weeks where everyone was grouchy and tantrum-myโ€ฆ

  • LH says:

    I was JUST listening this his episode of Fresh Air this morning! So many habits to breakโ€ฆprocrastination, late night snacking (popular!), keeping my apartment picked up during the weekโ€ฆto name a few.

  • Meghann says:

    Wine with dinner is a bad habit. Obviously I kicked it cold turkey when I was pregnant but itโ€™s pretty much back again!

  • Avatar Diane says:

    I broke my nearly-every nightly wine with dinner habit. Who doesnโ€™t love a glass (okay, sometimes two) of wine with a great meal? Especially a crisp white with a summer mealโ€ฆahhh.
    Then I got this thing called breast cancer, got rid of it all, but was told that to make sure it doesnโ€™t come back, I should only have 3 glasses of wine a week. Yikes. Over time, I realized that what I loved about the white wine (besides the ahhhh factor) was its chilly tang. I discovered a great lemonade (Trader Joeโ€™s with Stevia) and found that it quenched my thirst, was cold, tangy, and was surprisingly acceptable as a substitute. And once I kicked the white wine habit, the red wine habit kind of fell by the wayside as well. And I donโ€™t even have a lemonade habit ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Melissa@HomeBaked says:

    We have the dessert habit here, too, along with the tantrums when it doesnโ€™t materialize. Canโ€™t wait to try a new approach! In other situations, (Iโ€™m thinking of the binky habit of all three of my kids), cold turkey worked best for us. One day the binky fairy swooped in and traded the binkies for a more grown-up toy, and the other lovies (blankets, stuffed animals) stepped in as the primary comfort objects.

  • Avatar Lindsey Petersen says:

    So interesting! I love that the topics covered here are so varied. I used to drink a ton of diet coke (ick) and coffee. I had some annoying health problems that I was told would subside if I gave up caffeine/sugary drinks. Instead of only drinking water, my strategy was to allow myself to purchase diet snapples and sugar free ice tea which I never liked as much as coffee or soda so I didnโ€™t buy as many and gradually I weaned myself off of those too as I got used to drinking good old fashioned water all day. Every once in awhile I fall off the wagon and I use the same strategy each time to get back on track.

  • Avatar kathy says:

    When I quit smoking years back, I would take a brisk walk every time I felt like having a smoke. I would visualize my lungs filling with fresh air instead of smoke. I think it gave me that little energy jolt I was looking for,too. After the walk I drank a big glass of water to further โ€œcleanseโ€ my body. These techniques really worked for me. I quit โ€œcold turkeyโ€ after smoking a pack every day for about 15 years!

  • Avatar Gina says:

    I used to be a late night snacker but I recently changed my habits so that I could eliminate that from my life. First, I started knitting every night. It is hard to eat when your hands are busy! I also brush my teeth early so I am not tempted to eat again.

  • Anna says:

    Canโ€™t wait to read this book. In fact, I started my blog to help me to establish good habits while changing the old ones โ€ฆ And cleaning my house (or not cleaning and enjoying couch time instead) was one habit I really wanted to establish. I tried to take baby steps and set up a routine of daily cleaning. I created check lists, I set 15 minute timers, I looked at cleaning jobs one at a time instead of the entire, dirty house. This helped me to reach my goals of having a clean(er) house little by little. So I was never overwhelmed. Iโ€™m not saying it was easy, but felt achievable.

  • Avatar Silvia says:

    the habit i broke was using my ipad before bed every night. i used to stay up and play angry birds or read the newspaper or check email instead of getting quality sleep. now that i have given up my ipad completely for lent, i have gotten better sleep and my husband has his wife back ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Laura says:

    Both my husband and I used our laptops to cruise the internet in the evening โ€“ even when we were supposedly engaging in family time together. โ€œNo more!โ€ I announced angrily one night โ€“ to which he looked up with the foggily drear expression of a lost internet viking and said, โ€œhmm?โ€ We put the chargers and the laptops in the office, so now it takes more effort to cruise. Smart phones go into a basket by the coffee table. Now we are able to focus on each other and actually have that family time we so need!

  • Avatar Erin says:

    My husband and I just adopted a puppy, so weโ€™re forming all sorts of habits โ€“ going for long walks every day (and trying to start going twice on weekends while heโ€™s so young and rambunctious), listening to him let us know when itโ€™s time to go outside, being consistent with all verbal commands, etc. I miss sleeping in on weekends, but walks are better for us!

  • Sara in Montrรฉal says:

    I guess my habit was laziness regarding meal planning. I used to improvise meals every night and to buy whatever I encountered interesting in the grocery store. Now, on friday night or saturday morning, I check the specials and plan ahead 5 or 6 dinners for the week (thereโ€™s always room for leftovers or scrambled eggs). The reward here is important, because I find it fastidious to do it, but I save up to 100$ a week doing so, so I keep doing it.

  • Avatar kristin says:

    i broke the habit of waking up early to runโ€ฆ.need to get back on that one :). this book looks very interesting.

  • Avatar Mark says:

    I kicked the habit of making mundane meals by reading this awesome blog.

  • Avatar ellen says:

    When we started meals with my daughter (now 4), I was really good about varying the after-dinner routine. Sometimes fruit, sometimes yogurt, sometimes nothing and occasionally (1-2 x/week) a real dessert. When she started asking after dinner โ€œwhatsโ€™ for dessert tonight?โ€ i knew we had caved too many times. I went back to fruit & yogurt for most nights. But I love your idea of a non-food end to dinner.
    As a child, we had dessert every night and my routine is that I donโ€™t think a meal is over until Iโ€™ve had a sweet fix. I really didnโ€™t want my daughter to end up with that habit (and the weight issue associated) too. Not sure if weโ€™ve done as well as I had hoped but itโ€™s still a work in progress as sheโ€™s only 4. I think rewarding kids with dessert for eating their entree is awful โ€“ I cringe when I hear other parents doing it. But itโ€™s sooo tempting when they wonโ€™t eat the healthy stuff.
    I also went through a period when she started getting picky where I let her eat pasta too often. Iโ€™ve backtracked and returned to making a meal we can all eat (or at least some of it sheโ€™ll eat) but itโ€™s not easyโ€ฆstill the other night she ate polenta instead of pasta and I jumped up and down with joy. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Laura F. says:

    How timelyโ€ฆmy husband was JUST talking about this book last night, about how he wanted to read it.

    I am an avid runner and have a regular yoga practice. I was getting these intense cramps in my calves and feet at night (some call them charlie horses). After a visit to my doctor, it was decided this was a dehydration problem. Sure, I drink water immediately after a run, but that was it. The rest of the day, it was caffeine via coffee and diet soda.

    I purchased a 32 ounce bottle and keep it at work by my desk. I still allow myself a coffee in the morning (hey, no judgingโ€ฆI get up at 5:00 a.m. to run). But after that, I hit the bottleโ€ฆthe water bottle.

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