The gals in the 'Almost There' thread have been discussing this ebook and I'm quite taken with it. In fact, I'd like to start a discussion thread about it.
There are quite a few of us posters here who have gotten to be close to goal. Or close enough that this'll be ... um ... OK. You can tell by the number of lurkers in the Maintainers Forum that many many folks wonder what to do .... next??? There are threads about complacency.
I'm finding that this book is bringing together lots of odds and ends and nebulous notions (many of which I probably already knew) and coagulates them into a plan. The next step, so to speak. The answer to my question "What now?"
Since Ilene has already made some excellent references (derived from the book) to goal setting in another thread in Featherweights, all I'll say is that ... I did what I was told! If I remember I'll get a link here.
One line that particularly spoke to me went something like this .... the difference between knowing what to do and doing what you know.
Keep talking. I've gotta run and probably shouldn't have started this in a hurry. Anything special strike you?
Setting short and long term goals is a good idea. I have set a few bodyweight dependent strength goals for 2006: 1) Strict military press with bodyweight. 2) Do an unassisted pull-up.
If I manage to hit my weightloss goal without sacrificing much strength, these should be realistic goals for this year.
The difference between knowing what to do and doing what you know - struck a chord with me I could read about doing it till I'm blue in the face, and read and read and know everything there is to know, however by doing that, I think that perhaps I am burying my head in the sand when it comes to actually doing it. Like I can talk the talk, I know what I should be doing, my 4 day split, some HIIT and some kickboxing and running in there for good measure. However in reality, I get to the gym on average twice a week and I run... er well just don't ask!
I'm only 20 pages in, I haven't quite read to the end of the goal setting chapter, however I will sneakily print off some more pages today to read later on tonight
I can do focus but I really do have problems with visualisation. I think you need to have a good imagination for that and its one thing I'm definitely lacking in.
I check myself out when I walk past reflecting store windows and I sometimes surprised by that thin person. Not as often as I used to be so I guess that's coming.
I have always had one situation during which I see (in my minds eye) a slender sexy me. Perhaps if I have one good visualization, more will develope.
I just collapsed last night (even before the hockey game was over)so I didn't really think more on the focus thing but I woke up with a hymn running thru my brain. "Faith is the victory ...." Everybody sing ... just kidding. But that is certainly hmmmm-worthy.
The first chapter is very like the original BfL so I'm skimming through that - I haven't really found anything different yet. It has made me re-read the goals I set myself when I started this Challenge and think about them again, which has been helpful.
Maybe I need to diarise myself some weekly 'think about what you're doing' time because those goals are something I had lost sight of.
I'm sneaking it through the printer at work 20 pages at a time!
I have written some more goals down - I like the present-tense stuff, I didn't realise that you had to put down your goals in present tense, I thought it was just being thankful for what you are now! I now have new ones! I like the idea of writing them out twice a day! I might buy a spanking new notebook just for that... Or use one of the empty ones that I already have!
I'm in the chapter about carbs, on the computer screen, yuck! I'll print the whole thing off eventually and read it properly. I'm really enjoying his indepth study. I love nutrition!! He actually covers that little ditty about where do you think the stuff comes from that makes new cells!
I'm lingering in carbs on purpose and will read it again. To be honest ... I might be carb-phobic.
I have trouble with "humility" I guess you'd call it.
One of my "I will's" is that by New Years I will be firm enough that I can just go shopping and buy without watching what hangs out over what. It just feels so fat-headed to say that out loud.
And a bit silly. I'm a 45 year old mother of three for Heavens' sake!