Are you one of the people who makes New Year resolutions, only to have
them dissolve within a few weeks? Take weight loss, for example: The bullying
“tyrant” inside your mind begins the familiar attack: “Look at yourself! You
have no discipline and have gotten fat. You should lose weight, so do it
right now!” Panicked, you resolve to diet, work out, and lose that extra
poundage. You start the diet and go to the gym, but soon your willpower fails,
as you revert back to old patterns under the stresses of everyday life. The
tyrant punishes you for your failure, and you feel more guilty, worthless, and
depressed. You surrender; you just cannot make huge life changes all at once.
Here’s a new strategy. Break the cycle of failure. This year, start a
New Year’s Revolution by saying “No!” to the tyrant of the “shoulds” of your
life. “I should lose weight; I should go to church/ temple; I should
give more parties; I should do a better job at work; I should be
a better friend; I should stop smoking/ drinking/ doing drugs.” The list
is endless, and your internal tyrant has impossibly high standards.
But what do you do if there really are changes that you need to make for
health or relationship reasons? Focus
on only one change, devise a plan that makes it as small a life change
as possible, and try to stick to that. Do not try to change everything about
your life at the same time. If you need
to lose weight, clear it with your doctor to ensure you have no medical obstacles
to this and begin a sensible plan. Do
not crash diet, as your body will interpret this as starvation and ramp up your
appestat to compensate for your diminished intake, resulting in your regaining
the lost weight and a few more pounds to boot. We will talk about diet later,
but here is a simple plan: Reduce your calorie intake by only 100 calories a
day and you will lose about 10 pounds in a year without too much pain. Add some
exercise, and you lose more. Again,
nothing radical— adding extra steps in your usual routine, taking walks over
lunch or at breaks, using the stairs rather than the elevator.
If your problems are more serious, like relationship problems, alcohol,
or drugs, you will need social support and possibly professional help to implement
these changes. Search out online or other resources, including groups that can
encourage you and serve as examples of success. In the diet example, Take Off
Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) and Keep Off Pounds Sensibly (KOPS) are free support
groups that focus on weight control, like Alcohols Anonymous, which
concentrates on sobriety. There are many other suggestions and resources in my first book (www.keepyoureyeontheprize.org). Bottom line: if you decide to make a New Year’s Resolution, keep
your goal small and realistic— something attainable that can fit into your life
without adding a new “should” to the list. If you stumble, forgive yourself.
It does not mean that you are a failure; it may be that your plan was too
ambitious and needs to be modified. Reward yourself for small successes, and
your tyrant will be the one to shrink away and surrender!
No comments:
Post a Comment