TheMembers’AssistanceProgram (MAP) is sponsoredbyCDSPI and provides confidential short-term counselling support, professional guidance, resources and referrals for dentists, dental office staffand immediate familymembers.MAP services are complimentary and accessible24/7/365. ContactMAPat 1.844.578.4040 or visitwww.cdspi.com/membersassistance-program MAP is operatedbyTELUS Health (formerlyLifeWorks), the largestCanadian-basedEmployee andFamilyAssistanceprovider in the country.Available services vary by region.UseofMAPservices is completely confidential within the limits of the law. • Healthy Workplace Series • The following article is adapted and reprinted with permission fromworklifehealth.com AGuide to CreatingLastingHabits 1. Start small. To get started with your new habit, break it down into smaller habits that are so miniscule that they are almost difficult not to achieve. If you want to run for 30 minutes a day, start by running just 5 minutes a day. If you want to meditate for ten minutes, start with just one minute. These small goals are so easy that you don’t need much motivation to work them into your routine. Then, once you’ve got the small bits recurring regularly, you can increase them gradually until you’re where you wanted to be. 2. Work with a buddy. Having a witness to your objectives is a great way to increase the likelihood of achieving them. If you live with a spouse or a roommate, maybe both of you together can decide that you will eat vegetables at every meal, or do ten minutes of yoga before dinner. This way, if one of you is thinking of skipping it, you can hitch a ride to the motivation of the other to lift you out of that slump. 3. Attach new habits to existing habits. It can be easier to remember to do something new if it is closely attached to something old. Take your vitamins and supplements when you brush your teeth in the morning, or do your pushups right before you take a shower. These “anchors” will help you bring your new habits into sync with existing ones. 4. Track your progress. Using a paper calendar or an app, keep track of how of ten you manage to follow through on the habits you set out to form. Having a tangible, visual record of your ef forts is a good way to move them from the abstract to the concrete. 5. Keep it up. You are sure to trip up and miss a day or two, especially in the beginning. Don’t let these small defeats snowball into big ones, after missing a day, continue the next day exactly where you left off. Though it will probably take more than just 21 days, it is possible to create good habits that last. Give it time and effort, and eventually you will be doing things routinely that you never used to do even occasionally. No one said it was easy to change human behaviour. Habits are difficult to break, and difficult to implement. Wouldn’t it be great if going for a jog every morning, drinking 8 glasses of water a day, or meditating for 15 minutes during your lunch break came as automatically as brushing your teeth? But they don’t. Strongly cemented habits, like brushing your teeth, are so common they often go unnoticed. So then, how do you create new habits that are just as natural and easy? The answer is that it takes work, dedication, and time. There is a popularly held myth that it takes just 21 days to create a new habit. However, the truth is it often takes much, much longer than that. But don’t let the time it takes get you down; here are some ways to build lasting habits into your daily life: 42 | 2024 | Issue 5 SupportingYour Practice
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