HOW TO STRENGTHEN YOUR WILLPOWER

The chocolate cake or the apple?

Staying in bed or going to the gym?

Watching another YouTube video or focusing on your work?

Spending or saving?

Every day, all day, choices challenge your willpower: the ability to exercise self-control when you need it. The problem is that sometimes your willpower is weak, and you “fall off the wagon.”

You make New Year’s resolutions, and within less than a month, you find yourself feeling like a failure.

“Your promises and resolutions are like ropes of sand… What you need to understand is the true force of the will” (Steps to Christ, pg. 47).

Professor Kelly McGonigal, author of The Willpower Instinct based on her popular Stanford University course “The Science of Willpower,” reveals how when you fail, you tend to give up and think: “What’s the use! I broke my promise, my diet, my resolve… I failed, so what’s the point! I can’t go on.”

McGonigal demonstrates how study after study proves that those who were able to forgive themselves when they “fell off the wagon” instead of beating themselves up were more likely to get back on the wagon, achieve their goals, and resist harmful habits than those who condemned themselves and filled their minds with regrets.

A teenage boy I once taught, I’ll call him Mark (not his real name), made the decision to do five pull-ups every time he passed the pull-up bar at school.

By the fourth day, he was just too sore and too tired, so he quit. He just couldn’t go on. “It simply wasn’t in me,” Mark confessed to me.

At that point, Mark chose to turn to God; after praying, he opened his Bible, and his eyes fell on these five words: “We are saved by hope” (Romans 8:24). While he meditated on those words, Mark could see in his mind Jesus tenderly helping him through his struggle. Even though he had given up and failed, Mark knew Jesus was there for him, and that epiphany energized him to keep on going, taking on his challenge one pull-up at a time, one day at a time.

When you choose to do the right thing, it’s hard, so don’t be surprised if you fall more often, feel weaker, and even fail repeatedly. Like Mark, turn toward God, and see how He is leading you into situations that test your resolve and show you more clearly your need of Him.

Professor McGonigal further identified four practices that help people like Mark succeed in strengthening their willpower:

1) Get 8 hours of sleep every night

2) Eat a plant-based diet

3) Get at least 150 minutes of exercise a week

4) Spend 15 to 20 minutes a

day in spiritual contemplation, meditation, or prayer.

Mark noticed his ability to do more pull-ups decreased when he stayed up late the night before. He was also more likely not to go for his morning run nor wake up early enough to read his Bible and pray. That late night would push over the first domino in a chain reaction of lethargy and lack of self-control, and Mark would more likely eat a candy bar or donut to refuel his flagging energy.

Whenever he found himself feeling disappointed, Mark turned to Proverbs 24:16: “For though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again.”

Although he fell and failed repeatedly, Mark never gave up! He kept taking baby steps, and he listened for the tender voice of Jesus encouraging him: “Well done, my child. Keep going!”

In his final year of high school, Mark could do 50 unassisted pull-ups every time he walked past the pull-up bar.

Now, that’s willpower!

~ Mike Lemon

Upcoming Episodes

Victory in Jesus

Too often our secular culture paints God completely out of the picture and has an overpowering influence on the choices we make.

This was the case for two sisters, Melissa Chamberlain and Christina McSwain, who found themselves sucked into a culture and influences that gradually drew them away from their childhood faith and into a self-destructive lifestyle.

It Is Well With My Soul

Joy Astolfi is a mental health clinician who sees her work as a sacred trust. Through her own journey, Joy has learned life lessons that have enabled her to help many people experience hope and healing.

My Only Hope

Ernest (Ernie) Breitkreuz saw God lead him through many happy years from childhood to his married life with children and grandchildren, but then he faced an inner pain and depth of grief he could never imagine. Ernest shares with us how he faced those times of trial.

My Deepest Despair Was My Greatest Blessing
– Part 1

At the age of 50, Mario Roque left his second wife, with his two sons, to live with his parents. Mario describes his life at that time as “a very difficult personal, emotional, financial, and relational mess.” In his deepest despair, God revealed Himself to Mario Roque. How could Mario say that his deepest despair was in fact his greatest blessing?

UPCOMING EVENTS WITH MIKE & RENÉ

February 11

It Is Written Canada’s Nationwide Offering

February 11

11:00 AM – Preaching at Newmarket Community Centre

February 11

1:00 PM – “Love is Medicine” – Dinner with the Doctor at Newmarket Community Centre

February 25

11:00 AM – Preaching at Peterborough SDA Church

THIS MONTH’S FREE OFFER – Songs of Assurance – DVD, by It Is Written Canada Telecast

A glimpse of the past – This DVD features artists who inspired many viewers with their God-given talents. May this inspirational music bless you and draw your heart closer to Christ.

How Your Donations Make a Difference!

14 Baptized after Youth Evangelistic Series

Recently, we were asked to do a youth evangelism series, and at the end of those meetings, 14 people decided to be baptized.

Please, pray for those precious souls, that they will have the willpower to remain faithful to Jesus.

Without your ongoing donations, we would not be able to make this happen. Thank you for donating to It Is Written Canada!

Sesame Eggplant & Almond Butter Tofu Bowls

Ingredients:

TOFU

  • 8 ounces extra-firm tofu
  • 3 Tbsp cornstarch
  • 2 Tbsp sesame oil

SAUCE

  • 1 Tbsp sesame oil
  • 2 Tbsp salted creamy almond butter
  • 1 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 Tbsp lime juice
  • 1 1/2 -2 Tbsp maple syrup or coconut sugar
  • 1/8 – ¼ tsp cayenne pepper

 

EGGPLANT

  • 1 Tbsp sesame oil
  • 2 medium Japanese eggplants (stem removed, halved, then cut in 1-inch pieces with the skin on)
  • 1 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 Tbsp maple syrup
  • 1 tsp sesame seeds (optional)

FOR SERVING optional

  • 2-3 cups (or servings) brown or cauliflower rice

Instructions:

Beat together the vegan margarine and sugar in a large bowl.

Add the prepared egg replacer, molasses, and apple cider vinegar and set aside.

In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, salt, baking soda, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg to combine well.

Combine this flour mixture with the margarine and sugar mixture and stir until well mixed.

Refrigerate for at least 2 hours or overnight if possible. This will help the cookie dough to become firm. You can skip this step if you’re baking regular ball cookies, but, if you’re going to cut the dough into shapes, you won’t want to skip the refrigeration.

Preheat oven to 375 F.

Form mixture into 1/2-inch balls and flatten or roll out onto a floured surface and cut into shapes using cookie cutters.

Place on cookie sheets and bake for 6 to 8 minutes until done.

Let cool, decorate, and enjoy!