By Sharon Basaraba Updated May 17, 2019
Conventional wisdom
tells us that it takes about four weeks to build a habit. But is that really
true? If you're trying to eat more nutritiously or live an anti-aging lifestyle generally, how long
will it take for a new healthy habit to
stick?
There's no doubt that
establishing regular healthy habits (or breaking bad ones) can improve your
longevity. Once healthy behaviors — like quitting smoking, drinking only in moderation,
or getting regular exercise — are entrenched into your regular schedule, you're
more likely to do them consistently.
Despite that, there's
surprisingly little research on how much time is actually required to establish
a new habit. University College London epidemiologist Phillippa Lally examined
the habit formation process in everyday life. Her study was published in 2010
in the European Journal of Social Psychology.
How Is a Habit Defined?
Doing something for
the first time takes preparation and intention. With consistency, less
attention, thought, or effort must be paid. Lally describes a habit as a
behavior that is repeated often enough so that over time, less conscious
thought is required to make it happen. Rather, cues in a person's environment
or situations begin to trigger the behavior as an automatic response: it's
bedtime, so you brush your teeth (teeth-brushing has thus become a habit).
The paper cites the
following characteristics of an automatic behavior
or habit:
- It's efficient
- You're
less aware that you're doing it
- It's
unintentional
- It's
less controllable
How Long Does It Take?
According to Lally's
study, past research suggests that a behavior has become habitual once it has
been "performed frequently (at least twice a month) and extensively (at
least 10 times)". Lally's own research discovered it can take much longer
than that.
A total of 82 adults
were studied for a period of 12 weeks. They were asked to choose a healthy
activity, drinking, or eating behavior that was not already part of their daily
routine, and to perform it at a similar time or place each day. They were to
identify a cue or situation that could prompt the behavior, as long as that cue
happened only once daily. Each subject was to record on a website whether or
not they performed the potential habit. No reward of any kind was offered as an
incentive for repeating the behavior.
Subjects chose actions
like running 15 minutes before dinner, eating a piece of fruit with lunch, or
meditating.
The median length of
time it took for a habit to become automatic was 66 days. The range, however,
was 18 to 254 days for the habit to be established. In fact, about half of the
subjects did not perform their chosen action consistently enough to create a
habit.
Interestingly,
increased repetition of an action does not always yield stronger habits. Lally
found that consistently repeating a behavior early in the
process was more effective in creating an automatic action, than repetition
later on. Further, after a certain time, the habit-forming process plateaus so
additional repetition does not further solidify the habit. The relationship
between repetition and strength of habit is therefore not linear in this study.
What This Means for You
Unlike the four-week
time frame often cited as a threshold for establishing a habit, Lally's
research suggests that many more days and weeks of diligence might be
necessary. You needn't be discouraged by this finding; just recognize that
behavior change is challenging, and look for ways to support your lifestyle
tweaks — performing them consistently and often — to help make them permanent.
https://www.verywellmind.com/how-long-does-it-really-take-to-build-a-healthy-habit-2224073
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