Motivation, or the lack of motivation, seems to be an ongoing challenge
for many people. They do well for a little while, but then their
motivation wanes and they find themselves off plan and struggling to get
back on track.
Dr. Andersen, in his fabulous book Dr. A's Habits of Health,
writes about motivation in Chapter 3. He says that most of us try to
make changes because we're wanting to solve a problem or trying to get
rid of an unwanted situation (being overweight, having health issues
related to obesity, etc.). Dr. Andersen calls this "conflict-driven
motivation" and states that is one of the major reasons people yo-yo.
The
problem is that once we start to feel better, even if the situation
hasn't changed much, we feel less pressured to change. Once the
pressure lessens, the original behavior inevitable returns. For
example, my all-time high weight was 268, and it was at this weight that
I was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. I suddenly had motivation to change,
because I wanted to get rid of an unwanted situation - diabetes. I went
on a weight loss plan (not Take Shape for Life) and over the next several months I
managed to lose 36 pounds. I was now 232 pounds - still morbidly obese
for my 5'5" small frame, but I felt better and I had dropped a couple
of sizes. Because I lost some weight, my blood sugar stayed within
acceptable limits without the need for medication. Guess what happened
next? I lost focus and gained all of the weight back!
Because my
focus was on moving away from my top weight and getting rid of my
diabetes, once I had done both, I felt less pressure and ultimately
became vulnerable to all of the temptations that surrounded me. I
started congratulating myself (WAY prematurely, by the way) on all of my
success, then felt I "deserved" a treat here and there. Before long,
the treats were more "here" than "there" and the pounds piled back on;
my blood sugar also started rising again.
Dr. Andersen's
suggestion is that we motivate ourselves by focusing on what we want,
not on what we don't want. That may sound simple, and it is, but is
fundamentally different than being motivated by what we don't
want. Instead of thinking about wanting to fix our bad health (a
problem orientation), he encourages us to focus on creating health (an
outcome orientation).
Shortly after starting on 5&1, I began
to focus on earnest on what I wanted - being thin and healthy - instead
of what I was trying to move away from. I did not post before pictures
of me on the refrigerator as a way to motivate me to stay on plan,
because I wasn't focusing on where I'd been - only on where I was
going. Since creating health is an on-going journey, reaching my goal
was an important point on the journey, but not the end. That has helped
me to stay at a healthy weight for the past four years.
I
really encourage each of you to think about what you want - think about
and envision where you want to go. Get a mental picture of what you
will look like and what your life will look like when you reach goal,
then head in that direction! Don't spend a lot of time looking back,
because it's counter-productive and won't take you in the direction you
want to go. When you drive, you don't focus on the rearview mirror, so
don't do that on this journey, either!
Focus on your goal - what
it is you want to create in your life - then make the choices necessary
to reach your goal. You'll get there one day, one meal, and one choice
at a time. Choose wisely :-)
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