Subtitles section Play video
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gym membership Whole.
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30.
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Finally joining that dating app.
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It's time for New Year's resolutions.
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New Year.
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New me, right?
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Wrong.
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But everyone I know is doing New Year's resolution, so I should too, right?
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No.
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Did you read the title of this video?
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Absolutely not.
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80% of people who make a New Year's resolution will abandon it by the second week of February and certain resolutions, or even harder to keep, like fitness or losing weight.
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A social network for athletes looked at user fitness records over the month of January.
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They found that U.
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S users were likely to bail on their fitness resolutions by January 12.
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According to Forbes, the number of New Year's resolutions that are actually achieved 8% Those numbers don't look good.
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Why do we suck at resolutions?
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Well, to start with there often vague and hard to measure.
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Consider the popular resolutions.
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Get in shape.
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What shape?
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Hourglass square, Octagon.
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Travel more okay.
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Where exactly how long You know there's a pandemic going on?
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Don't you have more sex?
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Okay.
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With him yourself, let's be realistic.
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No one could follow through and stuff that broad.
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You wanna hold yourself accountable?
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You have to be more specific.
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Another reason resolutions fail because we don't just need to change our behavior, Wade told our consciousness.
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But seriously, behavior is hard to change when we haven't mentally prepared to do so.
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Humans hate change because we don't like to abandon what's comfortable to successfully change.
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You need to know why you're changing.
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You wanna quit smoking?
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Think about why you smoke.
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Is it stress?
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There might be something else you need to address first.
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And if you're pursuing a New Year's resolution because of some sort of social pressure, you might not really believe you deserve to achieve your goal.
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Or are you afraid that by actually succeeding you might leave others behind?
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What will your friends think?
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You try hard.
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Finally, resolutions don't succeed, because if we don't see instantaneous results, we already feel like we failed and we give up.
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It's hard to commit to big change, and if you have some hyper specific idea of your desired outcome, say you want to get in shape and that shapes and octagon.
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If you don't achieve that a deal, you might lose sight of the rial ways you benefited.
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All right, so is there any help?
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Is there any way that my resolution could be in that 8% that succeed?
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Maybe if you make a specific resolution, say, eat an extra helping of vegetables every day for two months and you have to know why you're doing it.
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You have to really believe that extra helping of vegetables is going to change your life.
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You have to commit to those vegetables.
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Don't ghost those vegetables.
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Marry those vegetables.
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But most importantly, don't make a resolution just because everyone else is doing.
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That's going to be a waste of money and time.
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What's the root causes of your unhappiness?
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Is it the stress?
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Is it self esteem?
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Address the real issues and leave the fitness discounts to the suckers, then oh yeah.