A 5-Step Plan for Adopting Healthy Habits After 60

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Many people have trouble swapping unhealthy habits for healthy ones. It may be easy to start strong then fade away and eventually call it a failure. Or maybe it’s hard to even get started.

Either way, it might be helpful to understand the well-documented five-step pattern to change identified by James Prochaska (2009) that most individuals go through when trying to form a new habit. These include:

  • Pre-contemplation: Not intending to or ready to change.

  • Contemplation: Thinking about it, but pros and cons of change seem about equal.

  • Preparation: Intending to change and have a plan of action for change within six months.

  • Action: Taking action on a regular basis.

  • Maintenance: Sustaining the change for at least 6 months; becomes part of a person’s lifestyle.

Unfortunately, it’s estimated that fewer than 20% of people with a less than ideal behavior make it to the action/maintenance phases of change at any one time.

Disconnect

Consider that if you’re in pre-contemplation or contemplation stage, even the slickest marketing messages concerning things like increasing physical activity or stopping smoking are irrelevant.

Just like marketing the “deal of the century” on the “best sewing machine ever made,” wouldn’t entice someone who doesn’t care enough about sewing to buy a machine.

If you’ve made unsuccessful attempts at changing a specific behavior, you’re likely bouncing between stages. Consider trying to determine which stage of behavior change you get stuck in most often, and why.

Here are the five steps or stages of change.

Pre-contemplation

Are you in pre-contemplation? My uncle smoked for years and after a check-up loved to call me and report the doctor’s observation that his lungs were clear – I may have nagged him about smoking a time or two.

One day he called to report he was diagnosed with emphysema and said, “The doctor told me to quit smoking.” Pre-contemplators are not motivated to change and often only a crisis like a diagnosis or hospitalization can move them into contemplation.

Contemplation

Thinking about changing a behavior indicates the contemplation stage. A contemplator judges the pros and cons equally so needs an extra push to move into action. If you’re in contemplation, consider whether you truly believe that this change will have a positive effect.

For example, if you just expect to continually lose function as you age, that belief alone could block your ability to start an exercise program.

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This article first appeared on the “Sixty & Me" website.