Contact Us

Resources

January 25, 2017

Advice by Kaela: What Is The Easiest Way For Me To Stay Motivated On My Recovery Throughout The Year?

Motivation can be a hard thing to come by when we are battling with our recovery. Finding the drive, energy and even the interest to keep going when things get hard is often incredibly challenging and overwhelming. January is a great month for us to discuss motivation and persistence because it’s a time when we are often bombarded by people’s new years resolutions.

The Looking Glass Foundation

January 25, 2017

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text][printfriendly]

Advice by Kaela: What Is The Easiest Way For Me To Stay Motivated On My Recovery Throughout The Year?

By Kaela Scott

Motivation can be a hard thing to come by when we are battling with our recovery. Finding the drive, energy and even the interest to keep going when things get hard is often incredibly challenging and overwhelming. January is a great month for us to discuss motivation and persistence because it’s a time when we are often bombarded by people’s new years resolutions. While I myself am not a huge believer in New Year’s resolutions, largely because only 9.3% of people are successful in sticking with them, I do strongly believe in setting goals that can help us achieve our ultimate goal of being well.

 

One of the greatest struggles people have when they are setting goals is that they make them too big, too broad, and too vague. These goals feel great to begin with but they often make it difficult to see our successes, which can cause us to give up and retreat into what is comfortable or safe. For example, lots of people will tell themselves that they will never engage in an eating disorder behavior like purging or skipping meals again starting on a certain date. Most people get defeated by goals that big.

If you want to move forward and stay motivated in your recovery I recommend you start much smaller and create monthly focuses, or for those of you who are at the very beginning of your recovery journey – weekly focuses. These focuses need to be bite sized. In other words, pick a focus that you feel you can manage without your anxiety being at a 10/10 consistently.

 

For example, we know that self-care is critical to our recovery and yet when it comes to doing it, it can often be something that people struggle to maintain. A bite-sized goal could be that you plan on doing some form of self-care for 20 minutes three times a week for the next 4 weeks. When the 4 weeks are up, you take a moment to reflect on whether or not you believe doing this goal was helpful for you. Keep in mind, helpful doesn’t mean it was without struggle. It means that it had some kind of positive impact on you and your ultimate goal of recovery. Sometimes it can be helpful to get feedback from those closest to us to see if they noticed if our focus had a positive impact.

 

If you did find your focus helpful, keep it in your schedule and add a new focus. Remember these focuses are meant to be manageable and not all consuming. On the other hand, if you found your focus was too overwhelming or ended up fuelling your eating disorder in some way, set it aside and pick something that you feel will promote your well being. We can always come back to focuses that may not have been the right fit for a particular time in our lives but might be healthier at a later date.

 

What we are ultimately striving for is the ability to increase the number of positive focuses we have each day. In time, the things that were particularly difficult become easier with practice and consistency and our days are dominated with recovery focuses and goals instead of our Eating Disorder’s demands.

[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]

[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]
[dt_divider style=”thin” /]

Kaela Scott is a Registered Clinical Counsellor who specializes in Eating Disorders. She runs her own private practice and works with the Looking Glass Foundation in both their summer camp and their Hand In Hand Program. She has been passionate about working with eating disorders since freeing herself from her own struggle and realizing what it is like to be happy and well. When she isn’t working, you can find Kaela either cozying up with a cup of tea and her friends or up in the mountains going for a hike. 

[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

chevron-downchevron-down-circle linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram