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The Psychology of Weight Loss
Losing weight requires more than a physical commitment
- the mental aspect is also vitally important.
When it comes to fitness, the mind truly is a
powerful thing.
Have doubts that there is a mind-body connection
to wellness? Simply try this easy test: do a workout
of your choice (running, walking, lifting weights)
with your favorite pump-up music. Then do it a
separate time with no music at all. You'll quickly
see how the simplicity of motivating music can
help you go farther, faster or simply feel stronger
during your routine. That's the power of your
mind!
Why is the mind-body connection important to
understand? Because, the wrong mental approach
to getting more fit can have powerful negative
effects. A huge amount of dieters quit their weight
loss plans because of psychological reasons.
What you think can create what you are. Your
personal self-talk is crucial in determining whether
or not you are successful at reaching your weight
loss and fitness goals. Continual negative thoughts
can create a self-fulfilling prophecy. If daily
you bombard yourself with self-defeating thoughts,
then eventually you will begin to believe them.
When you tell yourself such things as "I'm
always going to be fat" or "I can't
stop eating" or "I can't walk that mile",
then naturally you'll start to believe the myths
as factual. From there you have immediately set
the stage for failure.
So, how can you dig out of the seemingly endless
downward spiral of negative thoughts and feelings?
Start with these six important psychological exercises:
. Create a list of all the negative thoughts
that you have about yourself. Then create a second
list of all the things that you like about yourself.
Keep working on your positive list until it is
much longer than your negative list. We all tend
to be our worst critics, so this can be a challenging
exercise. Write down even little things like "I
can make a great cheese sandwich", or "I
always get to work on time".
. Take your list of negatives and change all
of them to positive potentials. For example, instead
of "I always fail at losing weight"
change it to "I can succeed at weight loss."
Or, instead of "I can't stop eating",
change it to "I will control my portions."
Destroy your negative list and only keep the new
potentials list.
. Stop using these words: can't, won't, never.
Replace them with: can, will, always.
. Forget the past. That piece of cake you ate
yesterday is old news. Forget about it and move
on. Live only in the present. You can't change
what you did even an hour ago. All you can do
is resolve to stay focused and committed right
now and try to keep that focus tomorrow too.
. Stop making excuses for why you can't exercise
and eat right. Start by making a list of all of
your steadfast excuses and also all the reasons
that you should workout. The list of reasons why
you should exercise inarguably should be much
longer. Post your list of reasons where you can
see it daily.
. Stop the blame game. Promise to take self-responsibility.
It's easy to blame your genes, your diet-plan
or even your family for your failed diet attempts.
But not accepting full responsibility will simply
keep you trapped in a repetitive loop of failures.
About the author: Lynn Bode is a certified personal
trainer specializing in Internet-based fitness
programs. She founded Workouts For You, which
provides affordable online exercise programs that
are custom designed for each individual. Visit:
http://www.workoutsforyou.com for free fitness
tips and a sample workout program. Fitness professionals,
learn how to support your clients online, visit:
http://www.trainerforce.com
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