Changing your lifestyle habits
Changing your lifestyle habits is one of the most important decisions you can make to take care of your health. Sleeping better, moving more, eating in a more balanced way, managing stress better or making time for yourself are very common goals. However, moving from intention to action and, above all, maintaining these changes over time is not always easy.
Many people know what they “should do”, but still find it difficult to start, sustain motivation or integrate new routines into their daily life. This does not mean a lack of willpower. Changing habits means modifying automatic behaviours, adjusting rhythms, reviewing beliefs and finding a way of taking care of yourself that is truly compatible with real life.
In this article, we explore why change can be so difficult, what benefits it can bring and how an integrative approach — including psychology, nutrition, physiotherapy and osteopathy — can help you build more lasting and sustainable changes.
Why changing your lifestyle habits can transform your health
Habits are repeated behaviours that we perform almost without thinking: how we eat, how much we move, how we rest, how we react to stress or how much time we devote to self-care. Even when they seem small, they have a huge cumulative impact on physical, mental and emotional health.
Changing habits does not mean aiming for a perfect version of yourself. It means creating an environment and routines that support more energy, more stability, less overload and a better relationship with your body and wellbeing.
The impact on physical health
When habits improve, the way the body functions and recovers also improves. Sleeping better, moving regularly, reducing sedentary behaviour, eating with more structure or managing effort more carefully can help prevent discomfort, reduce risk factors and improve the overall feeling of health.
The impact on mental and emotional health
What benefits can a change in habits bring?
Psychology: managing stress better and sustaining motivation
Changing habits does not depend only on the body, but also on how you think, how you talk to yourself and how you manage difficulties. Stress, self-demand, mental fatigue or limiting beliefs can block the process. By contrast, when you develop more flexibility, more self-compassion and better strategies to regulate yourself, change becomes much more viable.
Psychology can help you understand why you repeat certain patterns, what holds you back and how to sustain motivation without relying only on the initial impulse.
Nutrition: nourishing the body in a more stable and conscious way
Nutrition influences energy, digestion, rest, concentration and even mood. Improving eating habits does not mean living on a diet or controlling every meal, but building a clearer and more sustainable relationship with what you eat.
A more balanced diet adapted to your reality can help you feel more stable, less inflamed, more satisfied and with more physical and mental resources to face the day.
Physiotherapy: recovering movement and preventing pain
Many people want to change their habits, but feel held back by pain, stiffness or fear of injury. Physiotherapy can be a great ally when the body needs to recover mobility, strength, confidence or load capacity before incorporating more physical activity.
Sometimes it is not about “doing more”, but about learning how to move better and with less discomfort.
Osteopathy: supporting the body’s adaptation
Why changing habits is often harder than it seems
The brain seeks automatic patterns, not constant effort
Identity and beliefs also play a role
Sometimes it is not only difficult to change a behaviour, but also the idea we have about ourselves. Thoughts such as “I have never been consistent”, “it is always difficult for me” or “I have no willpower” shape the way we approach the process and can make us give up too early.
Real life does not always make change easy
Common obstacles when trying to change your habits
Psychological obstacles
Obstacles related to nutrition
Nutrition does not depend only on nutritional information. It is also linked to pleasure, social environment, culture, schedules and available energy levels. When there is haste, fatigue or confusion due to too many contradictory messages, it becomes harder to build stable habits.
Physical obstacles
Pain, fatigue, stiffness or lack of physical condition can make starting new habits much more difficult. Sometimes a person wants to start moving, but their body is not ready to do so without discomfort. In these cases, appropriate physical support can completely change the process.
Practical and environmental obstacles
How to move forward more sustainably
Start with small, realistic changes
Seek continuity, not perfection
There will be better days and worse days. There will be smoother weeks and more difficult ones. Changing habits does not mean never slipping up, but starting again without experiencing every stumble as a complete failure.
Seek support when necessary
Having professional support can make a big difference, especially when change gets blocked again and again or when there is underlying pain, anxiety, confusion or emotional dysregulation. You do not always have to do it alone.
Choose changes that make sense for you
What can an integrative approach offer?
When psychology helps sustain the process
When nutrition provides structure and clarity
When physiotherapy and osteopathy help the body support the process
At Aliantis, we help you change habits from a global perspective
At Aliantis Sitges, we understand that changing habits is not only about accumulating good intentions, but about building a realistic, supported process adapted to each person. That is why we work from an integrative perspective, where psychology, nutrition, physiotherapy and osteopathy can complement one another depending on what you need at each moment.
Sometimes the first step is not to make a complete transformation, but to understand what is holding you back. Other times, it means relieving pain, recovering energy, regulating stress better or regaining confidence in your ability to change.
FAQ about changing habits
How long does it take to notice the benefits of changing habits?
What should I do if I lose motivation?
Is it better to change everything at once or little by little?
How can physiotherapy help me if I have pain?
What role can osteopathy play?
When can it be useful to consult a psychologist?
How can I improve my diet without feeling deprived?
Is it normal to have difficulties at the beginning?
This blog article does not aim to generate new knowledge; it is based on the reading of scientific publications, blog articles and other texts.
Sources:
Ministerio de Consumo – Alimentación saludable
AESAN – Agencia Española de Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutrición
Consejo General de Colegios de Fisioterapeutas de España
OMS – Actividad física y salud
Ministerio de Sanidad – Estrategia NAOS (actividad física y nutrición)
Registro de Osteópatas de España (ROE)
Asociación Española de Osteopatía
Ministerio de Sanidad – Estrategias de promoción de la salud