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Well guess what. The secret brain society in the back of my head is at it again! And what did I discover it was up to this time? Oh you won’t believe this. My “healthy lifestyle” has been operating under this one foundational principle: Eat as badly as you can but still lose weight. As you can imagine, that is a VERY fine line. Like ultra, super fine. And how does someone manage to eat as badly as they can and still lose weight? By having little to no margin in their diet. Let me explain.Let’s say my caloric range per day to lose 1-2 pounds a week is 1,200-1,500. And let’s say I eat the absolute maximum amount of calories each day: 1,500. How much margin does that leave me for error? Say, an extra cookie. Or a bite of Hubby’s garlic mashed potatoes. Or a couple of cheez-its. And that is assuming that I can control every single craving, urge, and desire to eat unhealthy. Where does that leave me? Out of my target range, in an instant. Which turns into stagnation or evening gaining. This also applies to the points system on Weight Watchers. I have a daily number of points that I can eat and my thought process behind the points has been the same. “I need to make sure and eat the maximum number of points each day to get the full value because darn it, I deserve every single one of those points!!” So I do and then when the evening munchies come on, I find myself diving into my weekly allotment of points. That would be okay once or twice a week but this behavior has been validated by my thought process of eating as badly as I can but still lose weight and many times I end up going over. The problem with this line of thinking is this: It teaches me to try and cheat the system. It sets me up for thinking “Oh, I tried so hard and it just doesn’t work for me!” and “No matter how much I suffer, I still can’t lose this weight!” That type of thinking doesn’t promote positive, healthy changes…. it reinforces the old behaviors that got me overweight to begin with. Now that I’ve realized this sneaky secret goal exists, I get the opportunity to re-train my way of thinking and re-align my behaviors. Old goal: Eat as badly as you can and still lose weight. New goal: Eat as healthy as you can to feel good. The interesting thing has been that once I changed the premise of my diet, the rest of me has followed. Now that my goal is to eat healthy to feel good, my thoughts, willingness, and motivation have followed. Eating crappy foods or snacks just doesn’t sound good because it doesn’t support the bottom line like it used to. And that brings us back to margin. Now I can create some margin between the amount of points I take in daily and how many I am allowed. Reaching my maximum points is not important anymore because it has nothing to do with eating as healthy as I can at each meal. So I end up with this margin of points at the end of the day. Which turns into weight loss. Go figure. Finally, that brings me back to the magic of those secret goals and thoughts. They are the ones we pay little attention to but end up driving our actions if we aren’t careful. How many more of them are out there? How many more are swimming around in my head? It makes me wonder and reminds me how important it is to stay mindful and pay attention to what I am actually thinking. Sounds crazy but it just might help.
Comments:
Steph on August 23rd, 2008 at 1:01 am #
Ooooo…thanks for the great post, Julie! I’ve recently started smoking again (it was almost a year) and I know I have to stop. Your post helped me realize that I was thinking about it all wrong. My goal was to stop smoking for many different reasons: don’t have the money for it, it smells, it’s dirty, it gives me headaches and zaps my energy, cancer doesn’t sound like a lot of fun, etc… Notice the negativity? I do now! Rather, I’d prefer to come up with a total health plan that includes BEING SMOKE FREE (positive, eh?) so that I can be healthy and energetic to live life to the fullest and pursue my passions! Thanks again, Julie. And I don’t think you’re crazy. My next post is “How the Climb Back on the Wagon when You’re Hanging on By Nail” and it’s all about having a vision, reminding yourself of your goals and choosing activities that promote their success.
Julie on August 24th, 2008 at 4:25 pm #
@ Steph - I was a smoker too and girl, I know how hard it is to quit! I love your total health plan idea and how you are going to make it a positive plan. It’s interesting how that positivity can be used in any situation… finances is a place I need to be using it as well. Let me know how it goes with your smoking!
Shiloah Baker on October 21st, 2008 at 9:22 pm #
Love your blog! I found it through the Healthy You challenge site. I’ve enjoyed your posts. It is a change of life/eating to become healthy. I have learned in the last six months to retrain my negative programming. Our subconscious minds have to reprogram too. I highly recommend the book “Feelings Buried Alive Never Die”. Post a comment
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