What's My Motivation? Identifying Why Weight Loss matters
Through
Thick & Thin
A ttitude and motivation are critical in successful weight
loss efforts. It's important to understand the health benefits
that come from losing excess weight, but for sheer inspiration,
it's most helpful to identify the reasons that you personally
want to lose weight, and use them to keep you going.
The big reunion is coming up. You want the
energy to play ball with your kids. You've been seriously
frightened by a near-fatal heart attack. Maybe you're just
sick and tired of being sick and tired.
Or if you live
in Florida-maybe you've seen people around you hurt, economically devastated,
just folks who've lost so much, and you suddenly appreciate your health and want
to improve and preserve it.
Typically, the
main reasons for wanting to lose weight are to feel better and look better, but
the nuances to those motivations are as varied as the people who have them.
During the
hurricanes, we considered the dramatic motivation that kind of event can offer
to someone who needs to get healthy. But most of us are inspired to lose weight
by something far more mundane, so it can be helpful to figure out ways that even
the humblest motivations can support our overall weight-loss efforts.
Identifying
personal motivators
Patients
facing a new weight-loss attempt aren't always terribly excited about the
prospect. Some don't want to change, but their health problems have forced them
into it. Many have been browbeaten into it. Others have tried before and failed.
Often the
first thing we have to do with patients is help them identify their own
motivation for losing weight. There's usually some compelling reason that gets
people to start a weight-loss effort. For a woman, it might be a question about
when your baby is due-but you're not pregnant! For a man, he might notice the
activities at this year's company picnic seemed so much more difficult than last
year.
These turning
points are often the impetus for an effort, but by themselves, they won't keep
us on task. No single incident or experience, no matter how jarring, can
continue to stand up to the daily onslaught of "eat-more" messages and our own
ingrained, unconscious habits. We have to dig a little deeper to find values
that are at least as ingrained as our bad habits, to identify positive goals
that we want to achieve as much as we want to avoid the negative consequences of
our overweight.
If you are
getting ready to take another stab at losing weight and getting healthy, or even
if you just need some new vigor to a current effort, try this simple approach
for getting focused.
Get yourself
some index cards. Sit down and think about what benefits you hope to get from
losing weight. Write one such benefit per card, as many as you can think of.
"I'll be able
to wear my red dress again." "I will sit comfortably in movie seats." "I won't be winded from going up the
stairs." "I will feel
more self-confident when I walk into a room." "My life will increase in both
quantity and quality." "Regular sunglasses will fit my head."
When you are
finished, organize the note cards by your own priorities. If you've got 60 or 85
or 100 reasons, the mental exercise might take a while, but there's a benefit to
the very process. You have to look at each idea, think about it, weigh it
against others, let it sink into your consciousness.
Identify your
top five most important benefits of losing weight. Write these top five on some
other index cards, and keep one in your purse or wallet, another in your car,
another at your work. What you've done is identify what truly motivates you.
Take a look. It might be quite different than the reason that "made you" decide
to lose weight.
Play
offense, play defense
Now you have a
tool to help you do the mental work of weight loss. That's helpful in a couple
ways. You can review this deck of personal motivators daily. Start your day by
flipping through the cards. Take the time to read them slowly. Try reading them
out loud sometimes.
Pretty soon
you will memorize your motivations, but go through the stack each morning
anyway, to keep it green and fresh in your mind. The physical act of doing this
actually helps embed these ideas in your memory, just the way writing new words
several times helps kids remember their spelling better than just reading them.
If you are
tired and a bit grumpy, and you arrive to find someone has brought a plate of
fresh Danish in to work, lowering your cholesterol could be the furthest thing
from your mind, and it could be hard to remember what you wanted to lose weight
for.
But if you've
recently reviewed your list of benefits, it's a little easier. If you have it
written out and you can actually look at it in black and white, it's easier
still.
Everyone has
good days and bad days in any effort to change habits and lifestyle. On days
when you are feeling strong and committed, your list of benefits will feed that
feeling and further serve to inspire you.
But they're
perhaps even more useful when you're strength is not at its peak. The daily
practice of reviewing your motivations will help you bring these goals to mind
quickly and easily when temptation strikes, as it always does. And that's when
you need them most.
Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D. is a board certified Bariatric
Physicians, the medical specialty of weight management, and a board certified
Family Physician. She specializes in lifetime weight management at the
Cederquist Medical Wellness Center, her Naples, FL private practice.
Dr. Cederquist is a contributing medical editor for NBC-2 News, a trustee
of the American Society Of Bariatric Physicians and the author of " Helping Your
Overweight Child - A Family Guide", www.Amazon.Com or by Calling Toll-Free 1-800-431-1579.
If you are interested in a delicious, doctor-designed, foolproof plan for
fast and healthy weight loss please visit Dr. Cederquist's Diet-To-Your-Door
program by clicking here.