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71- Weight
Loss Tips That Really Work
1.
Prioritize.
The beds might not get
made, but Amy Reed, 36,
still makes time for
exercise. That's how
she's kept off more than
80 pounds for 13 years.
"I have to schedule it
in and let go of other
things -- like a
perfectly clean house,"
she says.
2.
Find a passion.
"I have a dance
background and when I
found jazzercise, I
said, 'Thank God.' If
somebody told me I had
to go out and run five
days a week, I'd still
weigh 185 pounds," says
Anne Geren, 41, who lost
55 pounds and has kept
it off for 13 years.
3.
Keep an Exercise Log.
It makes you more
accountable. Norma from
Dallas, TX, who hangs
hers on the
refrigerator, checks off
six workouts a week
dutifully. "If I miss
one day, I make that my
day off for the week."
4.
Set a Goal.
Sign up for some fun
runs and try to improve
your times. "I went from
a 5-K to a 4-miler, then
a 5-miler, then a 10-K.
As I was building miles
and speed, I was getting
fitter and losing more
weight," says Therese
Revitt, 42, who lost 80
pounds and recently ran
a marathon.
5.
Get Pumped.
"It wasn't until I put
on more muscle through
resistance training that
I was able to keep the
weight off -- almost
effortlessly," says
Verona Mucci-Hurlburt,
37, who went from a size
18 to an 8. The reason?
Muscle burns more
calories around the
clock.
Eat Smart
6.
Make changes for the
long haul.
"I learned how to eat
and live with it for the
rest of my life," says
Barbara Miltenberger,
42, who lost more than
40 pounds and hasn't
seen any come back in
three years.
7.
Stop dieting.
"The best thing I did
was quit dieting," says
Reed. "I'd always find
ways to cheat. So
instead, I stopped
forbidding myself
certain foods and just
started eating less of
them."
8.
Get a grip on reality.
"When I started keeping
a food diary, I
discovered that I was
eating somewhere between
3,000 and 4,000 calories
a day," says Rebecca,
46, who found the number
shocking.
9.
Eat minimeals.
Having smaller, more
frequent meals can
prevent you from getting
ravenously hungry and
overeating. On average,
weight loss winners eat
five times a day.
10. Follow the 90% to
10% rule.
"If you watch what you
eat 90% of the time, the
other 10% is not a
problem," says
Mucci-Hurlburt, who
learned this tip from a
fitness professional.
11. Dine at the dinner
table only.
If you eat in front of
the TV, then every time
you nestle in with the
remote control, it's a
cue to eat. Instead,
designate an eating spot
for all meals and
snacks. "Even when I
want potato chips, I set
the table just like I
was going to sit down
for a full course meal,"
says Kathy Wilson, 47,
who took off more than
100 pounds. "I put a
handful of chips on the
plate, put the bag away,
and then sit down to
eat. I never just stand
at the counter and eat
now."
12. Think before you
bite.
Creating rituals -- like
Wilson did or the old
standby of waiting 10
minutes before giving
into a craving -- can
stop you from eating
when you really aren't
hungry. "Nine chances
out of 10 the chips go
back in the cupboard,
and I just walk away,"
says Wilson.
13. Drink up.
"Drinking lots of water
keeps me from snacking
when I'm not hungry, and
it gives me more
energy," says Revitt.
"It also stopped what I
thought were hunger
headaches, which were
probably due to
dehydration. "
Set Yourself Up for
Success
14. Do it for yourself.
"My doctor told me for
years that I had to take
the weight off. But
you've got to want it
yourself," says Wilson.
"As long as somebody
else is pushing you, no
matter what you do or
what you try, it'll
never work," adds
Victoria Bennett, 39,
who shed 60 pounds and
has kept them off for
five years.
15. Take it slow.
We all want to lose it
yesterday, but slow is
the way to go if you
don't want to see those
pounds again. "It took
me a year to lose 100
pounds this time," says
Rebecca, who's kept it
off for eight years. "I
had lost 100 pounds
twice before, in less
than six months each
time, but I didn't
maintain it."
16. Customize your
approach.
What worked for your
best friend may not work
for you. And what works
for you today may not
work six months from
now. You need to decide
what you need.
Mucci-Hurlburt joined a
structured program for
accountability. "I
needed to know that I
was going to get weighed
each week," she says.
But for others that's
exactly what they don't
need.
17. Learn from the
past.
Everyone we talked to
had tried to lose weight
before. Part of their
success this time was
that they learned from
past failures. "Before,
the more I focused on
weighing, measuring, and
preparing food, the more
I ate," says Wilson, who
finally succeeded with a
program that offered
prepackaged foods.
18. Set small goals.
"My first goal was to
lose only 10 pounds,"
says Rebecca. "I had
very high blood
pressure, and my doctor
said if I would just
lose 10 pounds, he
believed that I could
get off the pills. Every
other doctor before said
I had to lose 100
pounds, and I thought 'I
can't do that.' But 10
pounds, I thought 'maybe
I can do that.' Doing it
one bite at a time made
it more achievable for
me."
19. Make changes you can
live with.
"Before I'd go to bed
I'd ask myself, 'Is what
I did today something I
could do for the rest of
my life?' If I felt
deprived, I'd do it
differently tomorrow. If
I thought, 'Yeah, I
could do this tomorrow,'
then I was on the right
track," says Revitt
Control Portions
20. Go back to school.
Joining a weight loss
class or working with a
dietitian can help you
learn proper portions,
even without weighing
and measuring. "If you
get a half cup of
cottage cheese, it
should look like a
tennis ball, a quarter
cup should look like a
Ping-Pong ball," says
Wilson. "Now, I know
what appropriate
portions look like."
21. Don't toss those
measuring cups, though.
"I usually misjudge
portions of salad
dressing, mayonnaise,
and ice cream," says
Revitt. "They're really
high in fat and calories
and cause the most
damage if overdone. So I
still measure them."
22. Cook for your
family, not an army.
Even for low-fat foods
like grilled chicken,
Bennett stopped
overfeeding her family
of four. "I stopped
making six or seven
breasts, thinking that
everybody had to have
two or three," she says.
"Now I make just one for
each person."
Take Some Cooking
Lessons
23. Plan ahead.
An empty fridge after a
stressful day begs for
pizza. The now-slender
crew doesn't leave meals
to chance. Many of them
plan their menus a week
or more in advance.
Others even cook ahead,
freezing meals for the
week in individual
containers.
24. A little dab will do
it.
If you just can't pass
on some high-fat
favorites, stick to the
most flavorful ones. "A
single slice of bacon is
enough to flavor eggs or
a potato," says Helen
Fitzgerald, 61, who lost
about 51 pounds. Her
husband's lost more than
150 pounds.
25. Fake fry.
Try"frying" with
calorie-free cooking
sprays instead of oil.
Spray sliced potatoes
and roast them in the
oven for french fries
that taste fried without
the fat, suggests
Miltenberger.
26. Stock frozen
veggies.
With pasta or stir-fry
sauces, they are diet
saviors. "I've been
known to eat a whole bag
of vegetables -- and
with only a quarter cup
of sauce, it's only
about 3 grams of fat,"
says Mucci-Hurlburt.
"It's saved my butt many
times when I was really
hungry and had to eat
now."
27. Flavor up.
Rice, beans, and other
cooked grains are the
staples of many
successful dieters. For
variety, Fitzgerald
cooks them in different
liquids -- tomato juice,
apple juice, beef or
chicken stock. "Rice
done in pineapple juice
is especially good for
rice puddings and
Chinese dishes," she
says.
Don't Go It Alone
28. Find the right
support person.
A nag won't do. Neither
will a partner in crime.
Look for someone who can
empathize and support
you in a positive way.
When Reed finally
succeeded in losing
weight, her fiance was a
big help. "We didn't
focus all our
socializing around food.
We went bike riding a
lot and played tennis
instead of going for
pizza."
29. Join a support
group.
"Hearing someone say she
lost 50 pounds would be
real motivating," says
Revitt. "I'd think,
'She's just a normal
person like me. If she
can lose 50 then I can
do it too.'"
30. Create your own
group.
"I started my first
women's group when I
first started
exercising. It was just
a bunch of women that
got together once a
week, and we would
compare notes," says
Debra Mazda, 44, who's
135 pounds slimmer than
she was 13 years ago.
Don't Boycott Dining
Out
31. Be picky.
"I'm not afraid to ask
for dishes to be
prepared differently,"
says Bennett. "My
philosophy is that every
restaurant has a grill
and an oven. They don't
have to fry everything."
32. It's not the Last
Supper.
This is not your last
chance in life to have a
particular food. "Those
french fries will be
there in a half hour if
I really have to have
them," says
Mucci-Hurlburt. Or
they'll be there next
week.
33. Don't wait to doggy
bag.
"As soon as the waitress
puts the food down in
front of me I cut the
whole portion in half,
put it on my butter
plate, and ask her to
wrap it," says Revitt.
If you wait until the
end of your meal,
oftentimes you pick at
it until the waitress
returns.
34. Tackle buffets.
"I get only one
tablespoon of
everything," says
Rebecca. "Usually I
don't even fill my
plate, but I at least
taste everything so I
don't feel deprived."
Deliver Yourself from
Temptation
35. Stay busy.
Do something that's not
conducive to eating. The
folks we talked to
aren't sitting around
thinking of hot fudge
sundaes. They're singing
in choirs, taking
classes, running
marathons, leading
weight loss groups, and
more.
36. Keep 'em out of
sight.
Overwhelmingly, weight
loss vets control foods
like chocolate, ice
cream, and potato chips
by not having them
around. "It's easier to
fill the house with
treats for my kids that
I don't like such as
Oreo cookies," says 30
year old Tammy Hansen,
who trimmed off 60
pounds.
37. Moderation is key.
But they're not
depriving themselves,
either. "If I want a
piece of cake, I'll have
one," says Mazda. "Then
I just won't have
another one for a week
or so. Knowing that I
can eat something and no
one's going to say 'you
can't' works for me."
38. Indulge and enjoy!
Go for the best brand of
ice cream or the best
cut of steak. "If I'm
going to blow 500 or 600
calories, I want to make
sure that I'm enjoying
it to the max," says
Mucci-Hurlburt. "Often
desserts look much
better than they taste.
If it tastes like
cardboard, forget it.
It's not worth it."
39. Limit portions.
"When I have to snack, I
put my hand in the bag
or box and whatever I
can grab, that's what I
eat -- only a handful,"
says Fitzgerald.
40. Buy individually
packaged snacks.
Cookies, chips, even ice
cream come in single
serving sizes. "If I
want some cookies or
chips, I grab one little
bag instead of a whole
box," says Reed.
41. Keep reminders
around.
A note on the
refrigerator reading
"Stop" kept Reed from
raiding it. Underneath
she listed other things
to do, like "take a
drink of water" and
questions such as"Are
you really hungry?"
42. Find alternatives.
Chocolate is still a
favorite even for
successful dieters. But
they've found ways to
enjoy it and still keep
their waistlines.
Bennett makes fat-free
chocolate pudding with
skim milk. For Sarah,
who lost 40 pounds and
has kept it off for two
years, a cup of
sugar-free hot cocoa
(about 20 calories),
topped with a little
fat-free whipped cream
does the trick.
43. Don't give in to
peer pressure.
If the cookies, chips,
or ice cream you buy for
the rest of the family
is sabotaging your
efforts, stop buying it.
"My daughters carried on
for about a month, but
after that they got used
to the change," says
Bennett.
Escape Emotional Eating
44. Know your triggers.
You have to know which
moods send you to the
cookie jar before you
can do anything about
it. Once you know your
triggers, have a list of
alternate things to do
when the mood strikes.
"When I get tired or
discouraged, I get an 'I
don't care attitude,'"
says Rebecca. For those
times, taking a walk or
reading affirmations can
help.
45. Quiz yourself.
Determine if you're
really hungry or eating
for other reasons. "I'll
ask myself 'Do you
really want this, or is
it something else, like
boredom or depression?'
About 80% of the time
it's not hunger," says
Geren.
46. Call a friend.
Talking about what's
eating you can keep you
from eating. "I had to
be willing to call my
support people at 9
o'clock on a Friday
night," says Barbara,
46, who's kept off 46
pounds for more than 15
years.
47. Stop worrying.
Remind yourself that you
only have control over
you -- not your spouse,
boss, parents, or
friends. If you can't do
anything about it, just
let it go, several
people suggested.
48. Take an emotional
inventory.
Ask yourself: "What do
you feel guilty about?
resent? fear? regret?
What are you angry
about?" Then deal with
it, says Barbara.
Confront the person
involved, talk to
others, or write a
letter -- even if you
don't send it.
49. Get spiritual.
If religion isn't for
you, try yoga,
meditation, or
relaxation exercises.
These are especially
helpful if you tend to
eat when you're
stressed, says Barbara.
50. Challenge the power
of food.
Ice cream is a poor
companion if you're
lonely. "If I eat the
whole bag of chocolate
chip cookies, am I going
to be any happier?
Probably not," says
Wilson
Blast Off a Plateau
51. Up the ante
"I started out walking,
and eventually tried
running, which was the
key to my success," says
Revitt. "I couldn't even
make it around one lap
(1/26 of a mile) in the
beginning, but it was
just enough to make the
weight loss continue."
52. Go back to basics.
"I'd go back to more
strict measuring because
you can sneak away from
reasonable portions and
start fooling yourself,"
says Mucci-Hurlburt.
53. Stop starving
yourself.
"As soon as I saw the
weight coming off, I
thought, 'If it's
working at this rate,
I'll try eating less so
I'll lose more,'" admits
Miltenberger. "Then I'd
stall or even put weight
on because I was
undereating and my
metabolism slowed. I'd
start losing again when
I'd eat a little bit
more."
54. Look how far you've
come.
"By keeping a graph of
my weight, I could see
that the line would go
up and down and up and
down, but overall it was
going down, so there was
no reason to throw my
progress away," says
Rebecca.
Stay Motivated
55. Don't give up.
"There are plenty of
times when I've wanted
to give up, but I
didn't," says Mazda. "I
realized a long time ago
that entrepreneurs fall
and rise up every time
they lose a venture, but
they just keep getting
up." The same is true
for weight loss.
56. "You can do it.
" Repeat this to
yourself. Many people
post affirmations around
their homes or offices
as constant reminders.
One dieter even
programmed her computer
screen to keep her on
the right track.
57. Get inspired.
"I read a lot about
other people who have
come back from obstacles
and really made it,"
says Mazda. Their
determination can make
you feel like you can
succeed too.
58. Envision your svelte
self.
"If you can actually
visualize yourself as
the person you want to
be, you'll become it,"
says Wilson. "When I
felt like I couldn't do
this one more minute, I
slipped in a
motivational tape. Step
by step, it would walk
me through a
visualization exercise
so I could see myself as
I wanted to be."
59. Find new measures of
success.
When she lost some
weight, trying on her
old, too-big clothes
further motivated
Miltenberger. "I also
bought myself a size
below what I was
wearing," she says. "I'd
see if I could get the
pants on, then if I
could zip them, and
finally when I could
wear them comfortably
Feel Good About
Yourself
60. Learn to like your
trouble spots.
Peggy Malecha, who's
lost about 75 pounds,
dresses in a black
leotard and, standing in
front of a mirror, she
points out everything
about herself that she
doesn't like. Then she
counters that. For
instance, "I hate my
legs, but they work,"
she says. "I can walk
and dance. I have no
control over the way
they look, so it's silly
to obsess over them.
Don't dwell on it."
61. Pamper yourself.
Take baths and get
massages, facials,
manicures, and
pedicures. "They make me
look good and feel
good," says Mazda.
62. Stop negative talk.
"If you make positive
speech a long-term goal
and stop using 'I was
bad (or good) today,'
you'll begin to feel
better about yourself,"
says Mazda.
63. Don't compare
yourself to others.
Instead, think "I'm
better or just as good
as anyone else is. Once
you start thinking that
about yourself, believe
me, you get real cocky,"
says Mazda.
64. Look in the mirror
and say, "I look good."
You may not believe it
now, but you will. "When
I first started this, I
avoided mirrors," says
Bennett. "I never wanted
to go into a dressing
room, so I'd get various
sizes, take them home,
and then try them on. If
they didn't fit, then I
took them back. But now
I'll look in every
mirror
Be
Realistic
65. Stay flexible.
Many people who have
kept the weight off
never reached their
initial goal weights.
Instead, they've gotten
to a realistic weight
that they can maintain.
"In 13 years, I've never
gotten down to my
initial goal weight, but
I'm very happy and feel
very good even though I
didn't reach it," says
Reed.
66. Quit the numbers
game.
Mucci-Hurlburt is 5' 5
1/2" tall and weighs 152
pounds -- by society's
standards she's heavy.
However, she can slip
into a size 8 thanks to
the fact that most of
her weight is muscle.
"It doesn't matter what
the scale says, it
matters how I look," she
says.
67. Reject others
standards.
"Thin is whatever you
think thin is. Next to
Roseanne Barr, I'm thin.
Next to Twiggy, I'm
fat," says Mazda.
Get Back on Track
68. Stop being a
perfectionist.
"Look at it like walking
a tightrope," suggests
Revitt. "The goal is not
just to stay on without
falling off. The goal is
to get to the other
side, and if you know
that you can fall off as
many times as you want
as long as you get back
up again, you're gonna
be successful."
69. Start fresh, ASAP.
If you have a slip,
don't wait until Monday
or even tomorrow to get
back in line. Revitt
uses water as a
cleansing ritual to end
a binge. When she
realizes what's
happening, she drinks a
water to signal that the
eating is over, and
she's back on track
immediately. "It's made
my lapses shorter and
shorter," she says.
70. Practice early
detection.
"I weigh myself about
once a month," says
Reed. "If I start
inching up, I increase
my exercise a little
bit."
71. Enlist professional
help.
Many of the people we
talked to used
dietitians, personal
trainers, and even
psychologists to help
them deal with problems
that were hindering
their efforts. If you
feel like you can't do
it on your own, seek
help. |