What do you say to yourself?
Chantallanthier83
Posts: 3 Member
Hi all! New here and struggling:( how do I stay focused and motivated after falling off the wagon so many times? I am constantly doubting myself and thinking that I am kidding myself for even trying.
0
Replies
-
I tell myself that one day does not have to ruin the overall plan. I tell myself that this is for the long haul and that I won't be perfect - that some days will be hard. I tell myself that I have a chance to re-focus every day. Most important? I tell myself that I am worth it to keep trying.7
-
I know how to do this. It's my choice either way. I know how to take off the weight. (What I say to myself now when I get off track and gain a few pounds after not logging for a while.
When I first started: I am going to give this my full effort for 5 or 6 weeks. I will stick to the calories MFP set for me no matter what and see what happens. If I don't lose at least 10 pounds then to hell with it. I was overjoyed to see I lost about 17 pounds in about 5 weeks. That motivated me to continue to end up losing over 50 pounds.6 -
I tell my fat a** to get to the basement and workout. Usually I do what I tell myself to, sometimes I don't and make sure I'm at least tracking the food as that is the killer. Amazing how fast weight comes back when you don't log3
-
Lots of people fall. Did you watch any of the Olympics that just finished? Skaters and skiers fall all the time. Every time they fall, they get back up and keep going!6
-
I can totally relate. I struggle with self doubt all the time. I think it comes from being a perfectionist.
feel like I’ve started over a million times, getting more and more disappointed with myself each time.
But this time, I’m not focusing so much on the goal as I am trying to enjoy the day to day process of getting there. I tell myself that this is my “new normal” and I don’t feel so much pressure to be perfect.
I know there’ll be good days and bad days and that it’s part of the process. When I was slim and fit I had good and bad days then too. I just didn’t let my bad days be an excuse to go on a binge for 3 months. Lol
Hang in there! Be kind to yourself and you’ll soon be your own hero! I’m cheering for you!3 -
I tell myself that time will continue to pass whether I lose weight or not, then I ask myself if I want to be where I am today a year from now. The answer is always NO. I have wasted too much of my life over weight.7
-
I tell myself that I lost a ton of weight before (220+ down to 177) so I can do it again. I've been "back on the wagon" since January 2nd and I've lost 17 pounds as of today. I've got a long ways to go to get back to 170(ish), but all I have to do is not stop. Logging as I go from the MFP app and an hour of moderate level cardio 7 days a week. Just like old times2
-
All i can tell you is the when you push through weakness it makes you stronger. if you give into the weakness you just keep coming back to the same point of failure and you start believing you can't do it. But you can. I've had many moments of doubts and temptation but never gave in..and right after i push through - my resolve gets stronger and stronger. i've lost almost 30 pounds since the new year. i'm almost to goal and my healthy choices seem easy and automatic, It used to take work.1
-
It's a tough place to be, I'm sorry you're experiencing it
I tell myself things very similar to the folk who have posted already. My biggest one is to tell myself that I can stop anytime I want...but that won't give me the results I want....so the choice is mine & mine alone. I'm over halfway to goal & had I given up when I first felt like it, I doubt I would've kept any weight off at all. In fact I'd wager I'd currently be heavier than where I began!
Sometimes the scales don't shift for days & even weeks at a time & some days I feel as graceful & capable as a baby elephant! But progress photos & measurements prove that what I do works regardless. I'm 7 months in & 4 stone down as of yesterday - I still doubt myself & my following of the process from time to time, but results say otherwise. One meal at a time, one workout at a time, one day at a time. My aim is always to not think about it too deeply, just get on & do it.
Best of luck & cheering you on1 -
I don't tell myself I'm struggling. I have challenges, as in a constant flow of tasks that need to be done, mental resistance that needs to be overcome.
I don't aim to stay motivated - motivation is a fickle friend.
There is no wagon, so nothing to fall off. It's just day in, day out, of mostly everyday things, some boring, some painful, some difficult, some easy, some fun.
I gain confidence by practicing new skills and seeing the results over time. Patience is one of those skills that has to be learned and practiced.
Weight management is simple and straightforward, a single player game, not like love or even getting a job. It's basically don't eat too much all the time. So I don't try this, I do it.3 -
You had your reason to use this app, don't lose sight of it.1
-
Keep tracking no matter what. It’s a thing to do, the only way not to do it is quit. Forget? Go back and fill it in best you can? No idea how many points in that meal? Figure out how to make a good faith guess. Put a number on everything.
Now that your food diary is the center of your program, forget the wagon. You are never off your program when tracking. Oh, you will eat too many calories here and there. Bad plans, loss of concentration, math mistakes, fatigue, lots of ways to make mistakes. But there is no such thing as a mistake free human undertaking.
Agree with everything in kommodevaran’s post.
Weight loss is a skill set. It has a learning curve. Give yourself time to learn.
When I made missteps I told myself this- perfect is the enemy of the good. And kept going.
1 -
Every time I quit - I stagnate and then there is always an event that triggers me to start again. Whether it be discomfort in bending down to tie my shoes, struggling to stay awake after a carb heavy snack/meal or just feeling of inadequacy. Trust your gut - you KNOW what you need to do to feel good and that is the goal - to feel good. Every choice is a new choice. Whether you over ate on calories today or didn't get any exercise in. Tomorrow is a new day - new choices, new goals.0
-
Thank you everyone for your support.0
-
I think a big part of many people's problem is an all or nothing mentality and that if everything isn't 100% perfect then it's utter failure. To that end, people try to do complete 180*s and just flip a switch and think they'll be able to "just do it". Both are completely and utterly unrealistic. Nobody is on 100% of the time and trying to do a 180* overnight is completely ignoring that this is all a process over time.
I don't tell myself anything...but I remember when my oldest was learning to walk (a process) he would fall a lot and he'd get frustrated and I'd ask him, "what do we do when we fall down?" and he'd respond, "get back up."
I've been on this good livin' safari for over 5 years...there is no wagon (that's part of the all or nothing mentality)...there are good days and there are bad days and there are good weeks and bad weeks and good months and bad months...such is life.3 -
I try to remind myself that I have years and years ahead of me and I hope to lose weight and then maintain that loss over the rest of my life, so it doesn't have to come off immediately. There's no deadline. I got into a cycle where I would decide something like "I'm going to lose 5 lbs this month by eating 1200 calories per day and exercising every day!" and within two or three days I would be so hungry that I would eat a large, unhealthy meal and then feel like I had failed... so why not just eat a similar meal again the next day? Now I'm trying to lose one pound per week... I was sick last week and wasn't able to exercise, and then I visited my parents who always have lots of unhealthy snacks and it's so hard to control myself when I visit, so when I weighed myself at the beginning of this week I had actually gained half a pound.... But I'm just trying to continue on and lose a pound from that weight by next week. There's a long term urgency because I want to be as healthy as possible, but I haven't failed because I didn't lose a much as I wanted to this week.1
-
It’s so tempting to just go and do what I have always done and eat everything in sight. The scale is not moving, but I’m always reminding myself that I didn’t get here in one day, keep on exercising and logging everything and eventually something will change. Also, exercising every day has given me a positive way to look at things. Good luck0
-
cwolfman13 wrote: »I think a big part of many people's problem is an all or nothing mentality and that if everything isn't 100% perfect then it's utter failure. To that end, people try to do complete 180*s and just flip a switch and think they'll be able to "just do it". Both are completely and utterly unrealistic. Nobody is on 100% of the time and trying to do a 180* overnight is completely ignoring that this is all a process over time.
I don't tell myself anything...but I remember when my oldest was learning to walk (a process) he would fall a lot and he'd get frustrated and I'd ask him, "what do we do when we fall down?" and he'd respond, "get back up."
I've been on this good livin' safari for over 5 years...there is no wagon (that's part of the all or nothing mentality)...there are good days and there are bad days and there are good weeks and bad weeks and good months and bad months...such is life.
So true! It is easy to have one bad day and think that it is a total failure of the effort. It's not. It's one bad day. But, when something is hard, just that can be the "incentive" to give up. It takes real strength to move beyond that.0 -
This content has been removed.
-
I just joined a few days ago. Being inconsistent and not logging has kept me from my goal in the past. Yesterday I told myself, it’s not just a few days or weeks of better choices but 100 days! (As a start.) Now let’s take them on one at a time!1
-
kommodevaran wrote: »I don't tell myself I'm struggling. I have challenges, as in a constant flow of tasks that need to be done, mental resistance that needs to be overcome.
I don't aim to stay motivated - motivation is a fickle friend.
There is no wagon, so nothing to fall off. It's just day in, day out, of mostly everyday things, some boring, some painful, some difficult, some easy, some fun.
I gain confidence by practicing new skills and seeing the results over time. Patience is one of those skills that has to be learned and practiced.
Weight management is simple and straightforward, a single player game, not like love or even getting a job. It's basically don't eat too much all the time. So I don't try this, I do it.
Absolutely!!
1 -
Sometimes with workouts if I feel like I don’t want to go for a run for instance, I will tell myself to get out there and do a really minimal amount to at least say I did something. Then sometimes once I am out there I discover I have energy or desire to do more. Just having done something makes me not despair...
Other than that big capacity to accept that I will fall down but am rresilient enough to get back up again. When I fail I tell myself, “Rad Biker Chick, I love you and I forgive you” as corny as it sounds, which doesn’t exactly make me feel better but it fends off the negative thinking anyway so I end up kind of feeling neutral.0 -
Also, I find that a lot of negative feelings can be addressed with a nap.2
-
I don't have anything to add here..everyone has given great answers. I like to think of where I might be if I hadn't had the good days I DID have...every one of them counts. You can absolutely do this.2
-
You haven't failed until you stop trying.
So what if you have to try again?
Every day is a new day.
Better a small step than none at all.
This is the one body you get, so be kind to it and take care of it.1 -
I keep telling myself that I've got this and one bad day does not ruin all of the progress that I have made! And if I don't feel like working out or unmotivated I just tell myself that I can do this, even if I only workout for 30 minutes or so, at least I did something1
-
There is a reason you keep trying. You don't want to be overweight. I have lost the 10-12 pounds several times, but have always gained it back after I've stopped paying attention. This time I told myself (when I was at my high weight), look, you aren't feeling alright being at the weight you are or it wouldn't bother you. So, this time I remind myself that it is a long term effort, and once you've lost the weight, you have to continue logging and being hyper aware of what you are eating. Because for me, maintenance is much more difficult than losing, and losing isn't all that easy!
What has really helped me:
1. Bought a food scale.
2. I weigh myself every day and use an app (I use Libra). This doesn't work for everyone; I think this is a very personal issue. But for me it keeps me on track if I'm 2 pounds up from the day before.
3. Eat back your exercise calories - but you may have to experiment and determine how much - 50% to 70% is mentioned on here that works for some people.
4. Go on a week long diet break every so often - it helps psychologically - at least for me. I'm on a .5 pound loss per week which is a 250 calorie daily deficit. For a week, eating 250 extra calories each day really makes me feel better, then my motivation is renewed to go back to the deficit.
5. Be selective about who you share this journey with. Not everyone is supportive, and some people say hurtful things, maybe without meaning to, but still.1 -
I have incentivized the process.
I will need a new car in about 10 months. I would like to lose 75+lbs and could easily lose 100 or so. For every pound I lose, I’m going to allow myself to spend $1000 on a new car. I’m a 50 yr old man and knee deep in my midlife crisis (lol) and want a two-seat sports car convertible that is FAST!
When I want to fall off the wagon, I just think of myself tooling around in a shiny new Convertible and I easily find the energy and will power to turn away. Maybe not for everyone, but I found what motivates me! Find what motivates you and keep it front and center!
Good luck!0 -
When I finally got on the fitness wagon again, it was as simple as I made it a priority. Not something I wanted, not something I was wishing for, not something I was doing to reach a "goal" - it was a priority, and that's all there was to it.
There would be times when it would suck and I'd just have to "embrace the suck."
Also, don't go with an all or nothing plan. Build up your fitness slowly - give your body time to adapt. Allow and plan to have your favorite foods as part of your diet. If you have trigger foods, find an alternative that can help with the cravings (for example, soda was really hard for me to give up until I realized that it was the bubbles, not the flavor, that I loved so much - got fizzy waters, and soda was easy to cut out).0 -
Chantallanthier83 wrote: »Hi all! New here and struggling:( how do I stay focused and motivated after falling off the wagon so many times? I am constantly doubting myself and thinking that I am kidding myself for even trying.
I say a lot. I ask myself is any of this worth it? What more do I want to lose weight or to sit on the couch? I ask myself if those extra calories are worth the time it takes to burn off in the gym?0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions