7 Habits That Helped Me Sustain A 30 Pound Weight Loss For 4 Years
Seriously, anyone can lose weight with almost any weight loss program – but sustaining that weight loss is a different story altogether. If you find yourself working hard and succeeding in losing weight only to gain back that weight and then start another weight loss program 3 months later, it’s time to change your approach. I struggled with yo-yo dieting all through my high school and college years. It was 4 years ago that I decided to stop all fad diet and made losing simpler for myself – by adopting practical and sustainable behaviours.
Like most girls, I wasn’t convinced about the simple approach – I was always looking for the quick and easy way out – but like me, you’ll realize soon enough that the real secret to sustainable weight loss is that there is no secret at all. It’s about eating well, exercising and doing these two things consistently. Understanding what gets in the way of consistency- and how to be more steady in your efforts-is the only way to stick with a plan and get the results you really want - that is the proverbial secret. Here are the 7 habits that ensured my weight stayed weight you lose will stay gone forever.
1. Schedule fun for yourself. Tension relief is one of the top reasons we overeat and make poor food choices. When something causes us to feel tense, we seek to alleviate that feeling… often with overly indulgent food and drinks. As we get older, we make less time for fun, which leads to burnout. What defines fun for you? Consider signing up for art classes, salsa lessons, volunteering, board games, meditation, yoga, even cooking healthier spins on your favorite foods. Focusing on fun might sound trite, but there’s a good reason my most successful clients create time for it: The more fun we have, the less we’ll rely on food and drink to create it for us.
2. Learn that food isn’t what you’re really craving. What you’re craving is avoidance. When we indulge, we’re after the experience of eating- the escape and distraction. So when you want to eat an entire pint of ice cream, what you’re really after is that sense of reward. But food won’t give you what you’re truly looking for, so when you’re craving something that will hamper your goals, ask yourself: ―If I could use a magic button to change something in my life right now, what would I use it for?‖ This will help you identify what’s really bothering you. For example, if you’re unhappy with your career, or you’re seeking a better relationship with your partner, identifying these issues will help you map out a plan of action instead of covering up a desire with temporary relief in the form of dessert.
3. Understand that 80 percent of weight loss success is diet. You know how some people can work their butts off in the gym—even with a trainer - and they don’t end up looking any different? You can’t outexercise a poor diet; what you do between exercise matters most. While exercise is the key to energy and a better mood, diet is the key to weight loss.
4. Plan and prepare meals ahead of time. We often have to battle between our short-term, irrational mind and our long-term, rational mind. When we’re hungry, stressed, or tired, it’s harder to make good choices. Besides, when was the last time you were ―in the mood‖ for grilled chicken and vegetables when you felt ravenous? Sure, you might not always follow through with your healthy-eating plans, but the chances you’ll do so increase dramatically when you actually have a plan in the first place. You don’t get any bonus points for using heroic willpower rather than simple planning, so why not make it easier on yourself? I always have healthy food ready to go in the fridge-this just makes good choices easier.
5. Choose a truly sustainable path. This might sound like common sense, but it’s not common practice. You can’t expect to stick with a plan that won’t work in the long run, but people keep attempting absurd fad diets. Forget about them! You can only follow a cookie, shake, grapefruit, cabbage, no-carb, and no-fun diet for so long-and my most successful clients avoid these diets. Before you start any weightloss program, ask yourself, ―Can I see myself eating like this in five years from now?‖ If the answer is no, then the diet you’re thinking about starting isn’t going to work. Give yourself a chance to succeed from the start.
6. Determine if you’re actually hungry before you eat. One of the top reasons people are overweight is because they eat when they’re emotionally hungry, not physically hungry. Physical hunger comes on gradually and can be satisfied with any food. It passes what I call the ―Broccoli Test.‖
Emotional hunger comes on suddenly. It feels urgent and is marked by specific food cravings. You can have snack after snack, and nothing hits the spot. This is because you’re not hungry for food- you’re hungry for something else. So when you’re about to eat, pause and ask yourself, ―Am I hungry or am I eating to change the way I feel?‖ This will allow you to catch yourself if you’re about to eat for emotional reasons, not out of true hunger.
7. Plan your indulgences. Never indulging isn’t sustainable or even desirable. You should eat treats when they’re special to you. My rule is that your special indulgence should pass the ―Will I remember this in two weeks?‖ test. Most of the indulgences we eat aren’t remarkable- they’re bags of chips or boxes of stale-tasting cookies from a convenience store. The idea is to make the most of routine meals and indulge when it’s truly worth your while. Wait for a memorable treat like a high-quality pastry from your favorite shop.
―Click here to see the ―Carb-Pairing‖ trick that helped Sarah melt away 37 pounds in just 30 days (proven for women only) A very popular program that gives you a variety of easy daily recipes. Good luck on your journey!