Weight Loss Resolution? No Way!
Resolve to Change Your Habits
By: Becky Hand, Licensed & Registered Dietician : 74 comments
Do yourself a favor this year…Do NOT resolve to lose weight.
Instead, pick two or three habits (encourage healthy eating and improved fitness) that could easily result in weight loss. Don’t know what to focus on? Well you have just enough time to find out. For the next week, faithfully use the Sparkpeople Food and Activity Tracker. Record the following:
Analysis #1: Do you meet your nutritional needs?
Analysis #2: How are your foods prepared?
Analysis #3: What beverage choices are you making?
Analysis #4: What activities are you doing while you eat?
Analysis #5: How quickly (or slowly) do you eat your meals?
Analysis #6: What is your mood before, during, and after eating?
Analysis #7: What Meal Patterns do you notice?
Analysis #8: How many minutes of Physical activity do you get each week?
Resolve to Make Realistic Resolutions
Now select the two or three items you want to improve this year and write a "realistic resolution" for each. Be as specific as possible and make sure your resolution can be measured and tracked.
Instead, pick two or three habits (encourage healthy eating and improved fitness) that could easily result in weight loss. Don’t know what to focus on? Well you have just enough time to find out. For the next week, faithfully use the Sparkpeople Food and Activity Tracker. Record the following:
- The food (and how much) you eat – Weigh and measure everything
- Every beverage you drink (juice, pop, coffee, tea, water, diet beverages)
- When the eating episode occurred (the time you started and finished eating)
- The location of the eating (kitchen, family room, restaurant, etc.)
- Who did you eat with? (friends, relatives, yourself, co-workers, alone)
- How you felt while eating (happy, sad, bored, depressed)
- Any exercise you did
Analysis #1: Do you meet your nutritional needs?
- Are you getting 2 low-fat dairy products daily?
- Are you consuming 6 ounces of lean meat or protein sources daily?
- Are you getting 5 servings of fruits and vegetables daily?
- Are you receiving 4-6 whole grain products each day?
Analysis #2: How are your foods prepared?
- How many foods are fried?
- How many foods are breaded?
- How many food items are covered with a sauce?
- How many servings of sweets do you have daily?
- How many food items come from a box, package, or can?
Analysis #3: What beverage choices are you making?
- How much water are you drinking daily?
- How many cups of tea and coffee do you consume?
- How many cans of diet drinks to you have?
- How many sugar-sweetened beverages do you consume daily?
- How much 100% fruit juice do you get each day?
Analysis #4: What activities are you doing while you eat?
- Watching TV, or your children play a team sport?
- Working or playing on the computer?
- Do you eat at the table, counter or sink, from the stovetop while cooking, in front of the refrigerator, while on the phone, while working from your desk, in the car?
- Reading?
- Balancing the checkbook, opening mail, or other multitasking?
- Studying for tests or exams?
Analysis #5: How quickly (or slowly) do you eat your meals?
- 1-10 minutes?
- 11-20 minutes?
- 21-30 minutes?
- 31 or more minutes?
Analysis #6: What is your mood before, during, and after eating?
- Happy or joyous?
- Sad, depressed?
- Bored?
- Worried, or anxious?
Analysis #7: What Meal Patterns do you notice?
- How often do you eat breakfast?
- Do you skip lunch or dinner?
- Do you usually have a snack?
- How much time do you have between meals and snacks?
Analysis #8: How many minutes of Physical activity do you get each week?
- 0 - 30 minutes
- 31 - 60 minutes
- 1 - 2 hours
- 2 - 3 hours
- 3 - 4 hours
- 4 hours or more
Resolve to Make Realistic Resolutions
Now select the two or three items you want to improve this year and write a "realistic resolution" for each. Be as specific as possible and make sure your resolution can be measured and tracked.
- Post the resolution where it can be seen daily—on the refrigerator, bathroom mirror, or computer screen saver.
- Find a buddy or pal who can assist as a cheerleader and mentor.
- Set up a reward system for yourself. For example, every week that you meet your resolution, put a dollar in the resolution jar. When it reaches $20, treat yourself.
- And face the facts that there will be setbacks but that doesn’t mean failure.
- Stay focused on all the positive aspects that you have already accomplished.