Preparing for Change
The following will help you prepare for making changes to improve
your health.
See your doctor
If you have any medical conditions or you are not physically
active, see your doctor before you begin to exercise. Your doctor may want to
check your blood pressure and blood
cholesterol,
triglycerides, and blood sugar levels. If you have
heart problems, are at high risk for heart problems, or have joint problems,
your doctor may want you to have some additional testing before you begin an
exercise program.
Change your thinking
Instead of focusing on weight loss programs, which are rarely
successful over the long term, change your focus to improving your health.
Focus on other health aspects you can improve, such as raising your fitness
level and reducing your blood pressure, reducing your blood sugar if you have
diabetes, and reducing your cholesterol and
triglyceride levels. Becoming active and improving your eating habits are the
two major ways to improve your health.
Heredity plays a role in your body type and your weight. Avoid
comparing yourself to others. Healthy bodies come in all shapes and
sizes.
Learn to celebrate your body for what it is and the fitness and
health you can achieve. Use measures other than weight or clothing size to
track your progress in reaching your health goals. Realize that our culture
overemphasizes extreme thinness, which makes people feel bad when they cannot
achieve such an unrealistic body size.
Set goals you can reach
Focus on small, cumulative changes in your physical activity and
eating habits that will lead to long-term healthy changes. Your goals should be
specific, within your reach, and flexible.
Tips for setting goals:
- Write down your goals. This gives you a clear
idea of what you want to achieve. Also, reading your goals can serve as a
helpful reminder.
- Make your goals specific. A specific goal can
help you measure your progress.
- Focus on achieving one goal at a
time. This can keep you from feeling overwhelmed.
- Set goals other
than weight loss, such as improving your eating habits, increasing your
physical activity, or lowering your blood pressure.
Tips for setting activity goals:
- Fit in physical activity whenever you have
time. Your physical activity does not need to be done all at once. If you do
not have time to walk for 30 minutes, instead try to fit in 10 minutes of
walking 3 times a day.
- Keep track of the number of steps you take
each day with a step counter or pedometer, which you can buy at a sporting
goods store. Wearing a step counter may motivate you to be more physically
active. Write down your daily step count on a calendar to track your
progress.
- Find creative ways to add physical activity to your day.
Park your car at the far end of the parking lot when you go to the mall or
grocery store. If you ride the bus, get off one stop before you usually do and
walk the rest of the way. When you watch TV, walk in place or do jumping jacks
during the commercial breaks. Instead of e-mailing a coworker, get up and walk
to his or her desk.
Tips for setting healthy eating goals:
- Add foods to your diet instead of taking
something away. For example, try adding more fruits and vegetables to your
meals. Taking things out of your diet (for example, all desserts or sweets) may
leave you feeling deprived, which may make it harder for your to stick with the
change.
- Make a list of foods you already like and find ways to make
them healthier. For example, if you like pizza, make pizza at home with low-fat
mozzarella cheese and lots of fresh vegetables. Or, order a vegetarian pizza
with half of the regular amount of cheese.
Measure improvements in your health
If weight loss is one of your goals to improve your health, it is
not necessary to lose all your excess weight to improve your health. Research
shows that improvements in health can be achieved by losing as little as 5% to
10% of your weight.4
Losing weight slowly will help keep the weight off in the long
run. A reasonable rate of weight loss is about
1 lb (0.5 kg) to
2 lb (1 kg) a week. People who
try to lose weight at a faster rate are more likely to regain the weight they
have lost. Very fast weight loss also may harm your body.
Blood tests are one way to measure improvements in your health.
Before you lose weight or make lifestyle changes, ask your doctor to check your
cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and blood sugar. Then have them checked
again after you have lost 5% to 10% of your weight or made lifestyle changes.
Testing your:
- Blood sugar levels can tell you whether your
lifestyle changes or weight loss are helping to control your
diabetes.
- Cholesterol and
triglyceride levels can tell you whether your
lifestyle changes or weight loss are decreasing your risk for heart
disease.
- Blood pressure can tell you whether your lifestyle changes
or weight loss are decreasing your risk for heart disease and
stroke.
Another way to measure improvements in health is to look for
changes in your fitness level. For example, are you able to walk longer and on
more days than when you started? Can you climb a flight of stairs without
getting as tired or out of breath? Do you have better strength and muscle tone?
Do you have more energy?