How to Stay Fit: Don't Drop the Ball After the Ball Drops
You want to stay fit: resist the urge to opt out.
Entering a new year, fitness resolutions can be as difficult to make as they are to keep.
The start of a new year is the perfect time to dream big. The Fitness path from the life you have to the life you want is marked by action. 2020 is a blank page --step by step, you can pave the path to a better life.
Most of us reassess where we are with regard to how to stay fit, weight loss, and general Fitness and where we want to be as a new year approaches. Some of us are full of unrealistic expectations (like lose 30 lbs in 30 days), while others feel they have no control over their future.
In reality, we have more control on how we stay fit than we’d like to admit, especially when they concern our own well-being (eg. Lose Weight, Gain Strength and Get Fit). We wouldn’t be where we are today without transforming thoughts into action. But we also didn’t come this far, to only come this far.
The majority of Americans make new year fitness resolutions every year. Often they have to do with exercising more and eating less. Many of us wait until 11:59pm on December 31st to ‘cut and paste’ our fitness goals from the previous five years onto our agenda. Based on past experience, we have little or no hope of ever achieving them. That is why the majority of us fail to keep our fitness resolutions.
It tends to go something like this: January 1st all-in, full speed ahead, January 2nd this is harder than I thought...January 12th this is stupid, I give up! Rather than concede defeat, we tell ourselves we don’t really want it, or that we just can’t do it.
We’re not going to get different results by taking the same actions this year, so here are some important tweaks you can make to your strategy:
#1
DECIDE what your best life looks like
The first mistake many of us make is to set Fitness and Health goals based on other people’s values. Subconsciously, we resent having to meet the standards of anyone other than ourselves. Our mind senses this discord and self-sabotage ensues.
This year, why not think about what is most important to YOU, and how YOU want to spend your time? If you choose a Fitness goal that aligns your desires with your values, you are much more likely to succeed.
We owe it to ourselves and the world to stay fit, be our most authentic self, and that is at the heart of the matter. As Paulo Coelho points out in his novel “The Alchemist”, when you put your heart and soul into a worthy pursuit, “the whole universe conspires to make it happen”. This is a great book to read for motivation.
#2
VISUALIZE your outcome in as much detail as possible
VISUALIZE your Fitness and Health outcomes in as much detail as possible: People experience some of the same joy planning a vacation as they do taking it. The same can be true for planning your next year.
What would it feel like to weigh 10 pounds less? Do you want to start doing yoga at home to improve mindfulness and fitness? Creating a vision board is a great way to keep the positive energy of your dream front and center. Using a mantra that encapsulates your new attitude is another great tool.
A third technique you can use is to write down every reason you want to accomplish your goal, from the tiniest to the most significant. The first time I lost a substantial amount of weight, I wrote down every reason I wanted it to happen and I’d read it each time a hurdle hit. It worked!
#3
TAKE BABY STEPS TOWARD YOUR NEW YEAR FITNESS RESOLUTION
Break up your big goal into small, manageable action steps. If your new year fitness resolution is to take control of your health, you may need to exercise more and eat better.
Your vision board could include a photo of a leaner you, and your mantra might be “I am stronger than temptations and excuses, I am on my way to being my best self”. Your action steps could be to be physically active at least three days a week, to eat less junk food and more vegetables, and to meditate on a weekly basis.