Scout Oath: On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty, to God and my Country, to obey the Scout law, to help other people at all times, to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.
....As I wait for my youngest son Nathan, along with some of our other friends to run the 3rd Annual Scout Strong Challenge 5k, I can't help hearing words my husband told me 23 years ago "If we have boys. . ."
I grew up with 4-H--showing cattle, cooking, doing crafts, hanging out with my 4-H friends, and going to camp. I loved the camaraderie of 4-H, it taught me to respect other people, leadership, and life skills. I was convinced my own kids would also go through 4-H like I did. My husband had different ideas . . . you see I fell in love and married an Eagle Scout. His compromise was if we have boys they will do Boy Scouts and if we have girls they can do 4-H. Well 8 years and 2 boys later, it was decided we would do Boy Scouts. I knew nothing about Boy Scouts--except they seemed kind of nerdy, wore ugly uniforms, and did merit badges.
As my 2 boys grew and joined Tiger Cubs, I learned on the fast track what Boy Scouts was really about. I was even the Den Leader of my youngest son's den and at the age 10/11 off to Boy Scouts they went. I learned quickly that it was more than Merit Badges--that was just one discipline of Boy Scouts and it taught them commitment, follow through, and some cases perseverance. They also learned to respect and assist others, leadership, and life skills that you don't always learn at home or in a class room.
Take for example, the Scout Oath and look at the last three attributes--keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight. Wow! That's good advice for all of us and they learn it starting at a young age and continue to have it embedded into their thinking--they developed habits that will hopefully follow them into adulthood. It doesn't mean they have to be an athlete to be in Scouts--for some Scouts this is their only extracurricular activity, for others it's one of many. However, they learn to be active and the importance of being physically fit. These are three great habits for all of us. However, sometimes the habits we learn as children we gradually fall away from or maybe these habits were never introduced to you. What are you doing to keep your self physically strong? Mentally awake? Morally straight?
Over the years, through life busyness and distractions, we sometimes tend to forget the good habits we may have once had, or maybe you never were taught . . . like the boys participating in Boy Scouts these are habits they were taught, they didn't learn these overnight. For adults, we can also learn to be physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight--you can teach an old dog new tricks--it just takes discipline and perseverance. I did not get into the habit of running every day over night--it took practice.
I'm currently reading Darren Hardy's book The Compound Effect and Chapter 3 really struck me as a WOW chapter. According to Darren Hardy--95% of everything we think, feel, or do is because of habit we learned or developed over time. 95%! That means both good habits and bad habits. If you go home every night and sit on the couch and watch TV ---it's not just a routine, it becomes a habit. However, it doesn't have to continue to be a habit. You can reprogram yourself to develop new more positive habits vs. the old habits you grew a custom to. Darren said to deprogram yourself of the bad habits, you need to do the following:
1. Find the Triggers - the big 4--who, what, when and where. Who triggers the habit, what triggers the habit, when does it happen and where does it happen. Perfect example. I have a habit of eating a handful of sugared cereal after dinner to kick my sweet tooth. I don't crave ice cream, cake, or cookies, but I do like just a handful of Cinnamon Toast Crunch or Frosted Flakes. Who triggers this--ME. When does it happen--after dinner when I have finished cleaning up the kitchen. What triggers it--being in the kitchen near my stocked pantry.
2. Clean House -- Ugh that is a nasty word. What he's saying is go in and throw away all temptations, but do remember that if your family is not looking to get rid of the same bad habit, you may have some disgruntle family members. This is a tough one! Because even if you do "clean" out all of the junk--you are still going to be tempted other places.
3. Swap It - Find a better replacement for it. For example instead of cereal, maybe I have a handful of berries or cut up an apple and eat with peanut butter. A better alternative and still getting that munching or sweet taste.
4. Ease In - Some people have to test the waters before they jump in. They have to take baby steps. This made me think of a story my mom told me about when they were trying to break me of the pacifier. I only had one pacifier that I was partial to but it was time to get rid of it. They knew if they took it completely away, we all would have some sleepless nights--so they decided to do a different technique. Each day they would cut a little bit off the pacifier until eventually there wasn't anything left to suck and I finally threw it across the room and that was the end of my pacifier.
5. Jump In head first - For others, you may be more of just jump in and go cold turkey. It depends on your personality of what works best for you.
Uninstalling those bad habits is just half the battle. According to Hardy, you have to also reprogram yourself with the new and improved good habits. The key through all of this is staying aware. It also helps to track your habit. For me, I would keep track of EVERYTHING I put into my mouth. For someone who want to cut out soft drinks and drink more water, they may tally up all of the water they drink for the day. In addition to this Hardy recommends the following tips for success:
1. Above we cleaned house of all of the temptations in our home, and now we are going to set up ourselves to succeed by stocking our life with the good things we want to replace the bad things with.
2. Think of it as an addition instead of a subtraction--don't look at it as a punishment that you can't have that anymore--look at it as an opportunity--something to look forward to. Tonight I get to have (fill in the blank).
3. Go for a PDA (Public Display of Accountability) We have social media at our finger tips--use it to hold yourself accountable as you develop this habit. Use your family or co-workers they can be your best cheerleaders to encourage you through this.
4. Find an Accountability Partner - Somebody else who also wants to change a habit and hold each other accountable.
5. Competition - If you have a fit-bit you know this. You can be friends with others on Fit-bit and do your own step challenges or cheer them or mock them on fit-bit. That friendly competition can be what you need to develop that positive habit.
6. CELEBRATE - Celebrate your successes--not just your ultimate goal, but set milestones along the way. Maybe at the end of the first week if I don't eat any sugared cereal I am going to reward myself with a nice relaxing bubble bath in my Jacuzzi tub--something I rarely do.
Are you Scout strong--are you physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight? Are you getting rid of those bad habits and replacing them with good habits? Think about one bad habit you want to get rid of and one good habit you want to replace it with. I challenge you to apply the steps from Darren Hardy's book The Compound Effect for 30 days and see if you can't develop a new habit.
On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty, to God and my Country, to obey the Scout law, to help other people at all times, to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight. Are you ready to be Scout Strong?
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