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Change Habits, Change Weight
by Michael Hallinan
So you’re determined you’re going to do something about your
weight. But what? Being overweight is not in itself a behavior. You don’t
do overweight. Being overweight is an outcome of many behaviors that add
up to consuming more calories than you're expending. (Yes, there’s
a genetic component too, but you can’t change that.)
The good thing is that this gives you lots of places to start moving toward
your goal of losing weight. The challenge is sorting through them all
and finding what will work best for you. So here’s the question:
What are you most ready to change?
Behavioral researchers have identified five stages in behavior change:
1. Precontemplation: You’re not even considering it. No way you’re
gonna give up your pizza and beer. Gym-going is not for you. Why walk
when you can ride?
2. Contemplation: Well, maybe you could live without pizza and beer *every*
week. Gym is out, but you always liked swimming, maybe a pool. The walk
in the park with your friend was pleasant last weekend, maybe you could
do it again.
3. Preparation: Next week you’re going to skip that pizza. You
found out the local Y has a pool and their family rates are affordable.
You talked to your friend about doing more walks sometime.
4. Action: Two weeks and no pizza. You joined the Y and you’ve
swum laps there a couple times. You and your friend have gone walking
the past three Saturday mornings.
5. Maintenance: The weekly pizza has been a thing of the past for six
months. Swimming is so much a part of your daily routine that you don’t
feel right if you skip it. Those Saturday walks are don’t-miss tradition.
In fact, this readiness to change model is behavior-specific. That is,
you might be in the action stage with the pizza but still in precontemplation
on that exercise stuff. You’re not likely to be very successful
if you flog yourself for not swimming laps every day, what you want to
do is move yourself to the next stage: List the pros and cons of regular
exercise and guess what, you’re thinking about it and that means
contemplation.
So think about the behaviors you can change to lose weight. What stage
are you in for each of those behaviors? In each case, what can you do
to move yourself to the next stage? What are you most ready to change.
We explore readiness to change in my free teleclass, “The Real
Skinny on Weight Loss: Don’t Diet, Do It.” You can get details
and register at www.teleclassinternational.com/catalog.phtml?keywords=MH-RS
Michael Hallinan may be contacted at http://www.healthyweightcoaching.com
michael@healthyweightcoaching.com.
Michael Hallinan is a personal coach helping clients find their healthy
way to their healthy weight. Subscribe to his free email newsletter of
tips, support and motivation at http://www.healthyweightcoaching.com.
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