July 14, 2014
11 Tips to Help You Stick
With Your Fitness Program Even the best intentions to exercise can be overridden with dozens of excuses. "I have to work," or, "It's too cold outside," or, "The gym is too far away." It's amazing how many ways you can talk yourself out of working out. What you need is motivation to turn inspiration into perspiration. Whenever you're tempted to quit your fitness program, use these motivational tips to get yourself back on track: 1. Get into your fitness program for the right reasons. Studies show that people who are externally motivated -- that is, they’re working out just to drop 10 pounds or shrink their beer belly into a six-pack -don’t stick with it. Those who are internally motivated -- meaning they exercise because they love it -- are the ones who stay in it for the long run. Which brings us to tip #2. 2. Learn to love it. Exercise shouldn’t be a chore. The more into your workout you are, the more likely you’ll stick with it. Don’t limit yourself to weight machines and treadmills. Try different programs like yoga or Tae Kwon Do until you find ones that are more fun than work. 3. Mix it up. Cross-train to keep things interesting and exercise different muscle groups. Switch from the elliptical to the stair climber. Alternate between machines and free weights. Don’t reinvent your entire routine every week; just shift it around a little. 4. Keep at it. No one has perfect form the first day they start strength training. Every workout takes practice. If you trip over your wheels the first time you try inline skating, do it again, and again. Eventually, you’ll get the hang of it. 5. Start slow. Running 10 miles your first time on the track won’t make you an Olympian, it will just leave you sore, or worse, injured. Take it easy when you’re getting started. Maybe you only run a quarter of a mile your first week of training. Add distance and intensity in slow but steady increments. 6. Don’t push yourself too hard. There are a few reasons why half of people who start a new exercise program ditch it within the first year, and one is that they can’t keep up with the boot camp pace they’ve forced on themselves. Learn your limits, and know when you’ve reached them. 7. Use the buddy system. When your inner demons are ordering you to the couch instead of the treadmill, a workout partner can steer you back in the right direction. It’s easier to bail out on the gym than on the friend who’s waiting for you there. 8. Exercise on your time. Health experts say you need at least 30 minutes of exercise a day, but try telling that to your crazy schedule. It’s a lot harder to make excuses when your workout is convenient. If you work too late to get to a gym, keep a set of weights at home. If you can’t do all 30 minutes at once, break exercise sessions up into 10- or 15-minute bursts. 9. Set realistic goals. Stress “realistic.” You’re not going to skim off 10 pounds in a week, so just forget about it. Try something more achievable. Increase your workout schedule from two to three days a week, or add 15 minutes to each workout. 10. Keep a fitness journal or use an app to track your progress, for example, how much you run, walk, or lift and the calories burned. 11. Appreciate the little things. You’re not going to get ripped overnight. It takes weeks, even months, to see real changes. Even a pound of weight loss or a pound of muscle gain is reason to celebrate. Brought to you by Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. / Source: http://men.webmd.com/fit-and-healthy-10/stick-to-your-fitness-plan