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.
I think I could never leave my dessert habit. Iโm weak.
So many good ideas to tackle so many bad habitsโฆ
One habit we started lasted year has been making our bed each morning. And we really didnโt have much discussion of this change โ though we had not made our bed daily for the previous 11 years of our marriage. But it was quick, easy & gratifying, which I assume is why it stuck. Cue: we are up & out of bed, routine: make bed, reward: small amount of order brought to our world.
Great post โ would love to read this book!
I needed to kick the habit of buying and then immediately eating those small chocolates that they always have at the check out lines in Whole Foods. So goodโฆ but really not good for me. Now I try to make sure Iโm chewing some gum when I hit the check out line and Iโm better at not buying the chocolate (though not totally reformed).
I am definitely a creature of habit. Itโs a comfort thing for sure. One way I kicked my โhave to have sweets at nightโ habit was by replacing it with a cup of warm tea. I sweeten it with a bit of Splenda, and though I still feel pangs of wanting desserts at night, the tea has become a comforting thing, too, and so I am happy!
ChapstickโฆI used to be addicted (for years)! And I can totally recognize it now as a cue/routine/reward cycle (and Iโd add comfort too). Eventually I had to go cold turkey and let my lips run the cycle of learning to keep themselves stayed moisturized by themselves. It sucked! But, I hardly use it anymore and itโs nice to not be dependent on it.
I totally understand what he is saying about the reward that is distraction! Iโm a student and I had a bad habit of web distractions when I should be studying in the library. โjust a little breakโ turned into a long-time bad habit. I just had to stop! So I quit facebook and removed the links from my website. Somehow it helpsโnow I just go the websites I remember from memoryโinstead of having links easily accessible. Its a small thing, but just putting a little hurdle in, helps me to limit my online time.
Iโve kicked annoying habits by changes in circumstance (moving, new job, different daytime routine etc.) but I never thought of it like changing my routine. Great insight. Now I just wistfully remember those days when I used to eat perogies for dinner every night and drink diet coke all day.
I heard about this book the other day and it has already started me thinking in different ways about my day to day life. Imagine my surprise to see this awesome post here! So my problem is not in breaking a habit as it is with creating a habit. I have so much trouble committing to something. Having just read the NYT article about this book was the encouragement I needed to set a cue to trigger me to get back on the treadmill. I am trying to create the habit of running. I would love to win this book and read further on this topic. THANKS for the giveaway.
I heard him on Fresh Air on Monday, saw this on Tuesday morning, bought the book Tuesday evening & now am almost finished with it. FABULOUS WORK! It is a truly tremendous book which should become a business school classic and a must-have to anyone trying to โfixโ a part of their habits and routines they donโt like. Way to goโฆ.Carrie
I am really struggling with a BAD โonline reading/surfing when I should be workingโ habit right now. I could sure use some help! I did break a bad habit of bouncing cheques and forgetting to pay bills a few years back by setting up online banking and automatic withdrawals. Worked like a charm.
I used to need something sweet after every meal. I broke the habit slowly by stopping the โafter breakfast sweetโ, then limiting the โafter dinner sweetโ. Now, itโs just an โafter lunch sweetโโฆ.mostly I try to eat dark chocolate, but sometimes I splure on my favoriteโฆ.pie!
Fantastic post and insight! Thank you very much! Love your idea on different rewards and giving โtreatsโ at different times! (Iโve also found that dried fruit works well as a special treat, that I approve of!).
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