Motivation and the Mind: How to Think Yourself Thin, Healthy, and Happy



Posted: Tuesday, March 31, 2009

by Jen Boda
Boda Botanicals

"it doesn't take much strength to do things, but it requires a great deal of strength to decide what to do."

–Elbert Hubbard.

A friend recently sent me this quote and it struck me as very true, especially when it comes to figuring out the big things–like love, life purpose, family….oh yeah, and taking care of ourselves. Let's face it–with over 60% of us overweight and almost twenty percent on antidepressants and anti-anxiety drugs (a three fold increase in just ten years)–it's obvious that we don't know how to care for ourselves very well.  We learn a lot in school growing up but there isn't a class in how to be happy, how to love ourselves and others, how to figure out what we really want from life, or how to nourish and accept our bodies. So it's up to us, as adults who want to be fit and lead full lives and pass that on to our children, to begin to learn how to nurture ourselves. And we can't do that until we know one thing–what makes us tick, what is the spark that pushes us toward health. We have to know what motivates us or we will never truly be able to reach our goals.

I am a quitter. It's true. Almost everything I have ever done I have quit, and often it is just when I am getting good, getting comfortable. I come so close to figuring it out, mastering it and then ‘poof'! For some mysterious reason my fire just goes out.  Suddenly the excuses are flying–it's too cold to run, I'm just not in the mood to write, I love that yoga class but it's too late at night…you see where I am going. Only recently have I been able to really sit down and start to figure out why this is the case. Motivation is different for all of us, but there are definitely patterns that we fall into. So read on and find out where your motivation lies and how to harness your spark to truly reach your goals:

Look Ma, No Hands!–Now our ego loves to ‘become'. It wants the characteristics but not so much the verbs. It readily clings to ‘I am a runner' and not so much the act of running. It also loves to brag. For some of us, the ego has become a trap. When we are praised for what we ‘do' outwardly and not for who we ‘are' internally, we often learn that the praise from others is worth more than our own feelings. I often fell into this trap. Instead of getting motivation from myself, I got it from telling others about what I was doing and getting their praise or even acknowledgment. The problem with this is that, once everyone knows, it is no longer new and there is less gratification. Less gratification equals less motivation. And so then you are on to the next new thing….always hoping for that quick fix from others.  The same thing happens when you are losing weight. You might start having people comment on how good you look and you lose the motivation…suddenly it's okay to eat junk again or slack on exercise because others have rewarded you–despite the fact that you haven't reached your goal.  Our egos aren't going to go away, they are part of us. So we have to outsmart them by acknowledging that they are there, that they want the approval of others, and then engage our friends and family into making us accountable to ourselves.  How do we do this?

The Kitchen Sink– Here's another one that many of us fall pray to. You've been doing so well, eating right, exercising every day and then something happens, something to stress you out. A fight with a loved one, a sick child, a bill you forgot to pay…the stress pushes you and you push back-at yourself.  You take a couple of days off, eat junk or stop exercising. And then you say ‘well I've already blown it so I might as well blow it some more' and off you go…coming up to the surface only when you feel bad enough again to want to make it right. I call this the kitchen sink mentality, and unfortunately, it often hits the most intelligent of us out there, those of us that think globally and creatively. The think is, when you have a hard time thinking in steps, but instead are a ‘big picture' person, it is easy to psych ourselves in or out of doing something. We often miss the small things that can make or break our goals.  I once had a friend describe it like this:  Imagine your life is like driving at night. You can only see that small area in front of your car that is illuminated by your headlights but you don't freak out at the darkness out there, at all that space you can't see. You have faith that the road and that your destination is there and that by paying attention to what you can see, that you will get there in the end. Life is like that. We have to have faith that the small things we do will add up into  big goals, that the two pounds we lose this month will equal twenty pounds by the end of the year; that by walking those two miles now, we will eventually be able to run them.  Some good ways to keep to the small goals:

Show  Me the Money– We live in a culture that is expressly materialistic and many of us have learned to reward ourselves with material objects. This is one of the reasons that so many of us struggle with our weight–we use food as emotional support and succor. Some of us also fall into the pattern of needing material rewards as a motivating factor.  This can be great when being used to reach short-term fitness and diet goals–making a bet with someone not to eat junk food or to exercise every day for a week–but in the long-term this type of motivation always falls flat. There has to be some kind of deeper, behavioral motivation in order to make lasting changes and reach long term goals.   Figuring that out is complicated but can be done:

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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)
» left by Glenna from arkansas 2 years 327 days ago.
Yes it was. Thanks
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