Pulse May 2016 | Page 27

B Y M A E M A Ñ AC A P - J O H N S O N To give a very simple example, imagine going back to 7th grade. Chances are, if you went back to 7th grade now, as an adult, you’d behave quite differently than you did when you were 13 years old and in 7th grade for the first time. You see life differently now. It didn’t take willpower or explicit behavioral change strategies—you didn’t have to pull out any tools or take lessons on how to act differently in 7th grade. You simply see life and yourself in a very different way now than you did when you were 13, so your behaviors would naturally be different. P: How important is it to learn about the power of personal urges in order to better understand habit formation? J: I wouldn’t call urges “personal”—they are quite impersonal, actually. An urge is just your brain sending the message that you should do your habit so that you can feel better. Urges are a healthy brain trying its best to help you out. When people come to really see that as strong, hijacking and personal an urge might feel, it’s actually just a fleeting, impersonal, well-meaning signal from your brain that goes away on its own, everything begins to change. The habit has no more power. P: You mentioned that, although willpower can be a tool to break a habit, it is the wrong tool to use. Why do you say this and which tool should we use then? J: Willpower is changing behavior from the outside-in. It’s us deciding to do things differently from our current understanding. It’s often an uphill battle because—to return to the example above—it’s like being on the bottom