Archive for the ‘goals’ Category

Making New Years Resolutions To Lose Weight

Saturday, December 27th, 2008
my ultimate n3rd New Year Resolution

Image by jonolist via Flickr

This is the time of year for New Years resolutions.  One of the most popular resolutions is to lose weight.  To make the resolution real, you must make it a goal, then find  your plan for reaching that goal.

Before you jump in and make a New Year’s Resolution think about it. It is easy in a moment of inebriation or frustration to declare “I am going to lose weight this year.” This resolution is also very easy to break. Why? Is it because you are addicted to overeating, or you enjoy the couch too much, or you are lazy? These may or may not be true, but are not the main reason the resolution might fail. The main reason is because the resolution is too vague.

How can you accomplish a New Years resolution objective if you do not have any way of measuring your progress towards accomplishing it?  We need a goal to strive for.  This goal needs to be reachable and reasonable.  You must have reasons why you want to be successful. If it is to lose 10 pounds to  fit into a size smaller prom dress you have a reasonable goal for most people.  The time you have to reach it is 3 or 4 months. If you lose the 10 pounds early, then you will have to maintain it until the prom. If you wait, you may not be able to lose it quickly enough.  Another thought:  what happens after the prom?  Do you forget about your weight and gain it right back?  Or do you continue to maintain a healthy weight?

For those of us who have more than a few pounds to lose, we have to follow through with a long term goal.  We have to change habits in our lives:  eating, sleeping, activity, schedules, etc.  Our resolution needs to contain levels of accomplishment.  One way to do this is to make our goal 10 pounds, then another 10, etc.   Say someone is 229 pounds and need to be about 140  pounds.   Make your first goal to get into the 200 teens, then the 200’s, then the 190’s etc.  Make it totally unacceptable in your mind to be above the goal.  Most of us, including me, are too comfortable at our heavier weight. How can you obtain a goal unless you feel it is a meaningful goal?

If you do not like the sub goals of  tens of pounds, try a percentage of the total pounds you are at the initial point.  So, if you start at 200 pounds and lose 10 percent of your body weight, you would be at 180 pounds.  In this instance, you simply need to know what percentage of your original weight your goal weight is.  For example, you weight 200 at the initial point, your healthy weight is 150 pounds, you need to lose 50/200 or 25% of your weight.

In weight loss, you also need to keep the time frame reasonable.  It is reasonable to lose 5 to 10 pounds the first week or so IF you have not been watching your food intake and IF you go on a strict 1500 calorie diet.  Most of the initial weight loss will probably be excess water weight.  After that, the safe weight loss rate is 1 to 2 pounds a week.

I have mentioned defining your goal in your resolution and making a reasonable time line.  The time line must be flexible as you will have plateaus in your weight loss.  To reach your goal, you need to decide what your eating plan will be, what your activity or exercise plan will be, and work on changing your mental attitude and picture of yourself.  I will not expand on that here.  That is the plan or the journey you will be starting on.  The resolution is the beginning of an interesting and challenging journey.

How do you plan on keeping your weight resolution?

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MAGIC HELP Touchstones for Weight Loss Part 3 ‘G’

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Touchstones - Magic Help

The touchstone for today is ‘G’ – goals.  This touchstone is to remind you not only of your ultimate goal, and the reasons for the goal, but also for your more immediate goals. To this end, I encourage you to set up a chart to trace your performance daily:

  1. Staying on your eating program
  2. Activity for the day – type, time, and count (if applicable)
  3. Thoughts, feeling, frustrations in a journal type entry
  4. Your goal for the week and motivation for the week.

In the ‘M’ touchstone I mentioned having a list of what you were going to eat for the day.  This performance record can be kept at the bottom of you list.  As you line out the foods you eat, you can enter the thoughts you have and the activities you do.  Also very important is to put foods you eat outside the program and why you ate them – we will get into why later with the ‘C’ touchstone.

Let’s get back to talking about Goals.  Your ultimate goal will be the weight you determined to be your goal.  Hopefully you made this an obtainable goal.  You can always lower it when you near the first goal.  So, say you are 220 lbs and think you should be 115 pounds.  There is nothing wrong in making 150 pounds your goal, and then deciding to go to 130 pounds, then again lowering it to 120 pounds, etc.  That way, if you feel good at 150 pounds – good, you are there.  But if you want to try to go further, you can.

Although we think about the goal as being pounds lost, there are other goals we have.

  1. Become healthier
  2. Become fitter
  3. Become stronger

Don’t lose sight of these goals.  They are the ones which will keep your motivation up.

While time goals are OK – they tend to put demands on us, stressing us out when we don’t meet them, depressing us and encouraging us to give up.  For those reasons, I don’t recommend setting time goals.  I had one year in my mind as the length of time it should take me.  Watch that ‘should’ word.  We will talk about it again in the ‘I’ and ‘L’ touchstones.  I have reached the one year, but not the goal.  So I have to shrug off the time limit and determine to continue – because I deserve to be a slimmer, healthier me.

Each week we need to go over our progress, do the weigh-in (around the same time of day each time) and once a month do our measurements.  Remember, if we lose 10% if our initial body weight, our health is better.  See this post about measurements and tracking table.

As we contemplate the past week, we can see what patterns evolve.  If we ate extra foods, we see what types and what was happening – a special event, an emotional time of loneliness or sadness, a stressful time.  Then we can determine if this was a choice we made, or if it was a situation we could deal with in a different way.  Such as loneliness – maybe call a friend or family member – walk over to the neighbors to say HI – talk a long walk and enjoy the outside – even take a bath by candlelight.  Then the next time it comes up, we have alternatives to eating.

Check to see if you drank your water, stayed within the program eating, choose healthy snacks, did our activity.  Think about the next week.  Write down what your motivation will be this week.  Then write a goal for that week.  For example, you find that you walked an average of 7000 steps per day (10,000 steps a day is the standard).  Make a goal to up that average by 200 or more steps a day.  A good pedometer will track your steps each day and even keep 7 days worth of data for you.

One of the most important factors is – do not put yourself down for missing your goal.  Instead, look for the things you did ‘correctly’ and give yourself a pat on the back, like you remembered to write everything down or your off plan eating diminished.  Nothing will be gained by being hard on yourself – actually, it could push you into giving up.  The only way you won’t reach the ultimate goal is if you give up.

Keep reminding yourself ‘I deserve to be a slimmer, healthier me”.

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