your mistakes made

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Replies

  • foreverhealthy3
    foreverhealthy3 Posts: 111 Member
    A big downfall for me, is grocery shopping. can't avoid temptations
    another one is not exercising consistently
  • sollyn23l2
    sollyn23l2 Posts: 1,755 Member
    A big downfall for me, is grocery shopping. can't avoid temptations
    another one is not exercising consistently

    Grocery shopping is always a hard one. The way I dealt with it was to have a fixed list of exactly what I was there to get. No wandering around the store. And if it wasn't on the list, it couldn't go in the cart.
  • refactored
    refactored Posts: 455 Member
    A big downfall for me, is grocery shopping. can't avoid temptations
    another one is not exercising consistently

    I pretend I eat all the things I know are not healthy for me while grocery shopping (in my mind not actually miming). I picture myself getting bigger and bigger with every food I pretend to stuff in to my mouth. I admit I am a little strange but it helps me. I also don't go shopping on an empty stomach.

    My mistake was belittling myself for making mistakes. As Thomas Edison once said: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." Mistakes are learning opportunities so I journal my journey (in the 10 day challenge on here) and reflect on my behaviors that don't help me achieve a healthier lifestyle.
  • mtaratoot
    mtaratoot Posts: 14,241 Member
    sollyn23l2 wrote: »
    A big downfall for me, is grocery shopping. can't avoid temptations
    another one is not exercising consistently

    Grocery shopping is always a hard one. The way I dealt with it was to have a fixed list of exactly what I was there to get. No wandering around the store. And if it wasn't on the list, it couldn't go in the cart.

    I was about to suggest the exact same thing. I also actually DO allow myself an occasional fun thing that's not on the list. Often it's a nice hunk of cheese and some crackers. It used to be I couldn't do this or I'd just eat it. After years of practice, I can leave cheese uneaten in the fridge, and I can open the cheese and eat a weighed amount and not the rest. It's taken a while to get to this though. Same thing with potato chips.

    refactored wrote: »
    I pretend I eat all the things I know are not healthy for me while grocery shopping (in my mind not actually miming). I picture myself getting bigger and bigger with every food I pretend to stuff in to my mouth. I admit I am a little strange but it helps me. I also don't go shopping on an empty stomach.

    My mistake was belittling myself for making mistakes. As Thomas Edison once said: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." Mistakes are learning opportunities so I journal my journey (in the 10 day challenge on here) and reflect on my behaviors that don't help me achieve a healthier lifestyle.

    I used to do something similar at the grocery with potato chips or other salty crunchy things. I'd pick up each bag, look at the nutrition label, and decide that 140 calories for 13 chips... probably wouldn't make me happy. I'd put them back on the shelf and look at the next bag. Every now and then I'd decide to get one. Usually not.

    I love the Edison quote, too, and use it frequently. The greatest scientific discoveries were usually not accompanied by a shout of "Eureka!" They were usually accompanied by a soft-spoken, "Hmmm. Well that's odd."