Daily Habits = Weekly Goals
How To Create Healthy Habits
Daily habits help you achieve weekly goals. Combined with accountability and a very long timeline, they are key in achieving a sustainable and healthy lifestyle. In fact, the easiest and most sustainable way to live a healthy life is to put your good behaviors on auto-pilot. The less effort you perceive, the easier they are to sustain long-term.
Examples of daily habits might include:
- Sleep 7-8 hours nightly
- 5+ fruits/veggies daily
- 30 min to 1 hours of physical activity (either cardio, strength training and/or flexibility), most days of the week
- 64 oz water daily
- 10 minute meditation/devotional (mmm...close your eyes and relax!)
These daily habits are skills we are working towards incorporating into our routines. They move us forward in a positive and healthy direction on a daily basis, and contribute significantly to our short-term well-being. Take a minute to list each one of the positive daily habits you already have!
Your list of positive daily habits right now may be long or it may be short. It is a skill that may or may not be a consistent part of your daily routine, but you are trying to incorporate into your lifestyle. Accept where you are at right now and seek to increase your list of positive daily habits.
Reaching a weekly goal is simply the cumulation of your daily habits. It might include such things as:
- stretch for 10 minutes 5 days this week, OR
- have a healthy snack each weekday afternoon at 3:30 pm, OR
- go to sleep 30 minutes earlier than normal, OR
- no processed foods this week
The idea behind a weekly goal is to help us practice skills and behaviors that can then be incorporated into our lifestyle and thus become a daily habit. Reaching weekly goals feels awesome because it means we put in sustained effort throughout the week and that can yield great results.
For example:
- stretching consistently promotes emotional well-being and helps guard against injury
- eating a healthy snack in the afternoon ultimately saves calories because you are not ravenous and eating everything in sight by the time dinner finally comes around
- getting adequate sleep each night translates into more energy throughout the day
- not eating processed foods and focusing on fruits and veggies instead means less calories, more fiber and even less inflammation, a win-win-win!
In order to get started:
1--Make a list of your daily habits.
2--Decide on a weekly goal (or two) to work on to help you practice sustained effort
3--Find an easy way to track your efforts
4--You did it! Now do it again next week :)
Exercise is man's best medicine
--Hippocrates
Nutritious Foundations









