There are essentially two approaches
to behavior modification from a weight loss standpoint. They are
analogous to the two methods used when jumping into a cold swimming
pool, namely:
The "toe" method
Where you drop your various bits of anatomy in by the smallest
amount possible, slowly but surely, until your entire body is
immersed (typically several hours later),
The "ocean of daggers" method
Where you throw all caution to the wind and exchange the unpleasant
sensation of a thousand tiny freezing daggers attacking your entire
body for a few seconds for the immediacy of getting into the water.
To each his own, I suppose.
I've found in my experience that, given the choice, most people will
opt to get into a
fat loss program slowly rather than experience total
immersion. That is, that they prefer to tackle one thing at a time
rather than make large, grand, sweeping changes across the board.
I personally thought that this was the best way to go about things
since the individuals you see that are the most fired up
about starting a program are the ones that flame out the soonest.
Better to take things slowly and steadily, to insure that the
changes made are lasting.
However (surprisingly), I found this not to be the case.
In fact, while compliance may be slightly higher, success tends to be more elusive with the "one little thing at a time" method, vs. "change your whole life, and do it yesterday."
I've wondered why this is, and here are the reasons I've com
e up
with:
1) Making one little change at a time, while a more
comfortable method of transition, takes too long to deliver tangible
results, so motivation to continue wanes.
2) You put all your eggs in one basket - if you initiate 55
changes in your lifestyle but fail to follow through on 10 of them,
then you've still made a whole lot of changes for the better.
However, if you make only one change and fail to follow through on
it, well...
3) People take massive changes more seriously than little
ones. The very thing that makes the "one little thing" method so
much more pleasant (that you probably won't feel the difference
changing one thing makes) works against it.
It's so easy to forget about the "one little thing", since it's the
only aspect of your life that is different. Whereas, if one intends
to overhaul their entire life, well, that's not something you'll
forget about.
That takes us to the crux of the matter - that it is just as easy
(or difficult) to make little, piecemeal changes as it is huge,
tremendous changes, because both entail a change in mindset.
One
has to consciously decide that "this is the plan of action I intend
to take" (which is why goal-setting is the at the heart of every
single 'be a success' self-improvement regimen). The changes
themselves are not the stumbling blocks to progress, the change in
mindset is.
If you believe you will be over-fat, then you will be. Henry Ford
famously quipped, "If you think you can do a thing or think you
can't do a thing, you're right."
Now, don't think you need to go back to school and get a PhD in
psychology to
optimize fat loss. You just need to do "One Little Thing" -
take action, ASAP, right now, if possible. Set or review your
goals, follow your action plans (for intelligent exercise and proper
nutrition), and keep up the good work!
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