
A week ago, I received a message from a blog reader. He commented that my entries have been longer of late, and while he tried reading, he was lazy to continue on. He suggested I should create shorter versions of my articles for busy and lazy people like him.
For perspective, my guest posts on Lifehack are about 1-2k words long, while the ones at my blog are about 3k words on average. I don’t intentionally write long or short posts – I write what’s needed to convey the message. If I think putting in more details helps the reader, I’ll do so. My objective in every post is to deliver the maximum value to the reader.
So when I first read the mail, the first thought that came to mind was this person seemed like a self-help junkie. A junkie is someone with a substance abuse problem. A self-help junkie refers to someone who indulges in self-help (for leisure) and doesn’t follow-up with action. Over the course of my personal development blogging and coaching journey, I’ve come across a good number of self-help junkies, such that I’m able to sieve out the tell-tale signs. Are you a self-help junkie? Here are 9 ways to tell if you are:
- You read self-help without following up with action. You read self-help blogs, books, and even attend self-help seminars once in a while. You are largely familiar with the different authors and teachings in the industry. Yet, of all that you’ve read, you’ve done little to nothing to apply what you’ve read. Rather than just read all the time, it might be more useful to ask yourself why you’re reading and what you intend to do with the information you’re acquiring. As with any activity, it’s important to do it with purpose.
- You like to discuss about self-help but you don’t act on it. Besides reading about self-help, you talk about it too. You interact with the authors, asking for advice once in a while. At the self-help blogs you read, you make the occasional comment or two, sharing your thoughts and engaging with the community. You even talk about it with your friends sometimes. However, after getting the advice, you don’t do anything. It falls short of action. When do you intend to take action? Perhaps start with what you want and when you want to achieve them. Create your action plan then act on it.
- You read for the sake of reading. You make it a point to read each self-help book/blog/post you come across, even if it’s in a topic that has no relevance or significance in your life. Does it serve any purpose though? It might be more useful to be choiceful of what you read, and read only if it pertains to what you’re going through. More importantly, make it a point to follow-up what you read with action/application (see #1 and #2).
- You treat self-help as leisure. It’s ok to read self-help books/blogs in your leisure time. But you treat self-help as just a recreational filler activity, never quite intending to take any action after you read it. However, self-help is more than just a filler or enrichment. It’s an important tool to help us live it in the best manner possible. What do you see self-help as and what role do you intend for it to serve in your life? Your answer to that question determines the kind of results you will get out of it.
- Self-help is your avoidance outlet. As ironic as it may seem, some people read self-help as a way to avoid dealing with problems in their lives. They seek refuge in it. They think reading about self-help is taking action. Of course, that’s a flawed notion, and very much just a delusion. If there is something you’re avoiding, you can’t ignore it by indulging in self-help. You have to face it and deal with it eventually. Use self-help to equip you with the right information, then act on it afterward.
- You measure your achievement by how many articles/books you read a week. With every post/book that you finish, you move on to the next, feeling satisfied by the amount you are reading. But real results should be measured by what you create in your life, not how much you read. Reading is merely a preparation step. Even if you read 1000 self-help books, nothing’s going to change until you do something. To date I’ve read less than 20 self-help books my whole life. I only read if it’s needed (to get certain info/knowledge); else I don’t touch the books. Read only what’s needed to achieve your results. Focus on what you want to create instead.
- You read self-help to motivate yourself / get a certain high. Like real junkies, you get on an emotional high from reading. It slowly tapers off afterward though, so you keep reading more to fuel that feeling. While it’s inspiring to read about others’ success, it’s even more inspiring to achieve that success for yourself.
- You keep fiddling with life hacks rather than work on the bigger pieces of life. Some people get absorbed in life hacking because it’s easy and it makes them feel productive. For many, it’s to procrastinate working on the bigger areas of life. While there are merits behind life hacks (this site is called Life Hack after all), you can’t hack your way to your dream life. There are big decisions you need to make, and until you do you can’t start your real life.
- You bookmark and RT list posts like “10 ways to XX” and “101 ways to XX” without remembering/applying any single tip in the post. It’s great to bookmark these articles for future use and it’s even better to share them with your friends. I always appreciate it whenever readers share my posts with others. However, you don’t want to end up just bookmarking/collecting a ton of these articles without doing anything. 2 questions you should ask yourself after every post you read are: (1) “What have I learned from this article?” (2) “What can I apply to my life moving forward?” There is always something to learn from everything, even if you may think you know everything that was written. If you read 1 post every day and you learn / apply just 1 thing out of each post, imagine the huge change you’d see in your life after 30 days.
How about you?
Are you a self-help junkie? Does any of the 9 traits above apply to you?
And true to what I wrote in #9, here are 2 questions I’m going to ask you: (1) What have you learned from this article? and (2) What can you apply to your life moving forward?
Feel free to share your comments with others. :)
















As I scout these indications, I can barely admit to…all of them. At some point in my life, I have definitely exhibited these traits and been a "self-help junkie." But, hey, I'll take it over other vices any day. That's like saying I was addicted to health food. Sure, it might put you in the poor-house, but, at least, you won't be starving.
I learned i should be more selective in what i read and to try to only read things which will benifit me in my current state and to try to read a few articles a day instead of going through various blogs and to give a couple minutes thought to the content and to try and act and implement at least 1 piece of satisfactory advice and try to set up an action plan of how i will implement it to my life.
Never actually comented on blogs only within the last week or so have i started taking an active interest in the self help comunity on line and i think this article really helped me over coming a big pitfall for many people into self help, thank you very much. Probably the best article i read in a long time and it got me really thinking its not so much what you read but its the ideas and actions that is generated.
So often in this world are we taught that length of writing matters and I think that is so wrong. In school we are given minimums and maximums even, but never taught that once you have said what needs to be said, you can just stop. People learn quickly how to fluff things up. I think your articles are great length and hope to never see them change because someone is too lazy to become a faster reader.
True…I already know that I am a self-help junkie, But this article has proved it.
I love this article, really excellent! 100% true!
*Bookmarked* :D no kiddin' :D :D
Nice article. You pegged me on the last three signs: reading for the certain "high", fiddling with hacks, and bookmarking for reference "later". I never get back to it later.
Honestly, I never use bookmarking tools. Ever. If I find something interesting, I take notes on paper.
What you’re shared here is true. I will use those tips to improve my self. online personal assistant
Number 8 describes me pretty much to the T.
Haha, sometimes I use going to the gym as a avoidance outlet, which must be why I've grown so much lately :)
It's pretty sad that people will invest so much time and money into all of these great self-help products, and then not do anything about it. If they were serious, they would just find some great quick tips online, for free even, and actually ACT on them right away and produce great results. That's why adversity is the greatest tool for change – it forces you into action.
If I go by this article i am def a self-help junkie. Although all of the nine dont apply, most do. But one very important thing i picked up was if I apply just one of the things i read every day how much of a difference it will make in 30 days. So I am making that my goal. Thank you for this.
I must admit that I can be categorized into a self-help junkie
this is a harsh-but-true slap on my face, that it reminds me to put into REAL actions of what I've read all this time,
or nothing REAL will come out of it, nor any REAL changes in my life.
thank you for this direct, bold full-of-truth post.
actually it's a very true article but damn it applies on me and i won't ask for a follow up article of this cause i guess it will not make sense cause it is more about implying what you have learned
true true… I just hacked myself through my entire life and the little geniius ended up in front of nothing but a hand full of useless shit. That to realize gave me a hard time, but it kicked me in the butt… Now i move forward, taking small steps, without the fking shortcuts. And i can say the small steps are getting wider by themself – no need for shortcuts ^^
i beleive that in one way or another, we are all self-help junkie. we read a lot of things, get interested with it but really don't have time to do it. important I learned fron reading your post today is really to do something about it. no action=no result.
Great read!
I would add to the list, "If someone asked what goal you were most proud of accomplishing last year, you wouldn't have an answer"
I'm totally guilty of being a Self-Help Junkie. :P
I feel there's so much stuff I should fix in my life, so I read a lot (and I mean, A LOT) of self help blogs, but all they do in fact is a temporary confidence boost, which fades as soon as I turn the computer off and I'm forced to face the oh-so-amazing real life.
What has a man to do to find that spark of enlightenment that makes you turn your thoughts into actions? :)
Brilliant Celestine!
It's action isn't it thats the crucial step. Because really you can do all of the things listed above also long as you take that action to make it happen in your life.
[...] a look-see… Celestine “Celes” Chua’s 9 Ways to Tell if You Are a Self-Help Junkie and What to… also, catch her on her celestinechua.com/blog/ As I scout these indications, I can barely admit [...]
This stuff couldnt have come at a better time , i've been trying to apply a lot of Self-Help principles in my life for three years.. yet seems i cant do it .. i try but , i end up in the same place …
just this morning i went to a cafe to write in my journal some goals and release some tense emotions after 3 months! …. And I was about to post in my blog about it ,looking for a picture in google i found this site … last night i asked god for help , and i asked the questions … This article sure talks about me… but , how , how can one apply that which one reads when your emotions are wild , and sometimes the sense of being.. dissipates into these emotions..
Hey all, I’m glad (most of) you found it helpful :) I was wondering what kind of responses this post will elicit since it’s quite “in your face” so to speak and talks about something which most people may not like to read about. In fact, it’s probably the least retweeted guest post out of all the guest posts I’ve written at lifehack. But ultimately, as long as it resonated with just 1 of you and did even a little to change your thinking/approach (which it did), it was worthwhile writing it. Thank you!
So the question now is – what’s next, and how are we going to do things differently from now on (beyond a mental reminder which can become quite elusive)? How can we start applying this starting from today onwards?
Well I am a self help and look-it-up junkie. I’ve realised for a long time that I simply don’t trust myself so I have to look everything up – on the net, or in a book, magazine, a “professional”, wherever. It’s a HUGE problem, to be honest, because this habit can get out of control to the point where I just don’t act at all until I’ve been assured of the “best” way to go.
SO… as to your question, Celestine, about how we do things differently, for me it’s been about asking myself whether the research is for avoidance or for actual knowledge. I mean, there’s nothing wrong with getting it wrong. Whose “wrong” is it anyway? What if I just tried what feels right without attaching TOO much significance to the outcome other than to learn from it, one way or another. So, in a nutshell, my advice as a fellow self-help junkie is this: when you pick up that book or google that question, what is it that’s you want? If it’s avoidance of the very thing you’re trying to do, then step away and go do it.
If that reader can’t handle a thousand words or so, he / she needs to steer well clear of MY blog … hell, I’ve got passwords that long! (Blog link deliberately omitted.)
What about tab hording(having to many tabs open in firefox) with self help sites. As well as the 10 ways to do this and to do that.
you read only less than 20 self help book????
Nice article, except I would say that nr. 7 is not a bad thing. I keep reading articles and lists to remind myself about the importance of staying aware of my actions and motivate myself to keep going.
Most self-help seems to be a lot of blowing smoke up the reader’s ass. Self-help that urges the reader to take a thorough, painful inventory of themselves is rare but the most helpful. Sure, in that inventory you also acknowledge the positive, but it’s important to be rigorously honest with oneself about the negative, too.
[...] de website Likehack kwam ik dit artikel tegen geschreven door Celestine Chua en tot mijn grote schrik gaat alles in dit artikel [...]
[...] If you’d like to know whether you fall into this category, check out this great post by Celestine Chua: “9 ways to know if you’re a self-help junkie (and what to do about it)“ [...]
rlly interestin post … hvnt read sumthin lyk dis fr a long tym..:)
I love this! For a long time I would bookmark important pages and accumulate tidbits of data from scrawling it down into notes in order to use it later. Also, I would have magazines with recipes that I would collect and keep and that went on for a couple of years. I would have all these ideas but put them off until later. Until later finally arrived with this summer. I liberated myself from the mounds of recipes I had collected and condensed them into about twenty pages that I was genuinely interested in creating (which I’ve done a few of already!) and the bookmarks are all gone now, I’ve only kept a few websites that I know will actually benefit me and will be referenced to. Nowadays when I read something inspiring I jot it down on a sticky note and put it up to inspire and remind me of my own purposes and regularly throw them out once their effect have worn off, but I no longer just read for the sake of reading and waiting until a later time. Though I am still preparing, I am taking the initiative to actually implement the strategies that the blogs I read write about in order to further propel me towards my own goals–which is to create a blog that will help others and fulfill my natural desire to share my own accumulated knowledge and insight.
Lovely post! This is the kicker to get me to create more and spend less time with that which does not serve me (:
zenfulmusings.wordpress.com (I know, I need to buy the domain!)
Abercrombie And Fitch Sale All of these girls and men looked himself into a light appearance and complex, Pak has some truly amazing clothing and accessories. This brand has captured millions of people live in hearts around the world. People die of hearts fans as they saved up this brand of products. Each primary and Fitch are always surprising fashion, bags, and can come up with unique design and style. You will see a lot is always considered very stylish Plaid, in-store products. If you say something, attracting the younger generation of fashion of mad men’s and women’s concerns, and then you will come to know it is Ian Abercrombie and Fitch shirts, is considered the hot favourite products Abercrombie online store.
UGG Shoes Outlet Years ago brand and small start for Australia shoes debut surfer reservation in sudden. The brand is the Ugg, promoters appreciate this boots warm lining of surfer’s name. Australia surf depend on to keep their feet warm when they go out of the water, but did not expect fashionable then Ugg boots UGG snow boots warm inside. Their wool inside and outside the tanned outer surface with rubber soles-UGG leather boots of ugg boots are neutral. They are not waterproof so they do not do well in the snow, this is the irony is that, because many Americans their UGG snow boots ugg boots was originally purchased. Years ago Hollywood Celebrity tons to UGG snow boots a try, thus this boot is everywhere! These days, you will find Ugg boots have high fashion-retailer recently shoe designer Jimmy Choo) creates a row of stars and other fashion boots with studded Tamara · Mellon is completed, like stripes and cooperation.UGG Shoes For Babies Ugg snow boots from practical fashion in just a few years, this day, branding is more than simply boot. Now you can get the Ugg boots, Ugg sandals, Ugg jams, Ugg slippers-the list goes on, and more! Ugg boots to help you stay warm and once in the cold air rushed, but thanks to the renovation of fashion, they get the boots can also help you maintain top fashion. Here are some selection of autumn. Ugg Australia woman classic TallThese started it all Ugg boots-classic tall boot is a brand of “cultural heritage style”.New UGGS 1872 Bailey Button Recently, the transformation of these boots with high fashion, and now they come in the rostrum copper in sheep’s clothing, so you can stay warm, and to make a statement at the same time. Tall Ugg boots are the most common style, because they look great, Sheepskin and wool show also all the way down. With genuine Sheepskin cover soft foam insoles, these boots are extremely comfortable and very warm UGG Original Kids Shoes.
UGGS Australia Years ago brand and small start for Australia shoes debut surfer reservation in sudden. The brand is the Ugg, promoters appreciate this boots warm lining of surfer’s name.UGG Ultimate Braid Boots Australia surf depend on to keep their feet warm when they go out of the water, but did not expect fashionable then Ugg boots UGG snow boots warm inside. Their wool inside and outside the tanned outer surface with rubber soles-UGG leather boots of ugg boots are neutral. Metallic UGG Boots Outlet They are not waterproof so they do not do well in the snow, this is the irony is that, because many Americans their UGG snow boots ugg boots was originally purchased. Years ago Hollywood Celebrity tons to UGG snow boots a try, thus this boot is everywhere! These days, you will find Ugg boots have high fashion-retailer recently shoe designer Jimmy Choo) creates a row of stars and other fashion boots with studded Tamara · Mellon is completed, like stripes and cooperation. UGG Outlet Store from practical fashion in just a few years, this day, branding is more than simply boot. Now you can get the Ugg boots, Ugg sandals, Ugg jams, Ugg slippers-the list goes on, and more! Ugg boots to help you stay warm and once in the cold air rushed, but thanks to the renovation of fashion, they get the boots can also help you maintain top fashion. Here are some selection of autumn UGG Kensington Boots Outlet.
I am very enjoyed for this side. Its a nice topic. It help me very much to solve some problems. Its opportunity are so fantastic and working style so speedy. I think it may be help all of you. Thanks, Download Beats
Many thanks for making the sincere effort to explain this. I feel fairly strong about it and would like to read more. If it’s OK, as you find out more in depth knowledge, would you mind writing more posts similar to this one with more information? Tango dresses Toronto
All the contents you mentioned in post is too good and can be very useful. I will keep it in mind, thanks for sharing the information. Keep updating, looking forward for more posts. Thanks. markkinointirekisteri
Clever work and reporting! Keep up the great works guys I’ve added you guys to my blogroll. This is a great article thanks for sharing this informative information.. I will visit your blog regularly for some latest post.thanks for sharing. hair loss clinic
I am impressed by the way you covered this topic. It is not often I come across a blog with captivating articles like yours. Dance shoes Toronto
Happy to see your blog as it is just what I’ve looking for and excited to read all the posts. I am looking forward to another great article from you. sähköpostimarkkinointi
I am very enjoyed for this side. Its a nice topic. It help me very much to solve some problems. Its opportunity are so fantastic and working style so speedy. I think it may be help all of you. Thanks,
a math
It is just humane to read a lot and apply some of it. I don’t think great personality even tried to apply whatever things he read either in internet or in paper. At the same time, there are some good points mentioned in this article as well. That points can be accepted by individuals depending on one’ circumstances and life experiences.
Nice sharing here, I really like this blog!
software live chat
Excellent post.I want to thank you for this informative read, I really appreciate sharing this great post. Keep up your work…
This is me exposed! I use self-help information as an excuse thinking that if I can just get the things in the book right first then the perfect life will follow. I’ve spent years not fully in my life for this reason. Reading, for me as a kid was a massive escape from the pain of daily life. I’ve just moved from fiction to “advice” in the dishonest notion that I am doing something productive. Every so often I try some of the techniques and strategies in this book, but I can’t say I’ve honestly ever applied any of them long enough for them to possibly have an affect. I think I’ve just found my new year’s resolution! Thank you!