I received an email from a client named Elizabeth and she asked: How can I build new habits and rituals into my already so busy life?”

When I read her email I thought … “Damn, that is an AWESOME question”. Building good and supportive habits and rituals that help you create the life you love. With that in mind, I decided to answer her question here on the blog, because I’m betting you’ve asked yourself this same question.

Habits are things we do without even thinking. For example, we all have a morning ritual. Wake up, hit the snooze once, then get out of bed, and go to the bathroom. I grab my workout clothes and get dressed, and then I do my workout. Then I jump in the shower. After my shower, I make a cup of Bulletproof coffee (my manly man has a ritual of getting up, feeding our furry clan, and then making a pot of coffee.) While my hair is still up in a towel, I check email and my social media sites. After my coffee, I brush my teeth, take my hair down from the towel, and wish hydrogen peroxide in my mouth, while I blow dry my hair. Then I get dressed for the day, and get to work.

Simply put:

  • A ritual is a series of steps that you follow.
  • A habit is something you do over and over without consciously thinking about and therefore is hard to stop.

We all lead very busy lives, it’s the way things are these days… so adding in a new ritual or trying to build new habits can seem impossible. I sometimes even have thoughts of “Where will I find the time?”

How To Build New Habits

The truth is that adding a new practice, habit, or ritual into your life doesn’t have to take a lot of your time, especially at the beginning. Here are some steps to help you begin a daily practice of incorporating habits and rituals into your busy life.

  1. Choose One Thing At A Time

    It’s very important to start slow and add manageable and realistic practices into your life a little at a time.
    If you’re like me, your energy and time are already spread thin. This leaves you with very little time to add anything to your already hectic schedule.
    Focus on adding one change at a time.

  2. Take Baby Steps

    Taking on a big change all at once can lead to frustration and make it difficult to accomplish your goal. Starting small is the best way to ensure success.
    Taking baby steps helps you narrow your focus, and allows you to put all your energy into your goal.
    As you build one habit at a time, you gain momentum. The small successes then build to become bigger successes in the future. Remember, who wins the race, in the end, the tortoise or the hare? The tortoise!

  3. Anchor The New Habit

    We all have habits. When you think about it, your day is habit after habit … all strung together. You can use the habits you already have in place to help create new ones.
    So, when developing a new habit, try to anchor the new habit to one of your existing habits. If you already have the habit of waking up to an alarm clock every morning, you can anchor the new habit of tapping, saying affirmations, or even working out as soon as you hear your alarm go off.
    In time you will associate working out with waking up in the morning. Waking up with your alarm clock becomes the trigger.
    You’ve just anchored a new habit.

  4. Do It Every Day For Two Months

    It takes time to create a new habit. And no, it’s not the 21 days that you have always heard. In truth, the exact amount of time differs from person to person and the habit they choose but according to a 2009 study from University College in London, it takes approximately 66 days. Repetition and giving yourself time to adjust are the main factors in forming a new behavior pattern.
    Be mindful and work on the new, desired habit every day. If you slip up just start again the next day. Whatever you do, don’t give up and through in the towel!
    Give yourself at least 60 days of repeating your process, or tasks, to build new habits.

Do you have any quick and simple ideas that have helped you build a new habit that you can share? If so, please share them below!

Image Credits:
     Jake Hills licensed under Unsplash License
     Jake Hills licensed under Unsplash License
     Jake Hills licensed under Unsplash License

Christy R. Hall

Christy R. Hall is a Wellness Mindset Coach & Emotional Alchemist. She focuses on helping people change their lives from the inside out. Trained in hypnosis, Rapid Transformational Therapy (RTT), various Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) and Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), she has numerous skills to help clients achieve real and lasting change. Christy says, “When you know how the mind works, it’s easy to make changes.” Christy fancies herself to be a Jedi Master, a verbal Ninja, and a Mindset Architect. In her free time, she spins yarn (both literally spinning fiber into yarn, as well as, writing), crochets for charity, watches silly cat videos, looks at pictures of Corgis, and plays massively multiplayer online games. Her current favorite is Elder Scrolls Online.