Resolutions and Changes – Making Them Stick
12 Days of Hope Series #2
Welcome to 2025! In your social circles, the “buzz” is probably about New Year’s resolutions. Did you make any? I want to share some perspectives on how humans make behavioral changes, such as resolutions or adjustments to our relationships and lives. In our second addition to the 12 Days of Hope series, we give you the skinny on resolutions and how to make them stick!
Resolutions and Changes
When it comes to making resolutions and changes for the new year, we often start strong and implement our changes with great gusto. Then, our energy for those resolutions begins to wane as results are not produced as quickly as we wanted. We get discouraged and start to believe that a resolution isn’t going to be accomplished. However, perhaps all that is needed is to apply a different perspective and a little strategy.
A “resolution” is a statement of commitment to change our behavior. Unfortunately, we often need to set these resolutions with better-informed expectations. To accomplish any behavioral change in our lives, we must first understand that we are engaging in a process rather than achieving a single event or goal. This process involves a series of shifts with ups and downs. It takes endurance and commitment to begin the process of change.
Understanding our Motivation
We also must understand our motivation to change. We must be ready, willing, and able to make the change we desire. To be “ready,” we need to compare our desired change with other priorities in our lives. For example, is this change one of the highest priorities I have in my life right now? To be “willing,” we want to ask, How much do I deeply desire to accomplish this change? What am I willing to give up or move to achieve this change? And to be “able” is to make change happen. Do I have the skills, knowledge, resources, and self-efficacy to follow up on this behavior change?
The three words “ready, willing, and able” are elements of our motivationโthese elements of motivation shift throughout the PROCESS of change. Prochaska and DiClemente (1984) have researched and studied human behavior and have identified Stages of Change. Here is how they describe what humans go through to accomplish behavior changes.
Stages of Change:
PRECONTEMPLATION
A person still needs to consider change, perhaps unwilling or unable.
CONTEMPLATION
One is considering the possibility of change – there is ambivalence and uncertainty.
PREPARATION
A person is committed to and planning to make a change soon, considering ability and resources.
ACTION
A person is actively making steps toward change but is not yet stable in their change.
MAINTENANCE
They have achieved the change and are applying new behaviors that maintain it.
RECURRENCE
A person has experienced a return of former behaviors and must now face the consequences and take the next steps.
Sticking to Resolutions – the Change Process
According to Prochaska and DiClemente, the above are the typical stages most people go through to accomplish change. However, people only sometimes move quickly from one step to the next. Instead, we tend to go back and forth between stages. Most often, we linger in the early stages of change.
Movement between the stages of change occurs when motivation (ready, willing, able) interacts with the dynamic aspects of change in real life. They also remind us that recurrence is a typical expectation at varied points in the change process. Because people usually wait to sustain behavior change. It does not mean a person has abandoned a commitment to change.
The Takeaway?
So, what is the big takeaway? At Sanford Behavioral Health’s Family Program, families deal with substance use disorders (SUD) and the changes inherent in recovery. I tell them it is imperative to understand the change process and the various shifts that go into accomplishing and maintaining change. This information applies to the changes one desires to make towards loved ones with SUDs and the change process they are engaged in achieving.
I hope you are on target with your New Year’s resolutions. And I wish you a Happy New Year 2025 with GUSTO!
If you or a loved one is struggling with addiction, eating disorders, or co-occurring mental health conditions, donโt wait to change your life โ click the link below to speak with an admissions specialist today.