The Marshmallow Test

YeaILift
YeaILift Posts: 580 Member
edited September 24 in Health and Weight Loss
Disclaimer: I'm not advocating Intermittent Fasting for everyone, but I thought the clinical study referenced in this article was very applicable to all dieters.
People will often feel inclined to explain to you why the numerous constraints in their lives have prevented them to achieve the their goal.

They have so much else going on in their lives. A job, a girlfriend, social events to attend. Time-consuming hobbies. A car that needs fixing or some other project of critical importance. Those are the reasons why they're out of shape or have attained only mediocre results.

For them, the idea of losing body fat or attaining muscle is about time. The notion that you have to spend hours in the gym and meticulously plan your diet every day is accepted as a truism. They think that if they could just find enough time, they'd easily get a physique comparable to a front-cover fitness model. But life gets in the way.

When a conversation reaches that point, and in my experience it often does, I try to terminate the discussion or switch to another topic. I have a very low tolerance for such drivel.

Some of my most successful clients are very busy people. They get in excellent shape, despite managing a business, family and many other obligations. In fact, I'm convinced that having too much free time is counterproductive. Surely it would be logical to assume that unlimited time for cardio, training and cooking would equal better results and make fat loss a walk in the park? Not so. How can this paradox be explained?

The Marshmallow Test

In the early 1970s, a psychologist named Walter Mischel conducted an experiment involving four-year-olds. He placed each child in a room, where they sat down at a table. In front of them, a marshmallow. Mischel then made each child an offer. He could eat the marshmallow right away or wait for a few more minutes and receive another one. Almost everyone decided to wait. Mischel then left the room for twenty minutes.

While a few of the four-year-olds were able to resist the temptation for up to fifteen minutes, many lasted less than one minute. Others just ate the marshmallow as soon as Mischel left the room.

This was a test of self-control. If the child wanted to achieve the goal of receiving another marshmallow, then he needed to temporarily ignore his feelings and delay gratification for a few more minutes. What this study showed was that some children at the early age of four were much better at this than others.

What I found interesting are the strategies the successful children employed in order to endure the experiment. They kept themselves distracted. Covered their eyes, played with their hands or just entered a trance-like state where it seemed they were lost in their thoughts. Their attention was elsewhere.

The failed strategy of the unsuccessful children was the complete opposite of that; in essence, they fixated on the marshmallow almost as if attempting to stare it down, actively fighting the temptation.

How does this translate to the various strategies used by the fitness crowd?

When some people are dieting, they are DIETING. They treat it like a full-time job and they're in the gym every day, sometimes twice a day. Their spartan diet is meticulously planned and carefully dispensed throughout the day. They are the ones that fixate on the marshmallow.

Others take a more balanced approach. Diet and training is part of their life, but it blends in beautifully. They are the ones that tries to forget about the marshmallow. It's background noise to them.

I'll give you a concrete example to show you what I mean. Some people schedule a weekly cheat day, which usually involves a day on the weekend when they can eat what they want. In practical terms, this often means that they pig out and end up on the couch in a torpor-like state. This day becomes the high point of their week. They restrict calories severely throughout the week in order to allow themselves the cheat day. Their training typically includes hours of cardio. On Thursday they start planning their shopping list for Saturday and on Friday they lie sleepless in giddy anticipation of the forthcoming food fest. They are fixating on the marshmallow, making it the center of the world.

I could give you a similar example when it comes to training. The overly enthusiastic young guy embarking on a 6-day-split that ends up overtraining and sick or hurt. He too was fixating on the marshmallow.

The solution then is to stay distracted.

You shouldn't buy into the myth of what it takes to achieve your goals. Don't get me wrong, it takes dedication. Sweat, yes. But that needs to be maintained as a regular, long-term commitment. And that's impossible to do if you're constantly thinking about it. It needs to be part of your daily routine, but it needs to blend in. Again, background noise and balanced. Or else you won't last.

If you're too fixated on the marshmallow, you'll eat it sooner or later. In this context it means you'll screw up your diet and/or training, burn out and lose all motivation. The more physical and mental energy you invest in your training and diet, the more likely you are to fail.

And that's why some of the busiest people are the most successful ones when it comes to reaching their physique goals. They have other things to think about.

Guidelines and attitudes to live by

* Spend too much time focusing on your goal and you will end up sabotaging yourself. This may not hold much ground in other areas of life where, in order to be successful, focus and time investment is of critical importance; such as building a business, managing a large corporation or becoming a highly-competitive elite athlete. But it's definitely one that applies to diet and strength training for the average Joe. Stay distracted. Have hobbies. Have a life. If diet and training become the sole focus of your daily routine, the road to your goals will feel like a very long road indeed.

* Commitment and dedication dispensed over a longer time period is superior to more focused efforts. The latter has a higher rate of failure and greater chance of backfiring on you and is why people fall off the wagon. This is my personal experience, but it's also backed up by studies. A good example of this are the numerous reformed health enthusiasts that pop up after New Year's Eve. They go at it hard for a few weeks, but are often back into their old patterns of sporadic training and a sub par diet by February. Another example is the rebound that many competitors experience after contest dieting. Avoid this with a balanced approach without extremes.

* Most people will not benefit from more than four training sessions per week when attempting to gain muscle mass.

* The great majority shouldn't be in the gym more than three times per week when cutting. You don't need the gym for cardio. Go outside.

* Use checkpoints to help you focus on long-term and not short-term progress

* Never attempt to train yourself into a caloric deficit. Don't spend hours on the treadmill. Diet comes first, cardio second. The dumbest fat loss strategy ever devised is used by people that wake up early in the morning before going to work to do cardio and follow that up with "recovery shake." Congratulations, you just wasted two hours of your life. Cardio is good for cardiovascular health, but most people use cardio as a fat loss tool - and force themselves through regimens that aren't very conducive to their daily routine (or mental sanity). Next time, skip the shake and the cardio. Sleep two hours longer, but skip breakfast and fast until lunch time. This way you can create the same caloric deficit with the added bonus of feeling more rested and having saved more time. You'll be much better off.

* Intermittent fasting is an easy way to create a calorie deficit. Your "cardio" is to stay productive during the fast and work. If you don't have a job, work on projects that are important to you. Learn. Read books. Write. Don't sit around and brood about your diet or what you have in the fridge.

Final note: I first learned about the marshmallow test in
How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer. A good read if you're interested in human behavior and psychology. It's interesting to note that the marshmallow test predicted future success in many other areas of life. When a follow-up study on each child was done twenty years later, it was found that children who waited longer also had better academic success and less behavioral problems than the ones who ate the treat sooner.
http://www.leangains.com/2010/01/marshmallow-test.html

Which four year old are you?

Replies

  • mamagooskie
    mamagooskie Posts: 2,964 Member
    interesting!
  • shaunarlr83
    shaunarlr83 Posts: 374 Member
    i like it : )
  • Gotta say you are right on. Earlier weight loss attempts for me have failed, because the workouts were the only thing I was fixated on. I burned out.

    Now I have work and classes from 9am to 6pm everyday. The gym and workouts are there everyday, but like you mentioned they are in the background now.

    Thanks for the validation!
  • jlcghs27408
    jlcghs27408 Posts: 37 Member
    Interesting, thanks for sharing!

    Just like anything, don't be crazy & burn out on exercise and your diet. Balance diet & exercise in your life.
  • exercisechic927
    exercisechic927 Posts: 64 Member
    hmmm I think there needs to be a balance. Of course obsessing over it is not good but giving it too little of thought would be bad too. If you are not thinking about it then I think you would screw up also. It should be in steps and phases to make a long-term change. interesting!
  • Very insightful!
  • tiffanygil
    tiffanygil Posts: 478 Member
    bump... This is the best piece of advice I've read in a while ...thank you for sharing
  • Curves73
    Curves73 Posts: 134 Member
    Was hoping this involved eating marshmellows.. too bad
  • LindaAnn51
    LindaAnn51 Posts: 10 Member
    Makes a lot of sense. Thanks for posting!
  • I think the marshmallow was a poor metaphor to use with the cheat day. Fad dieting would be a much better comparison.
  • this reminded me of my jar of nutella sitting on the counter... mmmmmm
  • janemartin02
    janemartin02 Posts: 2,653 Member
    Thanks for sharing!Very good advice!!
  • bump
  • I looove this! It is sooo true. When I'm busier, I tend to eat a lot less than if I'm sitting at home.
  • tanniew78
    tanniew78 Posts: 602 Member
    I am on the fence about this theory. I say it goes both ways. You cant allow yourself to get too distracted and go off course either. I have found on many plans the people that lost and kept if off, are the ones that focused on their plans when it was important. During their workouts, they gave all. They DID plan meals for themselves and made sure to have the things on hand they needed to get thru the week.

    There is a fine line here and nothing is black and white. As much as we would like it to be.

    It was a great read tho. Thank you very much!
  • chrisdavey
    chrisdavey Posts: 9,834 Member
    I think it's different for different people. I love the planning etc that goes into a good diet. I find that if I am bored at home is when I stray from my plan. If I am out and about, just make good healthy choices and stay active. Good article though :)
  • Knbrooks42
    Knbrooks42 Posts: 63 Member
    This is crazy babe! i just used these experiment results in class a week or two ago!!! Not about intermittent fasting, but still. Weird!
This discussion has been closed.