Once we admit to ourselves that perhaps we could use a hand with long-term weight loss, where do we turn? This article points us in several very right directions.
(Seventh in a Series)
Help
Pride and independence often tell us the story we want to hear: we can do this on our own, we know we can; we don’t need any help.
That may well be true if you only have ten or so pounds to lose to get into last year’s dress for a party. Live on lemon juice for a week or two while you treadmill yourself ragged for two hours a day. Sure, you’ll get into that dress—though you probably won’t again a couple of weeks after the party.
If, however, you’re facing a long-term weight loss project of fifty, seventy-five, one hundred pounds or more—and especially if you’ve tried, and failed, a few times already—it’s time to swallow your pride and acknowledge that, yes, you could do with a hand here.
The ability to accept help, freely and without resentment, is undervalued. Few have it innately. Most have to work at it. And as a long-term dieter, you had better acquire this skill sooner rather than later.
Once you have come to terms with needing a hand, however, you will find that such hands abound.
Weight Loss Sites
This paragraph opens with a warning: there are so many Internet sites devoted to weight loss that you can easily spend the rest of your days perusing them all and never quite get around to losing weight.
Also, many weight loss sites are pure money making schemes, praying on your need (getting more and more desperate as time, and failed diets, pile up) to lose weight. The best way to detect such sites is by their promises, which are always a little over the top, and always stress how easy it will be, if only you spend $50 a week with them.
This is a dead giveaway, for long-term weight loss is not easy.
But there are many helpful sites as well, providing all manner of tools and tips. FitDay and SparkPeople are two of the best. There are, however, many excellent sites. Just search for what you need in terms of information and support, and watch out for outlandish promises.
Nutritionists
If you have the financial resources to afford one, or the insurance coverage to provide one, a nutritionist can be of invaluable help to you. An experienced nutrition professional has been there and done that with almost any scenario and can provide excellent, and real, advice to follow.
Doctors
It goes without saying that if you have medical problems, or even concerns, of any kind, you need to consult—and gain the support of—your doctor before you set out on a long term weight loss program.
Many medical problems—although causes may appear to lie elsewhere—tend to resolve once you reach a healthy weight, for the body is an amazingly efficient self-healing organism. Once it no longer has to cope with and battle the ills of being overweight, it can turn its attention to other, medical, problems, and more often than not successfully resolve them.
Still, you need to enlist your doctor on your team. If your current doctor is less than enthusiastic about your weight loss efforts, it might serve you well to recruit a new one who is. The support guidance of a medical professional is an invaluable resource.
Loved Ones
Possibly the most important support you will need, especially over the course of a long-term weight loss project, is members of your family and friends, whether an old roommate, significant other, co-worker, parent, or child.
Knowing that those who love your are squarely in your court and willing to do anything to help you, can make all the difference; can in fact, make or break the success of long-term weight loss.
Successful Dieters
Another priceless source of support comes from those who have successfully lost the amount of weight you are setting out to lose. They have been there and done that on the field of battle, and they have won. They know what problems you will face, and they know how to overcome them.
Not unlike sponsors in an Anonymous group, they can offer you very real and applicable advice to virtually any situation. And they will, just like your loved ones, be firmly on your side against the mountain that often seems quite impossible to climb.
Seek them out by any means, and stay in weekly, if not daily contact, to benefit from their experience. It cannot be overvalued.
Help Revisited
The fact that you may have tried many times to lose weight, but has yet to succeed, is a clear indication that pride must be swallowed, and help must be sought and accepted—whether freely or grudgingly, it doesn’t really matter.
This can be hard to do, but for the sake of your own health and happiness, you must do it; you’ll find that it is nowhere near as hard as trying to go it alone.
The multiTRIM Diet
All diet plans—except for the outright fraudulent ones, and be warned: they abound—have only one goal: for you to burn more calories than you consume.
Possibly the most sensible plan we have seen in recent years is the multiTRIM diet which supplies all needed nutrients to maintain health while easing hunger in a fifteen calories meal-replacement drink.
A multiTRIM Journal
A friend recently set out to shed 143 pounds over 18 months with the help of the multiTRIM diet. The blog-record of her journey can be found here.
Outsmarting Internet Commerce Fraud
The Internet is the largest garage sale ever, and by last count is still growing.The problem with this particular garage sale is that you don’t know the seller (or the buyer). In a world of universal honesty and mutual trust, this would not be a problem, but this is not the world we live in. As a seller—whether you purchase on an online auction, or via an online classified such as Craigslist—your worry is whether the buyer will in fact pay, and that his or her check will not bounce. As a buyer, your worry is whether the seller will indeed send you the item once the payment is received.Weight Loss Basics -- Boredom
It may be true that boredom has tripped up more potentially successful weight loss attempts than much else; at the least it has tripped up enough of them to earn your respect; and when it raises its ugly head you need to deal with it. This is how.Weight Loss Basics -- Long-Term Weight Loss
If you have 26 odd miles to run, common sense decrees that you don’t set out at a flat-out dash. You pace yourself, that’s what marathon runners do; and the pace of a marathon-weight-loss runner is 1-2 pounds a week.For the not so comfortable truth is that long-term, permanent weight loss is difficult to achieve, and that about 95% of repeat dieters fail, regaining lost weight.What about the 5% who succeed?