Thursday, 10 May 2012

Making Your Weight Loss Plan.

Since excess weight puts you at risk of many health problems, if you are carrying a few extra pounds, you may need to make some weight loss plans to help avoid those risks and prevent disease.

But what should be your long-term goal? And what short-term goals should you set to help you get there? You have a better chance of attaining your goals if you make sure that the weight loss techniques that you choose to use are sensible and reasonable right from the outset.

Here are some guidelines from the experts in choosing weight loss plans and goals.

1. Be realistic

Most people’s long-term weight loss plans are more ambitious than they have to be.

For example, if you weigh 170 pounds and your long-term plan is to weigh 120, even if you have not weighed 120 since you were 16 and now you are 45, that is not a realistic weight loss goal.

Your body mass index or BMI is a good indicator of whether or not you need to shed of pounds. The ideal BMI range, according to the national Institutes of Health, is between 19 and 24.9. If your BMI is between 25 and 29.9, you are considered overweight. Any number above 30 is in the obesity range.

With this in mind, you will need to find or create a sensible weight loss plan that will help you achieve a weight range that falls within the ideal BMI range for you.

2. Set appropriate objectives

Using a weight loss plan just for vanity’s sake is psychologically less helpful than losing weight to improve health.

You have made a big step forward if you decide to undergo a weight loss plan that includes exercise and eating right so that you will feel better and have more energy to do something positive in your life.

3. Focus on doing, not losing

Rather than saying that you are going to lose a pound this week, say how much you are going to exercise this week and what you plan to eat.  This would definitely be much more beneficial to you in your success and continued sensible weight loss plan.

Keep in mind that your weight loss within a span of a week is not completely in your control, but your behavior is.

4. Build bit by bit

Short-term weight loss plans should not be “pie-in-the-sky.” This means that when you have never exercised at all, your best weight loss plan for this week should be based on finding three different one-mile routes that you can walk next week, or aiming to ascend and descend a set of stairs 5 times in a row, 3 times each day.  Everything you do will add up and start making a difference.

5. Keep up the self-encouragement

An all-or-nothing attitude only sets you up to fail. Learn to evaluate your efforts fairly and objectively. If you fall short of some goals, just look ahead to next week. You do not need to have a perfect record.  Just keep on with your objectives and you will surely make progress in time.

After all, self-encouragement should definitely be a part of your weight loss plans. Otherwise, you will just fail in the end.

6. Use measurable measures

Saying that you are going to be more positive this week or that you are going to really get serious this week is not a goal that you can measure and should not be a part of your weight loss plan.

This is another reason why you should incorporate exercise on your weight loss plan and focus on it. You should be able to count up the minutes of exercise in order to be successful in your plan.

The bottom line is, people often make weight loss plans that will only remain just that, plans! They have to put it into action by incorporating measurable goals that will motivate them to succeed.

2 comments:

  1. Great ideas! I "plan" to start working out as soon as these next couple of crazy weeks are done. :) I think the realistic goals are true for any amount your want to lose, whether it's 50 or 15.

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  2. Fantastic post, I completely agree, especially with the realistic goals. I find too many people strive to just lose weight rather than actually name their goal or look at what their ideal weight is or was.

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