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I bet you already know that fitness, nutrition and weight loss resolutions are the #1 kind set in the USA.  Sadly, 92% of Americans will fail to keep their resolutions in 2021. Fortunately for you, you’re reading this article so you can be part of the 8% in 2021.

Here are 5 Failproof Ways to Make A Fitness Resolution Stick:

1. Start with one – setting yourself up for success is pretty much the opposite of reality TV.  On reality TV you move to a Ranch and change every aspect of how you eat, move, sleep, etc. and sacrifice the rest of your life to lose the most weight.  This makes for great TV, but fails 99% of the contestants and doesn’t even work for a short period of time if you can’t abandon your family.

In real life single-tasking produces the best results.  When people have one habit to change they have an 85% success rate, at two habits it drops to 35%, and at 3 habits the success rate drops to less than 10%.  It feels like you’ll get better results by tackling everything at once, however the opposite is true – you’ll be busier, more stressed, yet have less to show for it.

2. Where should women start? We’ve been coaching mostly women for over 20 years and there are two skills that seem to make the biggest difference in success: (a) getting 3 workouts per week, and (b) eating 3-4 times a day without snacking. Why these two?  

On the mental/emotional-side getting 3 strength training workouts per week (a) gives women a reason and a routine of carving out regular time for self-care1, (b) literally boost self-discipline and self-control, and (c) provides a vastly superior outlet for stress vs. food.  On the physical side it (a) is the only thing you can do that actually increases your metabolism2, (b) won’t make you ravenously hungry like long cardio sessions will, and (c) literally makes the tasks you do everyday easier/less exhausting (this is pretty amazing!)

Eating 3-4 times a day is a refreshingly simple and incredibly effective way to establish calorie control.  When humans have (a) unlimited access to excessively tempting food and (b) graze all day long they almost always overeat.

But, what about eating 6 small meals per day? Josef actually wrote and entire article on that myth over here. And the short version is three-fold (1) your muscles don’t atrophy without a steady supply of protein – research shows that it takes a full 60 hours with no food before your body burns it’s muscle.  (2) The more often you eat the hungrier you will be. (3) Eating 6 meals a day was started as a weight-gaining strategy for bodybuilders when anabolic steroids became available.

3. Find your real motivation – Josef started exercising so people would stop calling him”blubber thing”, but that was short-lived motivation.  Once he got past where people stopped making fun of him, he found it impossible to stay consistent.  He would then regain weight until teased again, and the cycle would continue. This – working out so that he would lose weight and not be teased – is extrinsic motivation, and this is the yo-yo cycle that it produces.

Stepping off the motivation roller-coaster requires tapping into your intrinsic motivation. Intrinsic motivation is when you do something for it’s own sake – it’s fun, interesting, aligns with your deeply held values (vs. what others tell you that you “should” do), it makes you feel good, it allows you to be a better you. These days I primarily workout because it makes me feel good, and does more to make me a better mom, wife, boss, friend than anything else.

4. Dare to be fat – educator Charlotte Selver said, “if you dare to be fat, you can be thin.”  What she means is that if you make it OK to fail and make mistakes, then you can succeed.  The psychological concept is called ego involvement which is when your self-esteem is conditional depending on your results.  An example is saying that you’ll like yourself more when you lose 20 pounds.  Sure, getting fed up with yourself will give you a quick hit of rocket fuel, but, as you and I have already experienced, this ego involvement leads to sabotage.

The reality is that in 2021 you will have days, weeks and even months where you lose no weight or even gain some.  You will eat both cookies and ice cream in 2021.  None of these things makes you a bad person.  They’re opportunities to refine your plan, change your approach, understand that extenuating circumstances exist (i.e. caring for a parent) will interrupt your weight-loss.  Most importantly noticing that you are making a mistake doesn’t make you a failure or mean you should give up.  

5. Schedule it: Research has shown that you’re 200% more likely to follow through on your good intentions if you have a written plan for them that includes what, when and where.  Furthermore, as a busy woman, your dance card is already full and people keep dumping stuff in your lap. So, if your workout time isn’t already reserved in your calendar in advance, then someone or something else is probably going to consume that time.  You can still be flexible with a regular schedule and manage those commitments as needed, but without a regular schedule there is nothing to manage and your time just gets away from you when you’re busy.

Here’s to a Healthy and Happy 2021!!

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Guide To Eating Out And Staying On Track!


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