Eat or delete - Mind over platter
In
the ultimate battle of the bulge lies the ultimate roadblock your mind. How
you think about weight loss is as important, if not more, than eating healthy,
exercising and counting those calories. Unless there's a medical reason for it,
weight loss rarely happens by accident it's a strategy, a deliberate set of
actions designed to attain a particular goal. And every goal starts in your
mind. Based on my work with thousands of clients, here are two of the biggest
mindblocks that come between you and a thinner you.
THE THIN MINDSET
Don't
get me wrong: I am not talking about wanting to be thin; that's a separate
conversation entirely. When I refer to The Thin Mindset, I am simply talking of
how people track their weight loss progress. I'll tell you what I mean: Kartik
was a 34-year-old banker, who had lost 16 kilos but had a goal of losing 20.
Despite following my programme, he had reached -as weight loss sometimes does
-a plateau; and the weighing scale was taking a bit of time to dip further. He
came in one afternoon saying, “I am doing everything right but I've lost just a
kilo this entire month. I still have three to go.“ Now, here's someone who lost
a whopping 16 kilos but because of his `Thin Mindset', instead of focusing on
how far he'd come, he was obsessed with how far he had to go. When you have a
Thin Mindset, you tend to compare your progress against the end goal. So if you
have 30 kilos to lose, and you lose 5, you don't think `I am five kilos
thinner', you think, I have 25 kilos to go, and it's a long way.
There's
a tendency to measure your progress against the end result (which is imaginary)
instead of the current result (which is real). Celebrate every single bit of
weight you lose. Instead of focusing on being thin, celebrate being thinner
than you were a few weeks before. Replace the Thin Mindset with the Thinner
Mindset and make that your focus when you are trying to shed those kilos.
Because no matter how you look at it, losing is losing.
THE ALL OR NOTHING
MINDSET
It
usually starts with a muffin. Or a few peanuts. And suddenly, 30 minutes later,
you have scarfed down a bar of chocolate, a bag of chips and a thick chocolate
milk shake. And you don't even know how it happened. The `All or Nothing'
mindset is the feeling that since the diet has been `broken', you may as well
give up for the day, start again tomorrow, and eat everything in your path
right now because `it doesn't count'. Well, it does. Every little thing you eat
counts.
Let's
look at it this way. You have a set of six beautiful tea cups. You broke one by
accident. What do you do?
Do you break the other five be cause you have broken one? No, right? The `All or Nothing' mindset is like shattering all six cups because you broke one.
Do you break the other five be cause you have broken one? No, right? The `All or Nothing' mindset is like shattering all six cups because you broke one.
Instead,
salvage the damage.
There's
no need to pile on 2,000 extra calories because you've slipped. Slipping is human
and no one is perfect. Accept your lit tle imperfections, and learn to move on
from them.
It's
one of the best things you could do for yourself and your body.
|
by
Pooja Makhija Consulting Nutritionist & Clinical Dietician TL22NOV15
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