There is a way to make changing or developing new blogging habits easier. Change your environment. When you alter the context in which you write and publish your posts, developing new behaviors becomes simpler.
Your current environment supports your everyday writing habits. For example, if your desk sits in a dark corner of the house and is covered in bills, dirty tissues, and books, you won’t find it conducive to writing posts. In fact, every time you show up at your desk to work on your blog, you’ll feel the need to clean up first—and, since you don’t want to do that, you’ll walk away without ever turning on the computer. But suppose your laptop is positioned on the table next to your favorite chair, where the sun shines in and you can hear the birds sing. Then, when you sit down with your morning cup of coffee, you’ll feel inspired to pick up the laptop and begin writing a blog post.
Your environment helps you build and maintain supportive habits and enables you to break unwanted habits, too. For instance, if you want to stop eating sugar, you can create this habit by not stocking your pantry, refrigerator, or freezer with cookies, candy, or ice cream. You’ll actually find it hard to eat sweets in this context. You’d have to leave the house to find something sweet to eat.
The same is true of your blogging habits. If you want to publish posts consistently, you can create an environment that supports a daily blogging habit. For instance, you can schedule daily blogging time; add this writing block to your phone’s calendar so you receive a reminder. Create a space where all your blogging materials or research are handy. Find a blogging buddy or accountability partner, and reward yourself when you follow through and write a post daily, or punish yourself when you don’t.
Positive and Negative Cues Help Build or Break Blogging Habits
As you probably realize, you can design your environment with positive and negative cues that help you break or build habits. So, suppose you want to develop the habit of blogging first thing in the morning. Then, you might put your laptop next to the coffee maker as a reminder. As soon as you have that cup in your hand, you pick up the computer, sit down at the kitchen table, and begin writing a blog post. Before you know it, you’ll have developed this desired habit.
If you want to break a habit, like putting every other task or commitment before writing a blog post, you could commit to writing first thing in the morning. Wake up (and go to bed) an hour earlier in the morning, and, again, have your laptop situated by the coffee machine as a reminder. After you get your coffee, write for an hour before the day starts and you get distracted.
Choose Supportive Blogging Environments
Pay close attention to the context within which you operate. Choose to spend time in environments that provide cues that help you develop a blogging habit rather than develop or maintain bad habits.
In other words, don’t spend time writing posts in a coffee shop if all your friends congregate there. That’s just asking for a distraction from writing. Instead, spend time in a local library (where you cannot talk on the phone), at home in your office (with the door closed), or at a coffee shop far enough away from your stomping ground to avoid seeing anyone you know.
Or, if you want to blog a book, don’t spend time in the living room with the television on. Instead, find a quiet room in your home that is designated as your office.
Different Contexts, Different Habits
Also, notice how you demonstrate different habits in different environments. You may habitually find other tasks to do when at home, but focus and write productively when at the local library. Or maybe you are in the habit of getting distracted by social media (on your phone or computer) when trying to write in your office, but if you bring your laptop onto an airplane, you produce posts the entire flight.
Consider also how your habits in specific contexts impact other habitual behaviors. For example, maybe you always turn on the television when you enter the living room. It’s no wonder, then, that you struggle to blog when you use the living room as your office. Your brain believes the living room is for television watching, not writing.
If your living room is where you want or need to write, create a different relationship with it by only using that space for writing. Habitually walk into the room, sit down, and begin writing (without the television on). Even better, put the television in the family room or an extra bedroom. These actions change your mind’s association with the living room, and, as a result, you will develop the habit of blogging effectively in that space.
Change Your Environment to Change Your Habits
The concept is simple: change your environment, and you change your habits.
Recall a time when you went on vacation. You weren’t in your typical environment—your home or office—and your habits likely changed. Maybe you slept later and drank more alcohol than usual. Your habits were different.
Maybe you want to blog a book but feel challenged to develop a writing habit. You try to produce a post every day sitting at the kitchen table. However, your environment cues you to empty the dishwasher, do the laundry, feed the birds, walk the dog, and start cooking dinner instead. Your environment is not conducive to forming a blogging habit.
But what if you go to a coffee shop every day to write (one where your friends don’t congregate)? Instead of seeing laundry baskets, empty bird feeders, the dog staring at you, and the dinner ingredients stacked on the counter, you see other people working at their computers. The first day you write in this environment, you knock out three 1,200-word blog posts without effort. And after a week, it seems like second nature to sit down with your latte and write a post. You’ve formed a blogging habit.
Avoid Mixed-Use Spaces
A space used for more than one activity results in confusing cues. That makes it hard to develop habits.
So, try to create a space for an individual activity—blogging. Don’t try to write in a mixed-use space, like the kitchen; instead, only use your office, for instance. Then, focus on habits related to specific spaces. In other words, focus on writing in the space you designate as a blogging space.
For example, develop the habit of writing in your office, exercising in your garage, watching TV in the living room, or eating in the dining room.
That means the kitchen is for cooking—not blogging or eating. And you don’t read or surf the Internet in your office; you do that in the living room.
Create or Break Habits Quickly
Design your environment with habit formation in mind. And develop your blogging habit in a context that helps, rather than hinders, your efforts at change.
As a result, you’ll find it much easier to create supportive blogging habits and break unsupportive ones. Plus, you’ll never have to wait weeks or months to develop a blogging habit—or any positive habit—again. Instead, you’ll create or break habits quickly.
Have you found it easier to develop a blogging habit in a conducive environment? Tell me in a comment below. And please share this post on social media or with a writing friend.
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Photo courtesy of NejroN.
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