You want to know whatโs 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 havenโt been following his series on Apple, itโs 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 Iโm not an objective source on this โ Iโm 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; itโs habit. And thatโs 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, Charlesโฆ
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. Iโve become accustomed โ scarily so โ to dessert every night. And it turns out Iโm not alone.
This wasnโt 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 itโs a place where you can eat chocolate every night.
That isnโt 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 sonโs). 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, weโve 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 โhabit loop.โ
When weโre talking about dessert, the habit is pretty obvious: Thereโs a cue (โdinner is over!โ) a routine (โice cream time!โ) and a reward (โoh 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 wouldnโt 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 doesnโt 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 wasnโt 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 โthereโs no pockets in this leotardโ excuse to skip out on the bill.)
My wife and I knew we had to change my sonโs dessert habit. But how? When I asked the psychologists I was interviewing for my book, they told me that you canโt 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 sonโs 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.) Itโs not that we never let the poor kid have dessert โ we just vary it, and keep him guessing. Sometimes itโs fruit. Sometimes itโs 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. Iโm 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 didnโt think so. Take that, so-called โMan of Steel.โ โ Charles Duhigg
P.S. GIVEAWAY!!! Comment below with a story about how you broke a habit (your own or your kidโs) 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.
Iโm going to get my hands on this book! I am trying to start healthier habits with my kids too. Weโve switched up our ritual Sunday-breakfast-out to go to a restaurant along a lovely scenic riverside walking path. So, now we still have our favorite Sunday breakfast fix, but we follow it by unplugged family time along the river and get a few miles walking in too!
iโm fascinated!
iโve recently learned that the only way i can create good habits in my daily life is to try to do things every day. it ends up being less than every day, but better than not at all. running, for example: if i set a goal of running every day, i will probably run 4-5 days that week. if i map out a schedule to run every monday, wednesday, friday: i will be disappointed if i didnโt go on monday and that disappointment may lead me to not go on wednesday. or, if the weatherโs bad, i may not reschedule that particular day. iโll just wait until the next day. i wonโt go on the off days, ever. so iโll end up only running 1-2 times per week. iโm a very all or nothing person.
I had a habit ofโฆis this gross?โฆbeing too lazy to floss my teeth. I was just too tired at night and it felt like it took forever when sleep was anticipated. So, now I floss right after dinner. Kids are in the bath, I am hanging with themโฆflossing, facewashing, vitamin-taking. All of my skip-it-because-I- am-lazy things at once!
I do two things when I feel the sweet habit kick it up a notch, from โhmmm, that sounds goodโ to โoh my god, where is it?! Where is it?!?!โ. I let myself binge on whatโs in the house, then I just donโt bring it into the house anymore. Not having it instantly available is the perfect interruption to the habit loop.
We are in the process of breaking sugary cereal habits in the morning with my 6 and 4 yr old sons. It is so hard!! Any tips would be appreciated. We decided to do more educating and talking with the boys about better fuel for the day. Thank goodness they like eggs!
The other habit is television while I am making dinner. As soon as I walk into the kitchen the boys want the TV on. Then when it is time to eat they throw a fit. Thankfully, our TV broke a couple of weeks ago. The habit is out of my hands!
Our family had a bad habit of drinking juice with lunch and supper so when we spent 8 months living in Norway, I told the kids (step 1) I couldnโt find it in the grocery store, then (step 2) it was way too expensive to buy here, and then finally we progressed to (step 3) water is a healthier choice. When we moved home I made a point of sticking with our new water habit and reserving other beverages for treats.
This is awesome! Iโm converted my late-snacking habit into a hot-chocolate-in-the-evening habit. Iโm not sure if itโs better for me, but Iโm convincing myself it is.
I stopped drinking coffee by developing chronic heartburn. While it still tasted delicious, it felt like battery acid in my stomach, so I stopped. It made me a little sad at first, but the aversion to pain outweighed everything.
I used to buy grape or cranberry juice but was aghast when I saw the sugar content. So now Iโve started putting lemon slices into my water, and thatโs enough flavor for me.
This topic is completely fascinating to me! I canโt wait to read this book!
I used to have the awful and expensive habit of buying coffe on my way to work every morning. In my mind, the coffee from my local shop tasted better than what I made at home and it seemed easier & faster to pick it up during the commute, than to take the time to make it myself at home. In working out a new budget a couple years ago, I added up all the daily $2 coffees and $4 lattes here and there. When you look at that total over a week, month and year, it was shocking how much money I was spending. I pretty much went cold-turkey on buying coffee, and started making it at home. Taking 5 minutes out of my morning routine didnโt seem like such a hassle any more.
I broke my soda habit. I would have one every afternoon at 3pm at work. Every day I needed that extra boost of caffiene it felt like. So instead I kept gum and water at my desk and when the soda craving would hit I would put in a piece of gum and chug the water. Not only did it save me $$ it made me feel so much better. I would love this book I always think things like these studies are so interesting. fingers crossed!
I have broken many habits over the years (sometimes to be replaced by other habits that then need to be broken)โฆ..like when I was a kid I broke the habit of nightime thumbsucking by relacing it with rubbing my feet together (which for some reason is very soothing for me)โฆ.it is habit that my partner of 20+ years wishes that I would break! It is interesting to see that my daughter is now a foot -rubber!
Thank for the chance to win this book!
Oooh, I just heard the Fresh Air interview about this book yesterday! Fascinating!
I broke my kidsโ refusing-to-dress habit in the morning but utilizing the timer on my phone to make it a โrace against the clockโ kind of thing, and also by rewarding with a lollipop. Yes, I know. New habitโฆlollipop at 8:30 in the morningโฆbutโฆalasโฆ
I broke the mindless habit of eating in the car by not keeping food in there. It was REALLY hard. I was like Pavlovโs dog, the second I sat down to drive to work because I was so conditioned to eating my breakfast like that.
Iโd love to share a story here, but Iโm really not sure why we canโt have dessert every night. Everything in moderation right? This life is waaaaaay too short to deny yourself the things you love <3
I broke my checking-personal-email-all-day habit by giving myself 3 times to check it during the day: 9, noon, and 4. Because I became way more productive at work, I felt the reward of checking things off my to-do list and now I sometimes even forget to check personal email!
Great post. 40% of our decisions are habits โ Scary! When I am watching my weight, I have been successful with having a cup of Good Earth sweet and spicy tea after dinner instead of dessert. I feel like Iโm still getting a little treat, but without the sugar.
oh man, I have been dying to read this book since I heard about it. I am breaking my NO EXERCISE habit! Now I get rewarded for going outside (sunshine, feeling the wind on my face) instead of sitting inside (watching TV, too much screen time). Iโve gotten more time with my family and better health! Yahoo!
I love this! Personally, I recently switched from coffee to green tea. With the kids I teach to cook, we build in a routine where we eat once everyone is sitting down. Table manners absolutely fits into this important conversation. Thanks for taking on this great subject!
I stopped biting my fingernails when I was I high school, not sure what I did to break the cycle back then, but now I paint my fingernails in all different shades with lots of fun designs!
I had to break my coffee habit when I got pregnant, so I went from 4 cups of black coffee a day down to 1 cup a day plus 3 cups of black tea, to several cups of green tea, and now I do a maximum of 1 cup of tea a day, plus hot water whenever else Iโm craving my hot beverage. Its not as satisfying as coffee by a LONG shot, but its working. . .
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This book sounds fascinating, and many thanks for the guest post. We broke our sonโs pacifier habit when his routine changed and he moved out of his crib and into a bed. We hid all the pacifiers (out of sight, out of mind) and set up some new โrewardsโ for him, like cuddling up on the bed during story time. It worked surprisingly well โ it wouldnโt shock me to read that it is easier for children to change their habits than their (older, more ingrained) parents!
I kicked my afternoon cookie habit (and I donโt mean a small cookie occasionally after lunch, but rather an enormous face-sized cookie from the bakery next to my office every single day at 3 PM on the dot) by finding a recipe for a healthier cookie made of oats and bananas and dark chocolate chips and stocking my office freezer chock full of them. These cookies are healthier than store-bought granola bars but still feel like a treat!
We have been โthinking aboutโ breaking our nightly family dessert habit, but have not been able to commit so thank you for this post!!. As a side note, I read this entire post while sneaking chocolate chip cookies for myself!!
Our 2 boys broke the thumb sucking habit by wearing very cool skull mittens to bed. This not only made them stop at night time, it had the bonus effect of breaking the habit in the day as well.