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| ![]() FOR YOUR WELL-BEING Push Past the Plateau When you stall out on the way to a healthier lifestyle, take positive steps to put yourself back on course.
We promise ourselves we’ll change our lifestyles for better health. We start diets, launch exercise programs or try to quit smoking. And then we stall.We hit a plateau, putting us at risk of losing precious gains or quitting altogether. A healthy lifestyle change is just that — change. “A lot of people believe that change is easy, but we are fundamentally conservative creatures, and we don’t change until we have to,” says Michael J. Mahoney, Ph.D., an American Psychological Association spokesman and professor at the University of North Texas. “It doesn’t take much to throw us off course because we are such creatures of routine.” So sticking with a new routine is tough. Dr. Mahoney suggests you focus on being consistent, especially in the first six weeks of a change. That way, you build new patterns of behavior. Once that happens, odds are you’ll “begin to speak to yourself about the change in a more positive tone, instead of a negative one.” Pledging to reward yourself if you meet your goals can be a great tool for getting past plateaus. The reward that awaits you can serve as a symbol of what you’re trying to do and give you something to look forward to. “The symbol could be anything,” notes Dr. Mahoney — a piece of jewelry or a new golf club, for instance. Once you earn it, you can set your sights on a new reward for the next step. When you’re trying to get past a plateau, he recommends you focus each day on your behavior, your effort, rather than on your goal — the amount of weight you’d like to lose, for instance. One crucial skill you’ll need is patience. This, more than anything, will help get you past plateaus.“Most people don’t see a traffic jam as an opportunity to practice patience,” Dr.Mahoney says. But the skills that help you put up with a stalled interstate “will help you realize and understand that plateaus are a natural part of life and they’re going to occur — so if you learn patience you’ll get over plateaus.” “Progress,” he notes, “is not always linear. If we understand this going in, it helps us be more patient with the plateaus — so that we can get past them and keep going.” SIX STEPS TO PROGRESS
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