Many of us were prompted to start on Take Shape for Life because of a
crisis on our lives. Some of us received
a stern warning from our physician (God bless those physicians who are willing
to look their patients in the eyes and talk frankly about the health risks they’re
facing because of their obesity); some of us received lab work that revealed a
disease we were unaware of (a routine blood draw uncovered my own
diabetes). For others of us, our health
is fine at the moment, but we reached an emotional crisis – an “I can’t live as
an overweight person any more” moment.
Very few people start this program if their health is great and they’re
happy being overweight – a crisis of one kind or another is usually the
catalyst.
There is a fear of staying overweight, which is why we
started on the program, but we may also continue to deal with other fear – fear
of failing, fear of what would change in our lives if we really did get to
goal. That fear can paralyze us and keep
us in an oscillating gain-lose-gain cycle.
The fear of ultimately failing on this plan can keep us from just going
for it and can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The fear of what life might look like if we
were at goal can keep us from getting there.
I’ve seen people self-sabotage because it’s more comfortable staying
where they are, even if where they are is at an unhealthy weight, than risk
seeing their lives change by getting to goal.
Trust, on the other hand, can allow us to move forward into
unknown territory, and it makes all the difference! First of all, we can trust this program. It is a proven program with over 30 years
of research and history behind it. I
didn’t know much about Take Shape for Life when I started, but I knew that clinical studies proving the safety and efficacy our program have been done by both Johns Hopkins and the National Institutes of Health, and that’s all I needed to know in
order to trust that this was safe and effective. This
program has been recommended by over 20,000 physicians, and knowing
that also gave me a lot of reassurance.
Because of my own personal faith and relationship with Jesus
Christ, I also chose to trust God on my journey, looking to Him for the strength
I needed for each day. I have a dear
friend who has been my prayer partner for close to 20 years and she said something to
me that made a difference in my life – “fear and faith can’t stand in the same
spot, so you have to choose what you’re going to stand on.”
Fear keeps us at status quo – if we choose fear, we don’t
move forward. Faith and trust, however
small it may be, allows us to take the first step, and then the one
after that. Will you choose fear today, or will you choose trust?
Choose wisely :-)
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