When it comes to weight loss, the usual buzzwords you might hear often include the words 'lifestyle' and 'change'...as in, you need to make one to be successful at losing weight. It may seem like losing weight is a simple goal—do some exercise, go on a diet, and voila! But, if it were that simple, I'd be out of a job and you'd be too busy working out to read this.
While magazines and infomercials make it seem effortless, losing weight takes hard work and that often means changing different aspects of your life like, how you spend your time, how you schedule your day, and how/what you eat. If the way you live doesn't allow for these changes, how far will you get?
The reason lifestyle is so important is because how you live determines your choices and these choices decide how healthy you are and whether you're on the road to weight loss.
Where do you fall on the healthy lifestyle continuum?
The typical components of a healthy lifestyle include not smoking, eating healthy foods, exercising and keeping the body at a healthy weight.
If you spend more time doing the things in the first list than the second, it's time to reevaluate your priorities and decide what you really want for yourself. Living healthy means spending time and energy on your body—moving it around and paying attention to what you put into it. Staying in an unhealthy lifestyle means you can avoid expending energy, time and effort...but at what cost?
As humans, we like habits and routines, so much that we often keep doing the same things even when we know they aren't good for us.
Changing bad habits takes time and effort, but it can be worth it. Practicing healthy habits can help you to reach and maintain a healthy weight, live a more satisfying and active life, and reduce your risk for disease.
The rewards for making these changes are endless, but it's beginning that's so difficult.
Try keeping an activity journal and jot down how much time you spend sitting as opposed to moving around. Then see if you can reduce that number—take more walks, stand up and stretch, just move around more.
How to Make Your Own Health JournalNext, take a look at your diet and just pick one thing you could do better. Maybe you could eat more fruits and vegetables, or maybe you eat out a little too often. Work on that one thing until you've made progress and then you can pick another thing.
Working on one change at a time is slow, yes, but when you change too much at once, you're much more likely to go back to old behaviors. Taking your time leads to lasting changes and, in the end, a healthier lifestyle.
Simple Ways to Live a Healthier Lifestyle