Order Number |
3425643092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
“Self-Regulation”
It will be helpful for you to review Chapter 4 pages for this week’s discussion question.
Something to consider: Think about the video here and this week’s reading.
Please click on the link below to view the video:
Our text tells us, “Self-regulation refers to the self’s capacity to alter its own responses. It is quite similar to the everyday term “self-control” (pg. 133). Self-regulation enables people to be flexible, to adapt themselves to many different circumstances, rules, and demands. It enables people to “live together and get along much better” (pg. 134). Baumeister points out that there are three important “components” to remember in order to successfully self-regulate: 1) standards, 2) monitoring, and 3) strength or capacity to change.
Your discussion post:
peers 1
I would like to share an example of my successful weight loss in which I realized that self-regulation is important to achieving my goals and that willpower is an integral part of achieving self-regulation.
In order to achieve my weight loss goals, I decided to use self-regulation as a method, which involves three components. The first is standards, where I set a goal of 10 pounds that I would like to lose. I further helped with self-regulation by setting standards about how many calories I would eat each day and that I would eat foods low in oil and salt. The second is monitoring, which means monitoring what I eat and what I weigh each day. That is, I will record how much I eat and how much weight I gain. The third is the ability to change. After self-regulating this method, I could know if I have reached my weight loss goal and how much I have changed compared to my previous weight.
Lack of willpower is the biggest obstacle to change. According to Ph.D. Baumeister “Willpower is a key step in achieving the third step of self-regulation, which refers to a mental quality that we demonstrate when we consciously resist temptations and overcome difficulties in the process of reaching a predetermined goal”? Baumeister & Tierney, 2011) .
I agree with Baumeister that we can build willpower like a muscle. According to his research, “self-regulation works like a muscle, so willpower is a force”. It is possible that as people’s muscles get tired at times as they go about their daily lives, willpower can also become progressively more self-depleted as they exert self-control and resist temptation. In a state of self-exhaustion, people become more aggressive and prone to overeating, so a person’s ability to self-regulate is not constant. So willpower, like a muscle, can become stronger with regular exercise. It can start, for example, with some daily activities, such as standing up as straight as possible every day or forcing to exercise every day. Since willpower is related to the body’s energy intake, adequate sleep and healthy food are especially important (Baumeister & Tierney, 2011).
In order to reach my goal, I had to overcome the problem of “stopping halfway”. This is also known as “willpower”. I follow the standards and monitor them carefully in the early stages of the program, but in the middle and late stages I get tired and often can’t resist the temptation. For example, when I’m on a diet, I can easily lose control of myself in the face of a bunch of food, and I often want to just give up the diet. But I will give myself the psychological suggestion, that is, “delayed gratification”, I would keep reminding myself that if I could just stick to the plan for a month, I would have a perfect shape and eat more food. And when I finished the diet plan, I was able to control myself well enough to resist the temptation.