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Maintenance - not a 12 Week Program (Venuto)
I don't know how many of you get the Tom Venuto Newsletter - (that's why I put "Venuto" in the title - if you already read this article, then you can feel free to pass by...) but the article just SCREAMED to be in the Maintainers forum, so here ya go!
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Fabulous!
I do think that deadlines (and challenges, and contests) are things to be wary about. I've seen more people (myself included) become discouraged and give up when a self-imposed deadline came and the goal wasn't met, even if the goal was reasonable. the timetable on which one loses weight can be subject to a lot of things beyond the person's control. One way I finally succeeded in sticking to a program was by deliberately NOT letting myself think in terms of "I want to lose x pounds by y date." As I've said to other people, those aren't goals they're wishes. I try to have goals that are either behavioral ("This week I'm going to journal every day" or "Today I will focus on getting in all my vegetables") OR ones based on accomplishments but have no time criteria ("My next weight milestone is to get under 190" or "I want to be able to walk 4 miles in my target heart zone"). So, if deadlines work for you, GREAT. But, if they discourage you because you're still stuck in a compulsive all-or-nothing, I-failed-so-what's-the-point mindset, then file that idea in the round file on the floor by your desk. P.S. How can one subscribe to this newsletter? |
Great article, Karen! You're both so right about how deadlines and time frames for "diets" can backfire. Limited time "challenges" and contests certainly are popular in the bodybuilding and diet worlds, but you have to ask yourself why? Perhaps the reason is that people are willing to make short-term changes that they'd never be able to sustain for the long run (like Karen described with the extreme dieting). But what do you ultimately gain from drastic diet measures? A short-lived, unsustainable weight loss (that sometimes is partly or mostly water weight). Sure, you might get that moment of glory when you stand on the scales and it reads that "magic number" for a day. But you better take a picture of it because it probably isn't going to last.
My time frame for keeping the fat off is for the rest of my life so my perspective has to be a whole lot broader than mere weeks or months. My mantra has always been that the way that I'm going to keep the weight off is to do the same things that I did to lose it in the first place. But what if the actions that I took to lose the weight were things that I just couldn't sustain on an everyday basis? I daresay that I wouldn't be sitting here wearing size 4 jeans today! So, two + years after reaching goal, I still plan, journal, weigh and measure, eat the same foods, and exercise the same way as I did for the year that I was losing -- 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year (and so far it's working ;) ). Of course, I have planned vacations and meals out at times -- but never days or weeks in which I say I'm off my "diet" but will start again on X date. Really. I promise. :lol: Just like Karen says — think about what you can live with for the rest of your life. Be honest in your self-appraisal — look at your lifestyle and time constraints. If you’ve never stuck to a diet for more than a week at a time, maybe you need to find a way of eating that isn’t such a drastic change from what you do now. If you have a gym membership that you never use, perhaps you need to find another kind of exercise that you enjoy. If you’re a night owl, don’t tell yourself that you’re going to get up and work out at 4:00 AM every day. The goal is to integrate weight loss and maintenance into the rest of your life so that eventually it becomes part of the background and doesn't take much thought and effort. BTW, you can subscribe to Tom Venuto’s newsletter here: http://www.fitren.com/listserv.cfm. Take some time and look around his site — it’s excellent! |
Meg, we're of a mind on this. :)
And thanks for the tip on the newsletter, sounds cool. |
Great article Karen... I had received it but I hadn't read it yet... Thanks for posting it because I probably would have skipped it...
My mentality has certainly changed in the last year and a half or so. I also think more along the lines of "lifestyle" than "die" with a "t" ... My g/f's are always saying, I'll start after the summer, I'll start ___ (add excuse # 1,000,000,000 here)________ ... I can only sit and smile, once in a while I will say "....but it has to be a lifestyle..." But until they realise this on their own when that "ah ha" moment happens they will continute to be overweight...But I most certainly enjoy being me rather than them. |
I'm a long way from maintenance, but I check this part of the forum for inspiration, and living proof that it is possible to lose a large amount of weight and keep it off!
I'm interested in this discussion, because ever since I decided to change my lifestyle I have promised myself that I will only make changes that I feel are permanently sustainable. This means that I have a slow rate of weight loss, but I am reasonably confident that its sustainable. However, one think I have been thinking about lately is the "What difference will it make, reaching 'goal'??" Not that I'm planning to stop losing weight, but I have already had huge health, energy, confidence benefits.....and in a way I think I have begun to adjust, or take for granted, all of those, as I get used to this healthy lifestyle. So I'm having to think very hard about what is motivating me long-term.......health, definitely; appearance/self-confidence/feeling good, a bit harder to measure, but pretty important. But a number on a scale? BMI? etc Seems a bit meaningless, really......Life won't suddenly be different when I hit that somewhat-arbitrarily-chosen magic number. So I'm trying to wean myself off the scale a bit, and focus more on quality of life type goals (some of my ambitions when I am fitter include water-skiing.....surfing......walking in the mountains)... And just one comment on that article......if that guy is a responsible fitness trainer, why did he encourage this woman to go on such a short-term/unsustainable programme? Why wasn't he talking to her about sustainability, maintenance, long-term approaches? That's not meant to be a dig.....its just that the entire 'diet' industry, and the little of what I see of the 'fitness' industry, is driven by the short term approach/quick fix solution....what we need (IMHO) is a lot more talk, research, help on making sustainable, long term changes.... |
I think Venuto made it pretty clear in the article that he didn't put her on an unsustainable program, but that this woman took it upon herself to go beyond what he recommended in order to win the transformation contest. That's one of my biggest beefs with the transformation contests and competition (figure, fitness, or bodybuilding). Most novice competitors and those who enter contests sponsored by gyms or supplement companies, fall off big-time when the competition is over.
I've done competition diets too, and they aren't maintainable, and usually there is no guidance for how to ease out of it. As for why go on once you've achieved a level of comfort, there are a lot of reasons to look at numbers. Someone starting with a BMI of 35 will feel and look incredibly better with a BMI of 30, but that's still considered clinically obese and there are still much higher incidences of type II diabetes, high cholesterol and triglygerides, various cancers, joint problems, and other health issues associated. I'm not trying to minimize the great impact of losing some or any excess fat, but there are health issues assiciated with those goal numbers, not just vanity. Sure, when some of us agonize about the last 5 pounds- that's usually a vanity issue. Winning contests is a vanity issue unless you need that carrot to keep you motivated and can handle the post-contest let-down. But getting yourself into a healthy range is very possible without extreme measures, spending your life in the gym, ir living on eggwhites and broccoli. And There is so much more going on INSIDE your body than can be reflected by the size tag on your clothes or the "after" pictures from a 12 week transformation. Mel |
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