Monday, January 3, 2011

The Power of Habits

Found an interesting article online about the power of eating habits and it includes some very important tips for creating new habits.  This is especially important in relation to the frustration caused by how strong a pull unhealthy habits can have.

Bad habits may be hard to extinguish and lapses are common.  It is not about character strength (even though you really LOVE to blame yourself!) ...it's much more about chemicals in the brain, especially dopamine.  So set up the process of change correctly - you don't want it to be any harder than it needs to be!

So the key points are - 
Rrepetition is important. Repeat the new habit over and over.  Lifelong habits don't change overnight...but they do change.  
Reward (esp. non food reward) is motivating.  
Expect stress to cause lapses but remember, forewarned is forearmed.  
And all types of change and novelty in our lives increases our ability to be flexible in our habits.

Enjoy.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40893205/ns/health-behavior/


The wonderful world of blogging

I have just spent about an hour trying to work out how to send out email alerts when I post to the blog.  WELL! was that a complex process or what?

Anyhoo, done successfully.  Please subscribe via email and then you won't need to remember to check the blog....the blog will come to you!

Saturday, January 1, 2011

A new year...a fresh start

I have been pondering for days what sort of earth-shatteringly important message I should convey at the start of a new year and the end of a decade.  In fact I've been so intent on finding exactly the right message, that the new year is already two days old!  

Anyway, all the things I wanted to say are more than a blog long, so I shall be sending messages throughout January about (hopefully) interesting and important things.

Sufficed to say, this is the time of year for New Year's Resolutions.  These are often hugely ambitious and more in the line of wishful thinking ("if I only had a magic wand" type of stuff).  Lose 100kg, turn my life around, exercise every day, never eat chocolate again and so on.  They're usually very black and white, i.e. if its not a complete success, it's a total failure.  Losing 99kg would be a failure, under these rules.

Think instead of what you can DO, rather than what you WISH would happen.  

Example:  I started to keep a food diary again and have specified a calorie limit (not very low I might add, but less than I've been consuming recently).  I went over the calorie limit yesterday but didn't break into a sweat and a tirade of self-loathing.  This is not because I am perfect (although parts of me are excellent - tee hee!) but because I am understanding that plus or minus 10% around that calorie limit is not going to make any difference at all in the long run.  So it's actually the mid-point in a range, not an absolute limit.  Remember, it's not the food that makes you fat.  Its the guilt, shame and self-loathing which causes you to eat more that makes you fat.  

Example:  I bought 20 visits to the local gym at the end of August 2010.  I am probably going to my first session tomorrow, January 3rd.  YES, really!  I signed up and just could not force myself to go.  And I enjoy lifting weights.  Strange.... Rather than smacking myself upside the head and finding solace at the bottom of a bag of something greasy, I asked myself why?  What was the blockage?  And I eventually realised that I was totally burnt out from my paid employment, hating every day I spent doing that work and really needed to make a major decision.  I cut that work commitment in half, and that didn't fix things....it just gave me a bit of breathing space.  Fast forward to December and I made the decision to completely eliminate that stressor from my life.  I knew that, during these last few months, the best I could manage exercise-wise was to walk the dogs.  Once again, no guilt, shame and self-loathing attached to this postponement of commencing weight training.  

Clients often think that if they are not tough on themselves they will just continue to balloon and eventually need a crane to remove them from their house.  Not so. This is not a carte blanche to continue to indulge in unhealthy practices and unhelpful coping strategies.  Treating yourself with kindness, understanding, respect never is.  You probably wouldn't be as mean to your worst enemy as you are to yourself at times.  That inner critical voice probably helped you write those new year's resolutions.  Tell that voice "thank you for your input" but I've decided to focus on what's possible, not what's perfect.  And go rewrite that list in a S.M.A.R.T.er way.  That is

SPECIFIC - no vagueness e.g. I want to be slim - what's that?
MEASURABLE - in kilos, pounds, inches, dress size, running for buses, reducing cholesterol by x points.
ACHIEVABLE - this is the biggie - NO ONE loses 100kg in a year and keeps it off.
RELEVANT - don't sign up for singing lessons if you want to lose weight
TIME FRAMED - so that you can plan what you need to be doing this week in order to get where you want to be in 3 months time.

So this is actually a lot longer post that I intended it to be, which means that when I sit down and get thinking in front of the keyboard, stuff happens.  And now with kindness, compassion, understanding and respect I will acknowledge this piece of learning and resolve to do the same thing next time I want to blog.  But right now the dogs need walking.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

You will still be the same person after you lose weight.

http://www.theage.com.au/lifestyle/wellbeing/the-downside-to-downsizing-20101210-18sj1.html

I love her comment:



"Best tip for maintaining motivation
Stay calm and believe that you really can do this. Once I stripped the emotion away from weight loss and looked at it as the mechanical process that it is, it suddenly seemed doable." (emphasis from me)
Remember, overweight is not a sin, being slim does not make you a more worthwhile person.  So approach it like any other life problem - develop a plan...make a commitment.....expect good (not perfect) from yourself.....acknowledge your achievements.


Thursday, December 9, 2010

No one is immune!

Check out this article written by a physician who was obese and he talks about how he was mocked and derided and sidelined in his profession because of his weight.


As a species this seems to be the last bastion of prejudice - excess weight.  And of course we all internalize the concept that its a character flaw or personality defect.  In reality overeating is "A COPING MECHANISM FOR DEALING WITH EMOTIONAL ISSUES THAT IS INEFFECTIVE IN THE LONG TERM" just as smoking, drinking, retail therapy, cannabis and other recreational drugs are.  

Think about challenging your own prejudices about excess weight and stand out from the crowd (or should I say herd).  Remember no one can make you feel inferior without your consent (good old Eleanor Roosevelt).



Saturday, December 4, 2010

Obesity as Metaphor

Sadly I can't take credit for that phrase.  But I love the eloquent way Jennette Fulda writes about the concept of obesity as a character flaw in her blog PastaQueen.

Here's the link

In fact I've been telling my clients this for years.  Now I just have some better words to use in the summary of this flawed argument.

If I find more, interesting blogs or sites that are balanced, appropriate and, hopefully, humorous I'll let you know.

And if you're surprised that I've blogged twice in one day....so am I!

In the "Lap" of the gods

When all else fails.....there's always a lapband.  Is it the perfect solution that is the easy way out?  No.  Is it a great help for people who have life threatening obesity-related diseases/conditions?  Yes.

For a balanced view of this and similar weight loss tools, check these articles out.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40498098/  this one talks about reducing the BMI level for lapband surgery so that people with lower levels of obesity can become eligible.  The article warns, however, that "experts stress that the Lap-Band cannot stop deeply ingrained behavior that drives people to overeat. "  And   "There are certainly people who've had gastric bypass surgery and managed to turn themselves back into their original size by sipping on milkshakes all day."   

What does this mean?  A lapband is no substitute for dealing with the use of food to control mood.  Otherwise, people WILL find a way to continue to cope by eating, in some form or another.  Or they will find another unhealthy behaviour to use as a coping mechanism (e.g. drinking, spending etc.)

For some people the combination of lapband and emotional eating counselling may be the best option - but my advice is get the counselling first, before you spend $15,000 dollars on a "fingers crossed" procedure because you've "tried every diet under the sun and failed".  Of course that was a failure, but YOU didn't fail the diet, the DIET failed you.  And the failed diet plus the guilt and shame it engenders may well be the reason you are overweight/obese. 

And this article talks about an interesting phenomenon for people who have lost weight through bariatric surgery.  Guess what...you're still the same person, you're just 50kg lighter.  This busts the myth that when you become slim...life will be perfect.  Damn, this really bugs me.  I, too, am guilty of putting things off and expecting miraculous change when I lose the last 15 - 20 kg that persists.  I think after all the years of dieting (I have probably lost 200kg over the years - and gained 220kg) I deserve to have life offer me health, wealth, happiness, love, confidence etc. etc. etc.  The truth is that this is something that you have to go and get for yourself, no matter what your weight is.  

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36784702/ns/health-behavior/  read it and weep...or resolve to be your best self no matter what your weight is.

So get your hand out of the cookie jar right now and go for a walk!