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Tips
For Keeping Your New Year's
The New
Year is quickly creeping up on us. Do you have a New Year’s Resolution?
Well, if you’re like most Americans (88 percent in 2001 according
to a General Nutrition Centers poll), you have at least one resolution.
And, if you are like the majority of these promise-makers, your resolution
is probably related to health and fitness. In 2001 (according to GNC),
55 percent promised to eat healthier, 50 percent resolved to exercise
more, and 38 percent wanted to lose weight.
While resolutions
are well-intentioned, unfortunately most people fail at keeping them.
With all the hype surrounding these promises, it’s easy to get caught
up in them without really taking them seriously.
We live in
a throw-away society and even our resolutions, I’m afraid, are not
immune. However, especially for promises that include improving our health
it’s in our best interest to not take them lightly.
So,
what’s the secret to successful resolutions? While you can’t
wave a magic wand and make your resolution come true, there are some easy
steps to take to make it easier to fulfill your promise to yourself.
•
Choose an obtainable goal. Resolving to look like a super model
is not realistic for the majority of us, but promising to include daily
physical activity in our lives is very possible.
• Avoid choosing a resolution that you’ve been unsuccessful
at achieving year after year. This will only set you up for failure,
frustration and disappointment. If you are still tempted to make a promise
that you’ve made before, then try altering it. For example, instead
of stating that you are going to lose 30 pounds, try promising to eat
healthier and increase your weekly exercise.
• Create a game plan. At the beginning of January,
write a comprehensive plan. All successful businesses start with a business
plan that describes their mission and specifics on how they will achieve
it. Write your own personal plan and you’ll be more likely to succeed
as well.
• Break it down and make it less intimidating.
Rather than one BIG end goal, dissect it into smaller pieces. Set several
smaller goals to achieve throughout the year that will help you to reach
the ultimate goal. Then even if you aren’t able to reach your final
goal, you will have many smaller, but still significant, achievements
along the way. For example, if your goal is to complete a 10K race, your
smaller goals could be running a 5K in less than 30 minutes, adding upper
and lower body strength training to increase your muscular endurance,
and running 2 miles with a personal best completion time.
• Ask friends and family members to help you so you have
someone to be accountable to. Just be sure to set limits so that
this doesn’t backfire and become more irritating than helpful. For
example, if you resolve to be more positive ask them to gently remind
you when you start talking negatively.
Reward yourself with each milestone. If you’ve stuck with your resolution
for 2 months, treat yourself to something special. But, be careful of
your reward type. If you’ve lost 5 pounds, don’t give yourself
a piece of cake as an award. Instead, treat yourself to a something non-food
related, like a professional massage.
• Don’t go it alone! Get professional assistance.
Everyone needs help and sometimes a friend just isn’t enough. Sometimes
you need the help of a trained professional. Don’t feel that seeking
help is a way of copping out. Especially when it comes to fitness, research
studies have shown that assistance from a fitness professional greatly
improves peoples success rate.
• Limit your number of promises. You’ll spread
yourself too thin trying to make multiple changes in your life. This will
just lead to failure of all of the resolutions.
On average
only about 20% of us keep our New Year’s resolutions. Unfortunately,
some of the biggest failures are found in fitness resolutions. But don’t
let the statistics get you down. By following the tips above you’ll
be better equipped to fall into the successful 20% category. If you need
professional help with a fitness-related resolution, visit www.workoutsforyou.com
for help.
Written by
Lynn Bode, owner of WorkoutsForYou.com. Workouts For You provides affordable
online exercise programs to help you lose weight, tone-up, build muscles,
increase stamina and more. http://www.workoutsforyou.com
Health Discovery is independently owned & operated
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Weight Watchers is a registered trademark of Weight Watchers
International, Inc. Points are trademarks of Weight Watchers International,
Inc. Authentic information about the program is only available at
your local Weight Watchers meeting. This site is not affiliated
with Weight Watchers International in any way, and Weight Watchers
has not reviewed this site for accuracy or suitability for WW members.
Information on this site is based on recollections and assumptions
of it's author and is not warranted for any purpose by it's author.
All readers are encouraged to go to a Weight Watcher's meeting for
actual WW info. This site is presented under the rights of
the First Amendment; rights worth fighting for.
All information is intended for your general knowledge only and
is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific
medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any
specific health issues and consult your physician before starting
a new fitness regimen.