WLS Lifestyles Magazine - Weight Loss Surgery Plateaus and Regain2010-02-08T00:37:56Zurn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6
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A Closer Look at Post-Surgery Regainurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2010-02-08T00:37:56ZA Closer Look at Post-Surgery Regain
By:
Lee Kern, MSW, LCSW
Category: Weight Loss Surgery
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Appreciating the reasons for regain may help you prepare to protect your success.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)The Moment of Stoppingurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2010-02-08T00:24:50ZThe Moment of Stopping
By:
Joan Swerdlow-Brandt, MSW and Dr. Robert Brandt, Ph.D.
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Do you know when you are satisfied? Get in touch with that moment by following these steps.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)The Power of Progress PlanningTMurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2010-02-08T00:12:08ZThe Power of Progress PlanningTM
By:
Dr. Russ L'HommeDieu, DPT
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Experiment and challenge yourself to find your perfect progress plan.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)How to Make Weight Loss Last: Lessons From My Dogurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2010-02-07T21:02:17ZHow to Make Weight Loss Last: Lessons From My Dog
By:
Katie Jay, MSW, National Association for Weight Loss Surgery
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Accept the reality of change for lasting weight loss… learn to WAG.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)How to Make Weight Loss LAST: Four Essential Ingredientsurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-11-02T11:11:34ZHow to Make Weight Loss LAST: Four Essential Ingredients
By:
Melissa McCreery, Ph.D., ACC
Category: Weight Management
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“I’ve failed at losing weight so many
times… how can I make a lifestyle
change that will last?” This is a question
I hear over and over from potential
clients. Many people know how to lose
weight; they know how to get started
on a healthy lifestyle transformation.
What they can’t figure out, is how to
make these changes stick.
If you aren’t incorporating the necessary
components, efforts to lose weight or
rein in emotional eating can become
part of a vicious self-defeating cycle.
No one wants to start a program, fall
off track, feel defeated, resort to the old
self-defeating habits (like overeating for
comfort or stress-relief ) and then feel
like you are back at square one all over
again. Unfortunately, this happens a lot.
There are key ingredients you MUST
incorporate if you want to create an
effective recipe for weight loss success.
Once you understand the importance
of these concepts, you can create
specific strategies and approaches that
will work for you and that will fit your
life, your needs, and your preferences.
These four essential ingredients are very
powerful, and when used consistently,
they will impact your life and your ability
to achieve your goals in a much deeper
and more effective way than any diet
every will.
A powerful approach to permanently
changing your relationship with food
and health must include these crucial
ingredients…
1. Structure: When you are working to change the way
you eat or begin an exercise plan, including structure is an
important way to keep things in action and to create a routine.
Especially in the beginning, you will benefit from some kind
of schedule or plan that tells you what needs to happen when.
Examples of structures might be committing to a class, setting
a recurring appointment to meet with a friend, pre-planning
your menus and mealtimes, or setting up a consistent appointment
with a coach or a specialist. What you want to do is pick
the most challenging part of your new plan and find a way to
structure it. This is an especially helpful ingredient if you are
someone who is busy and juggling many responsibilities.
Setting your structure creates a routine. Routines simplify
your decision making. For example, a client recently signed up
for a belly dancing class that meets twice a week for six weeks.
By making one decision, she structured twelve workouts for
herself. She now knows what (belly dancing classes) she will
do when. If she didn’t have the structure of the class, each day
she might have to make a new decision (or not) about what
her workout would be and when she would do it. Without a
structure, each day is a unique challenge and a new set of decisions.
The more decisions you face, the greater the potential
for not following through.
Pre-plan and pre-schedule your most challenging activities.
Don’t neglect to decide when you are going to do that
workout or grocery shopping or meal planning! Implementing
structure is essential, because you can have all the best
tools at your fingertips, but if you aren’t finding the time to
take action, those tools will do you no good.
2. Motivation: Most people who’ve been around the
block a few times with food and weight struggles worry about
their ability to stay motivated. Building motivation into your
plan from the very beginning is one of the most valuable
things that you can do. As you are developing your plan of action,
it’s important to ask yourself what you will need to stay
motivated. Have you planned in rewards or small milestones
to acknowledge along the way? What will make the journey
more enjoyable and one that you will want to continue?
One of my clients created a great solution for monitoring
her motivation. Each Sunday she evaluates her plan for
the coming week, and as a part of that process, she rates her
motivation and asks herself what she needs to tweak, adjust,
or add so that she will keep moving toward her goals over the
next seven days. She doesn’t take motivation for granted.
Another motivation factor to consider, which many people
neglect, is whether you are creating a lifestyle plan that will
work for you. Don’t expect yourself to eat food that you hate,
or exercise in a way that just doesn’t match your style, your
schedule, or your preferences. One of the most powerful
things you can do to enhance your motivation is to create an
individualized plan that won’t fail you. This means having
a plan that feeds you—that is responsive to your needs and
desires. What does this mean? It means that to curb overeating
you must look at what overeating is helping you cope with
and start to include some alternative ways to help yourself
with those situations.
If you want to stop using food to meet your emotional
needs, or as a way to respond to stress, or as a reward or celebration,
you won’t stay motivated to do so unless you decide
what you are going to do instead to address those needs. It’s a
simple fact. No one stays motivated if they aren’t getting what
they need.
3. Accountability: Once you have a plan for action,
how do you make sure that you will follow through? Incorporating
accountability into your action plan is crucial. It’s
especially important for busy people who already have a lot
on their plate and are trying to establish new habits. If you
want to ensure that your new plan doesn’t fall off your radar,
you need accountability. For each action step, you need to
consider: when you are going to follow through (planning
your meals or doing the workout or buying the health groceries)
and how you will ensure that you do so.
A coach, a support group, or even an online message board
can be a great way to create accountability. Publically setting
your intention and reporting back afterwards works for many
people. Involving someone else in your accountability can be
extremely effective. This is one of the main reasons people
hire personal trainers and life coaches. Change is difficult and
everyone has unhelpful inner critics that can sabotage us and
lead us off track. Something I frequently do for my clients is
to point out how they are getting in their own way—and help
them figure out how to get back in action. One of the most
powerful ingredients for change is having someone in your
corner who holds your agenda for you and gently, but firmly,
helps you stick to it.
4. Support. Support may be the most important ingredient
for creating lasting weight change. Everyone hits rough
patches, gets stuck, and faces challenges and lapses in motivation.
Your support system is what you can lean on—what supports
you—when you can’t provide yourself all the gusto that
you need. The right support system can even assist you with
structuring your plan, and providing motivation and accountability.
In fact, a good support system can help you create (and
keep creating) your winning plan for success. Support is not
simply people who care about you. The support I’m describing
here is active and should include people who understand
your goals and who are ready and willing to step in to help
you succeed.
Support takes many forms. Your support system might
include a group, a close friend, a mentor or coach. What you
need from your support system will vary. Whether you will
benefit from a partner in action, gentle encouragement, reminders,
or someone you trust who will tell you the hard truth
when you need to hear it, it’s important to find a responsive
system that fits the bill. When you have a solid system of support,
you’ve broadened your resources. You’ve created a team
approach. A support system fills in the cracks and provides the
necessary elements that you aren’t able to provide yourself.
The most overlooked component of weight loss success is
the endurance factor. Meaningful weight loss is weight loss
that lasts. By incorporating these four essential ingredients,
you’ll be well on your way to building a solid foundation for a
permanent healthy lifestyle change.
about dr. mccreery…
Melissa McCreery, Ph.D., ACC is a Psychologist, certified Life Coach,
and the founder of www.TooMuchOnHerPlate.com where she
helps smart, savvy, busy women stop struggling with food, weight,
and overwhelm. Visit her site to download a free audio e-course:
“5 Simple Steps to Move Beyond Overwhelm With Food and Life.”
WLS Lifestyles - www.wlslifestyles.com – Copyright 2009
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Printer FriendlyLearned Eating™urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-11-02T10:58:56ZLearned Eating™
By:
Warren Huberman, Ph.D
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: A new way of thinking to achieve long-term weight loss.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)Optimizing Changeurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-11-02T10:47:43ZOptimizing Change
By:
Lee Kern, MSW, LCSW
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Guidelines to help you confront inner resistances to change.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)Will Powerless Weight Loss urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-11-02T10:31:10ZWill Powerless Weight Loss
By:
Russ L'HommeDieu, DPT
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Unlock your subconscious mind and “map” out a workable long-term solution to weight loss success.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)Healthful Bites.urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-09-13T16:35:48ZHealthful Bites.
By:
Vicki Bovee, MS, RD
Category: Healthy Living
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Tips From Successful Weight Loss Maintainers
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)Eating Less and Enjoying It Moreurn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2009-09-11T16:04:23ZEating Less and Enjoying It More
By:
Joan Swerdlow-Brandt, MSW and Dr. Robert Brandt, Ph.D.
Category: Weight Management
BRIEF ARTICLE OVERVIEW: Savoring the full flavor of your favorite foods brings new awareness on the temptation to overindulge.
For unlimited access to all magazine articles online, (click here to order)