Do you shop 'til you drop? Are you chronically late? We can help you turn over a new leaf.
We’ve asked top experts for their top tips. Try them for 21 consecutive days, and you may be out on good behavior before you know it.
“Start small with the creation of new, positive habits. These shift your energy and build confidence in yourself,” explains Regina Leeds, author of One Year to an Organized Life (Da Capo Lifelong Books).
Bad habit #1: Being Tethered to Your Cell Phone
Why you should kick it: You’re certainly not alone in your technology addiction. It’s hard to walk down the street, travel or dine and not see people texting, talking or scrolling away. But no one needs to be plugged in 24/7. It just takes you away from living your real, non-digital life.
How to kick it:
* Figure out why you’re hooked. “Are you using your tools to help you with work? Or are you using them to avoid life?” Leeds asks. “There’s a real difference, and you need to be brutally honest to find out.”
Force yourself to spend at least 10 minutes listening to nothing but your own thoughts. “Learn the joy of quiet time. You'll be astonished what you will discover,” Leeds says.
* Disconnect when you connect. There’s nothing more annoying than being with someone who’s answering emails or clutching his or her cell phone while pretending to listen to you.
“Unless you're on trial for a capital offense and you're waiting to hear the jury verdict, give your full attention to your loved ones during meals and when you're out to have quality time together,” Leeds says. “If you don't enjoy being with your partner or children, call your therapist.”
Bad habit #2: Being Disorganized
Why you should kick it: “Being organized is the foundation for everything you want to achieve or accomplish,” Leeds says. It allows “you to have more time, less aggravation, better health and can be a springboard for creativity.”
How to kick it:
* Take baby steps. Start with these small changes: Make your bed every day, never leave dirty dishes in the sink or allow clean ones to languish on the drain board and put your keys and glasses in the same spot every time.
“As you make slow, incremental positive changes, your self-esteem rises as does your faith in yourself that you can get organized,” Leeds says.
* Tame the paper tiger. Open your mail each day and immediately toss extraneous materials like flyers or freebie magazines that come with your bills. Also, be realistic about which catalogs you’ll really read, saving one from each company, not 10. File mail into folders or baskets according to bills to pay, invitations to respond to, etc.
Bad habit #3: Always Being Late
Why you should kick it: It leaves you frazzled, creates a bad impression and is rude. “Though it’s usually unconscious, it’s as if you’re saying, ‘My agenda is more important than yours’,” Leeds says.
How to kick it:
* Set a goal. Write it down and do so in the present tense rather than the future. “Saying, ‘I show up on time for all appointments’ is powerful,” Leeds says. “But saying, ‘As soon as I get organized, I’ll show up on time’ puts your good result in the future and just out of reach.”
* Get a calendar. “Whether it's an electronic calendar, the one on your computer or a paper version, you need to record your appointments and deadlines,” says Leeds, who adds that it helps to work with a week or month at a glance. “This way you can see what demands you're making on yourself. Are you trying to do too much? Perhaps that's why you're always late!"
Bad habit #4: Forgetting Your Friends
Why you should kick it: The good feelings you’ll elicit when you remember a friend’s big day are priceless. It makes people feel loved when you note the good times as well as the bad. Maintaining close relationships is important for a fuller life and better health, according to research.
How to kick it:
* Go high tech. “If you have a computer, it's pretty easy to stay on top of dates these days,” Leeds says. Most calendar programs let you set reminders of important dates, or you can register with an online service that emails you when these big moments pop up.
Or use a paper calendar to record only birthdays and anniversaries, and put a note in your daily planner to look it at the beginning of each month. “You’ll know which cards or gifts you need to buy,” Leeds says.
* Make time to reach out. “Set time aside each month to make long-distance calls,” Leeds says. “Or use your down-time waiting in doctor's offices or airports (as long as you use your 'inside voice' so no one has to listen to your conversation).” If you don’t have time to call, check in regularly with a quick “thinking of you email.”

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