Showing posts with label mentality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mentality. Show all posts

Friday, 11 September 2015

3 Mindset Shifts That Help Weight Loss

In a recent Facebook thread about weight loss that I was following, one commenter wrote that if she could write a diet book, she’d call it “Eat Less” and then leave all the pages blank. Drop the mic, call it a day, solve our obesity mess with a two-word prescription.
Most of us who have read anything about diets, obesity, and weight loss would nod in agreement. We have too much food, too much sugar, too many processed foods, and too many choices. And the reality is that we could likely engineer a one-size-fits-most diet that would push everybody back to healthy weights. Example: Eggs and berries for breakfast, grilled chicken salad with nuts for lunch, and fish with vegetables and avocado for dinner might get us there if we followed that plan every day (adjusting for variables like vegetarian options and allergies). Most of us who have read anything about diets, obesity and weight loss would also agree that it’s nowhere near that easy.
The diet dilemma has everything to with food. And nothing to do with food.
It really has more to do with adjusting our mindset so that healthy choices feel right—and don’t feel like deprivation, hard work or punishment.
I’ve spent most of my career writing about health, and I’ve spent most of my life in a bleep-off relationship with the scale. I’ve had quite a few lows (almost ballooning to 300 pounds while writing diet books, getting a D in sixth-grade gym class), and I’ve also had some successes. (For what it’s worth, our individual definitions of weight-loss success need to include not just pounds, but also things like bodily satisfaction, life satisfaction, numbers like blood pressure and achievement of other goals not associated with pounds.)
We all have the ability to change our mindsets—not with a tire-squealing hard left, but by simply drifting into a new lane of thinking. These 3 switches will help you start:
Reverse the leadership model. The protocol for people who want to lose weight typically comes in two forms. You have the people who seclude themselves, privately trying to swim upstream against all of the forces that will make them gain weight. And you have the follow-the-leader model, in which the would-be dieter listens to the plan/advice/program of the trainer, the doctor, the nutritionist, the author, the infomercial-machine-seller: the person who, by degree or some other definition, knows more about the subject than anybody else. There’s nothing inherently wrong with either model, because either of them can work.
The glitch, however, comes when the follower grows tired of following. And when one grows tired of following, one consumes three pieces of Oreo pie. It’s not that the experts don’t know what they’re doing, because most of the many I’ve worked with and interviewed in my career do. It’s just that we dieters, though most don’t even know it, need a more balanced mix of following and leading. We need to harness some of the power and control back from the people who are telling us what to do. We need to lead, even if we don’t look like we should.
Leadership can come in many forms, whether it’s being the person to arrange the neighborhood walking group, or the person who prepares the family meal and makes kale chips instead of buying chocolate chips, or the person who organizes a work team to run a 5K together. The last couple years, I’ve organized weekly workouts with friends and neighbors. I’m the worst athlete in the bunch, so at first glance, the question would be, Why is blubber boy in charge? Exactly zero percent of my friends have ever given me any inclination that’s what they felt. Instead, the dynamics of the group workout are that we all push and pull each other, no matter our athletic abilities. I know I’m not as good as the others, but I also know that these workouts don’t happen unless I kickstart them.
Dieters can redefine the roles we’re supposed to take, and that’s what drives changes in the way we think and act. This is where sustained energy comes from—what we deliver to others, we get in return.
Steer the fear. In the weight-loss world, fear is almost as bad of a word as pudding. We fear the scale. We fear the doctor. We fear shopping for clothes. We fear the camera. We fear being embarrassed. The more we fear, the more we retreat—and the harder it is to climb out of whatever destructive habits we have.
As someone who once was told I had child-bearing hips, I know that the fear is real, and I know it’s not easy to squash. But instead of letting fear steer us, we need to steer the fear.
Plenty of scholarly and popular writings have addressed the issue of goal-setting, though there is some debate about whether we should set dream-big goals or more attainable goals. My take: Every year, you should set at least one physical and mental challenge that scares you just enough to help you make good choices—because those choices are a means to reaching that goal. What is “just enough”? It’s that spot right in between “of course I can do this” and “no way in the world can I do this.” For me, it was taking on the challenge of trying to complete an Ironman in 2013 (2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run in a 17-hour time limit). I’ve found that the canyon in the middle of those two extremes is where the growth lies. Maybe it’s not fear in the traditional sense, but that bubbling angst of uncertainty feels different from and healthier than the kind of fear that dieters tend to have. (Tell us about your new challenge with the hashtag #TIMEtosteerthefear.)
Crank the voltage. As someone who has finished last in a race (maybe two, but who’s counting?), I do subscribe to the turtle-inspired mantra of slow and steady. When it comes to weight loss, that mindset will win the race. The choices we make over time, not one day or one hour, dictate the way that our bodies will look, feel and act.
I do think it’s a mistake to think that slow-and-steady is always the answer. Especially when it comes to exercise, we need high-intensity, those short periods of working as hard as we can. Why? Because that kind of work—the kind where you’re so immersed in the activity because it’s fun and intense—is what feels good, what feels enjoyable, what feels in the moment and what gives us the post-activity high that helps us make healthy decisions, especially when it comes to food choices.
My friend and sports psychologist Doug Newburg, PhD, has taught me a lot about the concept of feel, because he has studied how it works in hundreds of elite performers. It’s different than feelings or emotions. Exercise, like eating, shouldn’t feel like a chore. For it to truly work over the long term, it has to feel more like recess than like detention. Going all in—whether it’s running, dancing, playing tennis or playing tag with your kids—excites you enough to take you out of your own head, and that’s what makes you want to do it again and again. The byproduct of playing hard is that, without thinking, you find what you were after in the first place.




Source

Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Neurons That Fire Together, Wire Together: The New Science of Neuroplasticity

Throughout your life, as you grow and learn, the neural circuits (“wiring”) in your brain change and adapt to novelty and variation in your environment, relationships and experiences. Scientists refer to the ability of the human brain to alter itself in response to a person’s needs, as they evolve over time, as Neuroplasticity.
“Neuro” means “related to the brain,” and “plasticity” means “adaptability” or “flexibility.”
What does this mean for you?

The Two Types of Neuroplasticity:

Medical scientists have categorized brain plasticity into two main types:
  • Functional plasticity refers to your brain’s ability (once damaged, say, in an auto accident) to rewire itself, so that it can process functions like speech or body movement in undamaged areas [1].
  • Structural plasticity refers to the brain’s ability to alter its physical structure in response to learning new information, skills or habits [2].

scientist

Practice Makes Perfect

Look back to a time when you worked hard to learn a new skill, such as a musical instrument or a foreign language. As you will recall, your new abilities developed and improved in accordance with your level of focus, and the time you put into practice. Eventually, as you repeated your efforts, new neural pathways began to form within your brain.
At the same time, your brain was also doing a little “synaptic pruning” as it eliminated pathways it no longer needed. For example, as you learn a new language, your knowledge of your native language probably also improved, and pathways corresponding to improper usage of your native tongue were re-purposed. If, afterwards, you did not practice your new language skills on an ongoing basis, they were gradually “pruned” and you forgot them.

Taking a New Look at an Old Belief Of course, you will have heard the tired old adage “You can’t teach old dogs new tricks!” Until very recently, everyone thought this was true. Scientists now know that the human brain, which consists of approximately 100 billion neural cells, with trillions of interconnections, can, in fact, generate new pathways—and even new neurons. The old model assumed that you were pretty much stuck with the neurons, pathways and brain you were born with, and that, when a cell died, no new cell grew in its place. We know now that certain areas of your brain can generate new cells, in a process called neurogenesis, as well as generating new neural pathways [3]. In fact, the brain can grow as many as 1,400 new cells in a single day! 


synapses

The phenomenon of neuroplasticity has thrilling potential applications in the optimization of human emotional states and behavior. For example, even though the neural pathways in a person with a history of anxiety are “wired” for anxiety, we now know they can be “rewired” for more serenity in the face of life’s challenges. As people learn and practice new tools and habits to help them feel calm and centered, the brain prunes away their “anxiety pathways” for lack of use.
The old question of the dynamic tension between nature and nurture (environment versus genetics) is no longer relevant, as our understanding of the interplay that goes on between a person’s outer world and DNA throughout life, improves. As scientists around the world learn more about neuroplasticity, we become more and more capable of overcoming the limits of our biology to create our own destiny.



Source
http://www.myneurogym.com/neurons-that-fire-together-wire-together-the-new-science-of-neuroplasticity/

Sunday, 6 September 2015

Does Meditation Help You Lose Weight?

Your efforts around exercising and eating well are helping your blood pressure and your weight. Something else might also help: meditation.
Meditation -- the practice of focusing your attention in order to find calm and clarity -- can lower high blood pressure. It can also help youmanage stress, which drives some people to eat.
"People often put on weight from trying to comfort themselves with food," says Adam Perlman, MD, executive director of Duke Integrative Medicine.
Although there's not a lot of research showing that meditation directly helps you lose weight, meditation does help you become more aware of your thoughts and actions, including those that relate to food.
For example, a research review showed that meditation can help with both binge eating and emotional eating.

"Any way to become more mindful will guide that process," Perlman says.

How to Meditate

There are many ways to meditate. The CDC says that most types of meditation have these four things in common:
  • A quiet location. You can choose where to meditate -- your favorite chair? On a walk? It's up to you.
  • A specific comfortable posture, such as sitting, lying down, standing, or walking.
  • A focus of attention. You can focus on a word or phrase, your breath, or something else.
  • An open attitude. It's normal to have other thoughts while you meditate. Try not to get too interested in those thoughts. Keep bringing your attention back to your breath, phrase, or whatever else it is you're focusing on.
Pick the place, time, and method that you want to try. You can also take a class to learn the basics.

Becoming a 'Witness,' Not a Judge

Meditating requires a commitment to stop and look within and around you, even if you have only a few moments, says Geneen Roth, author of the New York Times best-seller Women Food and God.

"The way I teach meditation and integrate it for myself is to focus on being a witness to your thoughts and not so much how long you need to practice," Roth says. "You want to learn how to quiet your mind and sometimes avoid the stories you tell yourself, like you need to go eat cookies or that bag of chips."
Try not to bring major expectations to meditation. Let it unfold without judgment.
Most people have an inner critic that's running their lives, Roth says. To reframe your thinking, she recommends asking yourself, "What's working?" when you wake up and again at the end of the day. "We get so caught up and don’t take the time to look around and notice what’s good," she says.
One of the daily practices Roth recommends is taking 30 seconds to look around and see what's in front of you. It's a way to be present.
"Not only do you need to be present in the moment, but you need to be informed to make the right decisions -- what to eat, what to avoid, what [are] the best exercises and lifestyle choices for someone with high blood pressure," Perlman says. He calls it "informed mindfulness."
The bottom line: Meditation doesn't replace diet, exercise, and following your doctor's guidelines for weight loss and better blood pressure. But it can support those positive changes, if you do it with patience and commitment.


Source
http://www.webmd.com/hypertension-high-blood-pressure/features/meditation-hypertension-and-weight-loss
SOURCES:
Adam Perlman, MD, MPH, executive director, Duke Integrative Medicine.
"Beyond Medications and Diet: Alternative Approaches to Lowering Blood Pressure: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association, " Hypertension, published online April 22, 2013.
Katterman, S. Eating Behaviors, April 2014.
Geneen Roth, author, Women Food and God, Scribner, 2011.
CDC: "Meditation and Health."
Reviewed on August 01, 2014