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Getting Your Head in The Right
Place for Weight Loss Success
Copyright ©
Joel Kaye, MA
Losing weight is most definitely about burning more calories than
you consume. Just as important as intake and output, however, is the
state of mind you are in when approaching weight loss. You can have
a library full of reference books and even have a chef and personal
trainer at your disposal just like the celebrities, but if you are
not mentally prepared to lose weight and have a diet plan that
supports your mind, your chances for success are next to nothing.
It takes more than just wanting to lose weight to have your mind
ready to work its power over the body. Most people who are
overweight or unhealthy because of their diet want to be in better
shape, yet still can’t succeed. In order to make real changes in
your weight, you have to get the mind to the point that it controls
the body – not the body telling the mind what it wants. That’s not
to say that your body doesn’t signal your brain about what it needs.
Cravings for certain healthy foods can be a trigger to tell your
mind to get some fresh veggies into your body. What the mind over
body theory means for losing weight is that you have to be mentally
strong.
Here are some ways to put your mind to work in your weight loss
efforts and stay mentally strong for the long haul:
1. Don’t let your physical appearance define who you are. If you are
not comfortable with the fact you have worth as an individual no
matter what you weigh, you will not feel any differently about
yourself when you lose the weight.
2. Make sure you want to lose weight for the right reasons. If you
are trying to lose weight so that you can be a stronger, healthier
person – and even a better looking person—then you will be
successful. If your only reason to lose weight is because you think
it will magically make bad situations in your life better, then you
are not as likely to have lasting success.
3. Don’t try to lose weight to please someone else. Weight loss has
to be for your self to be lasting. Trying to please a parent or
spouse might motivate you to get started, but won’t work for
lifetime maintenance.
4. Give the brain a healthy dose of positive thoughts. Just as you
would feed your body healthy food, the brain needs healthy thoughts
to be nourished and to thrive.
5. Let your diet feed your mind. If you have started a diet and
failed because you couldn’t stick with it then it didn’t do enough
to nourish your brain. Once you’ve decided you want to make changes,
it should be the responsibility of the right diet to make you
mentally able to stick with it. If you can’t, then the diet failed
you. You didn’t fail at dieting.
Many diets claim to offer quick results. That often gets people
mentally psyched up to start. When they see the results start to
slow as the body fights to keep from starving, it can make the
dieter extremely discouraged. Remember, that is the kind of diet
that didn’t support the mind. Weight loss that is healthy and
permanent involves a diet plan that feeds the mind as it nourishes
the body.
Joel Kaye holds a Masters Degree in Physical Health Education and he
is currently teaching classes at the prestigious New York
University's Coles Sports Center On Weight Management, Nutrition And
Exercise And Cancer Wellness. Find out how to achieve optimal health
at:
www.rightbraindiet.com
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