What keeps you motivated when you're not seeing results?
soccerkon26
Posts: 596 Member
Working 2 jobs, full time student, and trying to exercise and eat better...it's all starting to get very overwhelming. I'm so happy that I'm eating better but it's been almost 2 weeks and I haven't seen that much progress (if at all).
What keeps you going when you didn't see results, or if you currently aren't?
What keeps you going when you didn't see results, or if you currently aren't?
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Replies
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Good health, taking care of myself and feeling better overall.
Once you make progress, maintaining that progress and not losing ground is a good motivator.0 -
What progress were you hoping for? 2 weeks is not very long for much of anything0
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You know what I don't mind progress too much. I'm making it, but it's not the cornerstone of my days. I weigh in once a month.
Basically my advice would be to "forget" that your dieting or losing weight and just continue as normal, but obviously still keep the eating in check and log. You should start to see the "diet" as a...sigh for lack of a better phrase... lifestyle change. It should come to a point where it become habit and you barely think of it. That way you won't need motivation. Because it's an everyday thing.
Don't be "obsessed".0 -
I will try to forget it0
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I've been counting calories for two years. It's like brushing my teeth. And I don't need motivation to brush my teeth.0
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soccerkon26 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »What progress were you hoping for? 2 weeks is not very long for much of anything
Only positivity please.
Ok. Sounds like you are doing great but maybe a little stressed. Keep your eyes on the prize0 -
queenliz99 wrote: »soccerkon26 wrote: »queenliz99 wrote: »What progress were you hoping for? 2 weeks is not very long for much of anything
Only positivity please.
Ok. Sounds like you are doing great but maybe a little stressed. Keep your eyes on the prize
That's not negative--just realistic. Sometimes things take a while.0 -
Tune into and recognise your non scale victories - do you feel more energetic? happier? Is it easier to concentrate at uni? Sleep better? etc
Are you getting stronger in the gym? Less breathless walking upstairs?
Theres alot of progress that you're making that you might not even be noticing if you're just focusing on scales/measurements/mirror.
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MustLoveCats21 wrote: »I've been counting calories for two years. It's like brushing my teeth. And I don't need motivation to brush my teeth.
Love your attitude
Feel the same after 8 months0 -
Tune into and recognise your non scale victories - do you feel more energetic? happier? Is it easier to concentrate at uni? Sleep better? etc
Are you getting stronger in the gym? Less breathless walking upstairs?
Theres alot of progress that you're making that you might not even be noticing if you're just focusing on scales/measurements/mirror.
These are the motivators that I've relied upon. Things you can experience immediately or within a short time frame. A workout session = a mood and energy boost, that's the main one for me.0 -
If I'm not seeing a result on the scale, I'm seeing it in my measurements or in improved fitness goals. Sometimes you have to look for the results that aren't on the scale, if you focus only on the scale you're setting yourself up for disapointent0
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I try on my skinny jeans.0
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How much do you have to lose? If it's below 20lbs, it will take awhile. You need patience and consistency. Best of luck.0
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Running farther or lifting heavier than yesterday.0
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I am almost 50 and I started with some major issues with regards to my body (plantar fasciitis, morton's neuroma in my right foot, and a very weak core).
My motivation is to be able to be "active" forever.
My hobbies require strength and stamina (landscaping & gardening) and I want to travel later in life. Can't do the things I love if I don't fix myself!0 -
If you're not seeing the results you're looking for, you need to change what you are doing so that you do see results. It's that simple. But what are you doing and what are you trying to achieve. Robert Cheeke's new book addresses this issue and when I finally applied it, I started seeing the results. So the best solution to not seeing results is to change things further. If you don't track what you are doing, it's impossible to know what to change.
Robert's book gives you the recipe to obtain any realistic fitness goal you set for yourself. You track your nutrition, which is a full bore whole foods plant based diet. Don't get scared if you already aren't on it. It's whole wheat bread vegetable sandwiches, whole wheat pasta with tomato sauce, rice and bean burritos, split peas soup, pancakes, muffins, food you will love and the food will love you back. Your body will function like never before. I'm talking perfect nutrition. Leave dead animals and cow breast milk products and vegetable oils out of it. Now add tracking for your exercise and food, which is easy due to a lot of online tracking like myfitness pal. You are guaranteed long term results. You will meet any realistic goal you set. So the best medicine for when your stuck, is to change. But by tracking, you will know what to change. I tried all this without tracking and had great success on a whole food plant based diet to a point. I've been plateaued for a maybe a year. I read Shred It, and then had to go back a re read the stuff about tracking. I worked so hard in the gym for a year and got nowhere losing the rest of the weight I wanted. I didn't track because it was too much trouble. Now I understand that the tracking is so much easier than intensive cardio. I've controlled my calories and tracked them and I received results beyond my plateau in a week. Robert's book is the solution to long term health and fitness and is backed by so many proponents of a plant based diet. There is nothing else like it out there.-4 -
Well it's motivating just to know I am doing the right things to take care of myself.0
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My pedometer keeps me motivated.0
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Like LoveCats and Rabbit, I log into MFP religiously. Every bite, every workout every day. That keeps me plugging along. It really does get easier, but you have to be patient. MFP seems to be an outlet for me. I like reading and learning about others, too. When I see the thrilling success stories (the big weight losses over a couple years), it reminds me that my 20 or 30 lbs is very doable.
Don't use your body weight as your only metric because it fluctuates so much from day to day. Use a measuring tape or a couple of outfits as gauges, too.0 -
azulvioleta6 wrote: »Good health, taking care of myself and feeling better overall.
This ^^
Even on day/weeks I don't lose, I know that exercise and not overeating is making me healthier.0
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