Showing posts with label Goal Setting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goal Setting. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2013

You have to believe in yourself to hit your weight-loss goals. Get 7 key strategies to help you stay focused while you're losing weight.



Article By: Megan Gressor

When trying to lose weight, believing in your goals and having a positive attitude can be as important as improving your diet and being active. If you have a plan to keep yourself motivated while you're losing weight, you stand a better chance of succeeding.
"People struggling to lose weight often talk about their lack of willpower, as if willpower is something that you are either born with, or not," says Palma Posillico, former VP of training and development for Weight Watchers International. "Losing weight is all about 'wantpower' — about recognizing that you already have all the resources you need to get what you want."

These resources include knowing what you want, knowing how to get it and knowing how to keep yourself motivated along the way. Here are some strategies to help you discover all three and reach your weight-loss goals.

1. Plot out your goals
It helps to have an action plan to keep you on track. "Storyboarding" is a technique used by movie directors to sketch out a plotline, frame by frame, before they start filming. In a similar way, you can make a blueprint for success by breaking your goal down into parts. Say you've given yourself three months to lose 10 pounds. Make a chart of the timeline and build it up, week by week, with details of shopping strategies, exercise tips and so forth—anything that helps make your goal concrete and achievable.

2. Envision your success
Athletes mentally rehearse every step of their winning routine to make it feel attainable. In the same way, you can make your own goals as real as possible by visualizing yourself succeeding in particular scenarios, like making the right choices when dining out. Revisit these scenarios often, and think about how good you'll feel about achieving your goals.

3. Don't sabotage yourself
Many of us unconsciously sabotage ourselves with self-destructive thoughts such as "I'll never lose weight." Whenever you catch yourself thinking this way, try to substitute more constructive statements; for example, "I haven't lost as much weight as I would like, but I can change that. I'm going to start by setting aside time to exercise three times each week."

4. Be your own cheerleader
Some people believe it's modest to put themselves down. But you wouldn't call a friend "fat" or "ugly," would you? You deserve the same respect, so try becoming your own best friend. Celebrate your progress, and try not to obsess about setbacks.

One way to do this is to make a list of your accomplishments in every area of your life (personal, professional and physical). List the talents and skills that enabled you to achieve them, and look at this list often. Adds Posillico, "Begin a daily journal of everything you did 'right' today." You'll be surprised how quickly it adds up!

5. Avoid being a perfectionist
Try not to think in all-or-nothing terms — that you've blown your diet, for example, simply because you've overdone it at one meal. "We need to be kinder to ourselves, and learn to regard setbacks as learning opportunities," says Posillico.

6. Follow through with your goals
Believing you can achieve your weight-loss goals is important, but you have to act too, by changing your eating habits, increasing your physical activity and so on. You can't just think yourself slim, but you can think yourself into the right frame of mind to optimize your prospects.

7. Affirm your self-belief
Feel your confidence wavering? One way to reinforce your self-belief is with positive affirmations: simple, self-validating statements repeated as often as possible, preferably daily. Try coming up with one or two of your own, and remember to keep them positive. You can — and you will — succeed, as long as you believe you can do it!

Monday, May 13, 2013

Baby steps to success



It's no secret that sticking with good habits for more than a few weeks is key for losing weight.  Behavioral expert B.J. Fogg explains the anatomy of a habit so you can break it down (and down...and down) to maintain your healthy behaviors for life.

You've decided to lose weight, and the first couple of weeks go according to plan.  But by the third, you're back on the couch again, pizza in hand, wondering if your barely used sneakers could score a few bucks on eBay.

So what's the secret behind keeping a healthy habit - not for a month or a year, but for the rest of your life? One day, as I was picking out socks after a shower, it hit me:  The key to forming habits is in the "after."  Think about it:  After I get out of the shower, I get dressed - as if on autopilot.  After I brush, I floss.  These are what I call "anchoring" behaviors, and they are what habits are built on.  After I had this lightbulb moment, everything else fell into place, and I soon figured out three (totally doable) steps to adopting a healthy habit.

Step 1 - Shrink your goal
You know the drill when it comes to being healthier:  You try and fail, try and fail again.  What slips people up is that they usually take a giant leap, like vowing to eat a salad for lunch every day.  But this rarely works. The solution:  Take the first step toward your goal by adopting a small habit.  How small?  I'm talking miniscule, like eating one baby carrot at lunch or just opening a vitamin container - you don't even have to swallow a capsule!  For me, my goal was to improve my upper-body strength, so my mini-habit was to do two push-ups at a time - much easier than aiming to do 20 in one go.

Step 2 - ID your anchor
If you want to create a new habit, you need to have something that prompts, or anchors, it.  Think of an action you perform daily (or several times a day) that could serve as your anchoring behavior - in other words, what will you do just before practicing your new habit?  For example, I decided to perform my two push-ups after using the bathroom.  That happens several times a day, so the number of push-ups I do in 24 hours quickly multiplied.

Step 3 - Celebrate!
This is the fun part:  Every time you complete the habit, reward yourself.  I'm not talking about a new pair of shoes; I mean literally throw your hands in the air and a do a happy dance as soon as you pop open that vitamin jar.  It may seem silly, but if you start by simply acknowledging the act, eventually the habit will naturally evolve into your taking a vitamin each morning or eating a whole handful of baby carrots with your lunch.  Case in point:  My two push-ups soon became five at a time, and now I'm easily doing 70 a day.

If my plan sounds easy, that's because it is.  Sure, you'll have to solve the puzzle of your own behavior (maybe you'll choose the wrong anchor and need to rethink).  But once the habits begin to stick, you'll wonder why you didn't take baby steps sooner.

-Debbie Koenig, Weight Watchers Magazine, May/June 2013