Categories: Parenting Our Children
Change is… Scary!

If you are thinking about making a change, but are struggling with the idea, take the following quiz to help you see what kind of change maker you are!
- How does change make you feel?
- When you find out bad news, what do you do?
- What happens when you think of all the changes you would like to make in your life?
- When you decide to make a major change, such as switching careers or ending a friendship, what is the first thing you do?
- What would your friends say about you and change?
- What do you do when you feel paralyzed and uncertain during a time of change?
Small Steps
Here is one hands-on practical tool that the authors suggest, “One way to shrink change, then, is to limit the investment you’re asking for – only five minutes of housecleaning, only one small debt. Another way to shrink change is to think of small wins – milestones that are within reach… when milestones seem too distant, they should look for ‘inch pebbles.’” That means that if you want to lose weight but the thought of an hour-long exercise class is just too daunting, commit to a five-minute walk in the morning. Then, commit to a five minute walk every morning for a week. Bump that up to ten minutes, then to twenty, and soon you will be well on your way to weight loss. In the same vein, if you think about milestones, if you have a ton of company coming for Shabbat and you don’t know where to begin to cook and bake, just decide that on Wednesday night you are going to make the desserts. Once you check that milestone off of your list, you can move on to side dishes or vegetables. Each milestone will give you the needed feedback that you can move forward. The same goes for large organizations. If the company wants to affect change, it needs to give a few small instructions that require a very small amount of time. Slowly, those can add up and create maximum change. NFL coach Bill Parcells in Harvard Business Review wrote, “When you set small, visible goals, and people achieve them, they start to get it into their heads that they can succeed.” All of these small changes work their way into the framework of the elephant and the rider because they are helping the elephant move forward. The Heaths explain, “The Elephant has no trouble conquering these micro-milestones, and as it does, something else happens. With each step, the Elephant feels less scared and less reluctant, because things are working. With each step, the Elephant starts feeling the change. A journey that started with dread is evolving, slowly, toward a feeling of confidence and pride. And at the same time the change is shrinking, the Elephant is growing.” And with the Elephant’s growth, your capacity to grow and change balloons! So, get out there and make those very small changes. They just might add up to something big.

July 10, 2026 






