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By Australian outback,
schmoutback. If you're talking about a true survival challenge, you're
talking about weight loss. The tests: Surviving going to a buffet and
choosing the salad bar instead. Choosing to exercise during the one hour
you have to yourself. Staying motivated when you hit a plateau…. now
there's a challenge!
1.
Downing diet soda.
I am a guzzler. The waitresses at my favorite restaurants probably hate to
see me coming because I take the concept of "free refills" to the extreme.
It is not unusual for me to gulp down three or four glasses of soda at one
sitting. Once I decided to add up how many calories those sodas amounted
to. Can you believe I was drinking more than 2000 calories a day just in
soda? After years of swearing that I would never drink diet sodas, I
switched. I couldn't stand diet sodas at first, but the more I drank them,
I got used to them, and now I actually prefer some diet sodas to their
high-calorie counterparts.
2.
Exercising when I
don't want to.
Sometimes I can list a dozen things I could be doing instead of
exercising. It's hard not to give in. "Well, I really do need to
reorganize my closet. I could get ready so much more quickly in the
mornings if everything was grouped together by colors." The only thing
that gets me to exercise when I don't want to is to think about how I will
feel afterwards, knowing deep down that I have done something that is far
more beneficial than color-coding my closet.
3.
There are
also two other tricks I use to "force" myself to exercise. One is to
focus on the benefits besides weight maintenance. For example, when I
walk on my lunch break, I remind myself that it's to get fresh air after
being stuck in the office for four hours and to get moving after being
seated in front of my computer for a half a day. I know that it's good for
my mental health and emotional well-being to get that break and fresh and
air, and the brisk walk keeps me from getting the afternoon dullsville
syndrome.
4.
Another way
I get myself to just do it is to go ahead and change into my exercise
clothes, even if I think I don't feel like exercising. Most of the
time, I'll go ahead and break a sweat since I'm dressed for the occasion.
Granted, sometimes it doesn't work; once in a blue moon I'll end up doing
nothing but watching t.v. Subconsciously, I think I believe that channel
surfing can be considered an aerobic activity if I do it wearing spandex!
But nine times out of 10, I feel obligated to finish what I started and I
hop on the treadmill or pop in that exercise video.
5.
Pack up a portion.
I read this tip years ago in Prevention magazine and I recently
started putting it to use religiously. We all know how massive portion
sizes have become in restaurants. Cut your fat and calories in half by
dividing your meal into half as soon it is brought to your table and put
it in a container to take home. It cuts down on how much you are consuming
in one sitting, and provides you with a meal to heat up for lunch the next
day.
Go to Part 2 of "Weight Loss Survival Skills"
This content
is provided for informational purposes only and does not imply the
approval or recommendation by Weightloss.ms .
Always
consult a medical professional before significantly modifying your diet or
beginning an exercise program. |