Struggling to keep your weight loss motivation and
need some inspiration to continue with your diet? Dietitian Juliette Kellow
gives you more fabulous motivational tips to keep you on track.
So you’re back to where you need to be, but now,
out of the blue, the pounds are no longer falling off and you’re starting to
get niggling doubts about whether you can really reach your goal. Worse still,
you’re craving all your favourite comfort foods and the idea of exercising has
suddenly lost its appeal.
Look forwards rather than
backwards
Don’t dwell on your experiences with diets in the
past. The chances are if you need to lose weight now, they weren’t right for
you.Whilst it’s probably easy to find examples of times when you’ve felt
demotivated with your diet in the past, given up and quickly regained those
lost pounds, this doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed to happen this time.
Thinking negatively will almost certainly result in
you giving up. So instead, put past dieting failures behind you and instead
focus on the success that lies ahead.
Reflect on your successes
Start by reminding yourself how much better and
healthier you already feel. Then look at some old pictures of yourself when you
were bigger and reflect on the differences in your appearance now. Doesn’t it
feel great to have more prominent cheekbones, slimmer arms or a trimmer waist?
Put on an old item of clothing that used to be
tight – there’s no better feeling than trying on a pair of trousers that you
couldn’t get past your hips and can now do up at the waist! Checking out your
overall weight and inch loss to date can also really help to give you a
boost.
Hopefully, you’ll have been monitoring your
progress on WLR’s target charts, so you can quickly check out just how far
you’ve already come and boost your motivation to continue your diet.
Do some maths
If your motivation to lose weight is sliding, dig
out a pen and paper and attempt to add up all the hours you’ve spent in the
last month worrying about things like:
- your weight
- your shape
- what you eat
- what you don’t eat
- feeling guilty about not exercising
- how you look in your clothes
- whether people are looking at you
- if your health is suffering
- anything else that’s linked to your size
Now add up the number of hours in that month where
you’ve felt great about your size, shape and diet. Chances are you’ll find a
massive difference in the two numbers, with negative thoughts seriously
outnumbering positive ones.
Ask yourself whether you really want to go another
month wasting so many precious hours thinking negatively about your weight,
health, eating and exercising habits. When you think positively, you’ll
generally feel happier with the result that you’ll regain your motivation to
diet and achieve your weight loss goals.
Get to grips with a weight loss
plateau
Jumping on the scales after a hard week of dieting
only to discover you haven’t lost as much as a pound can be seriously
disappointing and demotivating. But sadly it’s very common.
Research suggests that after four to five weeks of
steady weight loss, some people even increase in weight by about a pound. Why
this happens isn’t clear but it’s probably the result of our metabolism
adjusting and seems to be the body’s way of ‘catching up’ with its sudden
change in size.
Many slimmers see this plateau as a sign that their
diet isn’t working, lose their motivation to lose weight and so give up and
quickly pile the weight back on.
Understanding that your weight may stabilise for a
few weeks – and looking at this as your body sending you a positive message
that it’s been through some pretty big changes and is preparing for more –
really can help to keep you positive and focused during this difficult time and
regain your weight loss motivation.
Pay attention to your food diary
People who regularly write down everything they eat
and drink are generally more successful at losing weight – and keeping it off.
The reason: it helps to keep them focused on every single morsel that passes their
lips.
After several weeks or months of dieting many of us
get complacent about keeping our food diary because we think we know what we
are doing. As a result, it’s all too easy for portion sizes to gradually
increase, more treats to creep back in and old bad habits such as skipping
breakfast to return.
Unsurprisingly, the scales stop moving in the right
direction and we end up feeling miserable and lose our motivation to lose
weight. If you’re not already keeping a diary, get back into the habit of
writing down everything you eat and drink – and watch those pounds start
dropping while your diet motivation soars.
Cut calories a little
It might not sound like a great way to get you
motivated, but if the scales have been static for several weeks then cutting
your calorie intake slightly may be all it takes to get them moving again.
There’s a good reason why you should reduce the
number of calories you have as the pounds fall off.
Quite simply when you lose weight, you need less
energy to move around, and so need fewer calories to continue losing weight at
the same rate. The good news is, WLR does all the hard work for you, so as the
pounds drop, your daily calorie allowance is adjusted to suit your new lower
weight.
Get support
Surrounding yourself with a good support network
really can help to spur you on so enlist the help and support of friends and
family.
- is there a friend you could exercise with?
- could your partner also do with eating a more healthy diet?
- could you encourage your work colleagues to do a fruit run rather than a chocolate run every afternoon?
Source: http://www.weightlossresources.co.uk/weight_loss/weight_loss_tips/motivation-weight-loss.htm
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