Showing posts with label fitness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fitness. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Kick bad habits for good using the 1-minute rule

Just about all of us are interested in habits — whether because we want to change one of our own or help someone else change theirs.


But to change habits, it’s important to understand how they work. People make mistakes about the nature of habits, and that makes it harder to tackle them. 
Here's what to keep in mind:




bar; cellphone; close; cocktail; communicating; connected; connection; device; drink; hands; internet; phone; smart; table; technology; touching; up; ...
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Drinking too much alcohol or continuously checking your email might be some of the bad habits you want to break. But the same strategies don't work for everyone.
1. Repetition isn’t enough to build a habit. People assume that if they repeat a behavior, it becomes a habit. Maybe, but maybe not. I’ve heard from many people who trained for a marathon, with the thought that this would make them a regular exerciser, but then after the marathon, they never ran again. Or they do a month-long sugar detox, but go right back to sugar when the month is over. In both these cases, the danger of the finish lineexplains why a habit wasn’t formed. Beware the finish line! It’s hard to start over, so don’t allow yourself to stop.


2. Don’t beat yourself up. Although some people assume that whipping up feelings of guilt or shame will help them stick to their good habits, the opposite is true. People who feel less guilt and show compassion toward themselves are better able to regain self-control. People who feel deeply guilty and full of self-blame struggle more.

3. Trying to resist temptation? Some people do better giving it up altogether; some when they indulge in moderation. I often hear people say, “Indulge with moderation, live a little, don’t be too hard on yourself.” This approach works well for Moderators. But I’m a hardcore Abstainer, and for me, abstaining altogether is easier. It sounds rigid and difficult, but for me it’s not. As my sister the sage told me when she gave up her beloved french fries, “I tell myself, ‘Now I’m free from french fries.'” A friend had to stop playing the word-game app Ruzzle entirely, because she couldn’t play just a little.

4. Don’t expect to be motivated by consequences. People make the mistake of thinking that if consequences are dire enough, they’ll change a habit. Nope. Consequences, without the proper approach to changing a habit, often fail to move people to change. For instance, one-third to one-half of U.S. patients don’t take medicine prescribed for a chronic illness, including serious conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, even leprosy.






5. The same strategies don’t work for everyone. The sad fact is, there’s no magical, one-size-fits-all approach that will work for everyone. When it comes to habits, people are very different. So it’s not really useful to copy what Steve Jobs did, or what worked for your sister. We can get ideas from each other, and we definitely pass habits back and forth (that’s the Strategy of Other People), but we have to figure out what works for us. The Strategy of Accountability is crucial for an Obliger; it’s counter-productive for a Rebel, who makes more progress with the Strategy of Identity. A Lark does better scheduling an important habit for the morning, but that might not be true for an Owl. 
We won’t make ourselves more creative and productive by copying other people’s habits, even the habits of geniuses; we must know our own nature, and what habits serve us best.

Monday, 16 March 2015

Want to lose weight? 3 fitness myths you should never, ever believe

Fitness myths are tempting to believe, because if they were true it would be easy for everyone to get in shape! But falling for them can sacrifice serious results and keep you from finding an effective program that really works.
Here are 3 myths I hear all the time:
Ab exercises will help you lose weight in your midsection.  FALSE!
The only way to really trim belly fat is through diet. You can work your abs until you’re blue in the face and you won’t see results until you get rid of the belly fat—and that comes from a smart diet and cardio plan.
This requires cutting out fast-food and junk food, going easy on the alcohol (sorry!) and eating lots of fresh (preferably organic) veggies along with lean protein (e.g. chicken, fish and low-fat cheeses). For cardio, make sure you're working hard enough (walk briskly, don't stroll) and aim for 30 minutes a day, five days a week.




You can spot reduce. Everybody holds their weight in different places. FALSE!
And no matter how hard you try, you cannot direct weight loss to a specific body part. I may hold my weight in my lower body, but it doesn’t mean that if I lose pounds, it’ll come off that region. Again, a healthy combo of diet and exercise will help with overall weight loss and a quicker path to achieving your goals.



There’s always a shortcut. FALSE! 
It didn’t take you 2 weeks to gain the weight, it won’t take you 2 weeks to lose it. So toss out the idea that you want to drop 4 dress sizes in a month. Do it the right way and it’ll last. You need to embark on a steady lifestyle change… reduce the caloric intake, increase the caloric output and watch the weight fall off. The foolproof recipe: cardio, strength training, cutting out the crap in your diet and patience.