Surfing
the Urge Wave - Turn Your „Shouldn’t“ into „I Will“ Power!
Most bad habits are an
attempt to meet a need, whether it’s reducing stress, having fun, or seeking
approval. You can get the focus off of prohibiting your bad habit by replacing
it with a new (healthy) habit. Ask yourself “What could I do instead of the “I shouldn’t” behavior that might
satisfy the same needs?”.
What
positive habit, that you might be doing instead, would get you further toward
your real goals?
Most of our addictions and
distractions take time and energy away from something else we could be doing.
Try focusing on that missed opportunity. I am now, for instance, “learning” to
cook really healthy, tasty food. Food that makes me go “WOW!” more than any of
the junk I pour in. The best results are achieved if I have all these good
things ready when I get back home hungry. Then I can dive into the goodies
without the guilt.
How
about reframing your shouldn’t into “I will”?
I used to have quite a
problem with lateness. I knew exactly how to arrive on time yet, in the end, I
didn’t do what was necessary. Then I changed my goal from “not being late” to
“being there 10 minutes early and read my Kindle” or “being the first one
there” so I could prepare mentally or just plain relax.
If I need to get my kitchen
cleaned up, I have a race with the kitchen timer or the commercial break on TV!
I usually win. Changing the “must” to “I can nail this!” is a winning mental
technique.
Surfing
the Urge
Urge surfing is a term coined
by Alan Marlatt as part of a program of relapse prevention he developed for
people recovering from addictions to alcohol and other drugs.
Urges rarely last for very
long. In fact, they almost never last for longer than about 30 minutes (if even that long), if
there is no opportunity get what you shouldn’t have. If there is no opportunity,
there is no internal struggle. It is this internal struggle that feeds the
cravings.
Trying to fight cravings is
like trying to block a waterfall. We end up being knocked over. With the mindfulness approach, we step aside and watch the water (cravings, impulses &
urges) just whoosh right past. Instead of trying to distract from or argue with the
unpleasant thoughts, feelings or urges, mindfulness simply makes the thoughts,
feelings or urges less important. When we use mindfulness, we stay exposed to
the thoughts feelings or urges for their natural duration without feeding or
repressing them.
In fact, if we just let an urge be – non judgmentally – without feeding it or
fighting it (Fighting it is just another way of feeding it anyway.), then it
will crest subside and pass.
Each time you overcome a bout of cravings they become less intense and less frequent if you don’t feed the urges and if you don’t give in to it.
Each time you overcome a bout of cravings they become less intense and less frequent if you don’t feed the urges and if you don’t give in to it.
Urges do go away, but they may be very strong at the beginning. Knowing that they will weaken will help you to continue to surf the impulses that you feel, especially in response to your personal triggers.
Riding
the Crave Wave - the idea of watching cravings come and go
Purpose
To experience the cravings in
a new way and to “ride them out” until they go away
Preparation
- Remember that urges pass by themselves.
- Imagine that urges are like ocean waves that arrive, crest, and subside. They are small when they start, will grow in size, and then will break up and dissipate.
- Practice mindfulness regularly and especially notice any impulses or urges that appear. Then we are well prepared to ride these waves without giving in to the urge.
How to Urge Surf
1) Practice mindfulness
- Watch your breathing. Don’t alter it. Let the breath breathe itself.
- Notice your thoughts.
- Without judging them, feeding them or fighting them gently bring your attention back to the breath.
- Focus on one area where the urge is being felt and noticing what is occurring.
- Notice quality, position, boundaries & intensity of the sensation
- Notice how these change with the in-breath and out-breath
- Repeat the focusing process with each part of the body involved.
- Be curious about what occurs and notice changes over time.
The key is replacing the anxious
wish that craving will go away with interest in and attention to the experience. When you do
this, you'll notice the cravings change, crest and subside like waves in the
ocean.
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