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How to Keep Your Fitness Resolution

To keep your fitness resolution, first vow to change your habits. Then set small goals.

Also see: Santee Health Awareness Month Offers Free and Discounted Health Promotions

After the binges of the holidays, who hasn’t noticed the post-holiday blahs? The clothes fit a little tighter, the energy level just isn’t there and we’re afraid to
peek in a full-length mirror. It’s no surprise that losing weight is a top new

year’s resolution.

It’s no surprise either that losing weight soon becomes a broken resolution.

It doesn’t have to be that way. We can break the cycle of enthusiasm ultimately replaced by disappointment.  It takes a bit of self-discovery, a dose of realism. Instead of resolving to lose weight, make a commitment to healthy living. Change your behavior by building health habits for a lifetime. Otherwise, it is not going to work.

Thousands of school district employees participate in a wellness program offered through California Schools VEBA. They have an advantage, professional health
screenings, peer encouragement through group settings, personal coaching,
wellness challenges that run just four to eight weeks, and even financial
incentives.  Still, you can do it on your own by borrowing from aspects of our program.

Step one, the bromide of a doctor’s visit, is good because it can provide the physical numbers of heart rate, cholesterol counts and such. Write down your weight as well as the girth numbers, the measurements of your chest, waist, hips, upper arms, biceps, hips and upper thighs. The real goal is to lose fat and replace it with muscle. Since muscle is more dense than fat, with time the tale of the tape can be more meaningful and accurate than the reading from the scale.

Don’t stop with the physical numbers. Assess your behaviors.  Are you missing out on exercise, not even setting aside time for a good walk? Are the sweets and carbohydrates within reach but not the fruits and veggies? Are you wolfing down your lunch at your desk instead of taking time to dine?  Is “portion control” a foreign concept?

Step two is setting goals. If your long-term goal is, say, a loss of 30 pounds, understand that a drop of three to five pounds over eight weeks is realistic and
attainable. Set that as your first goal instead of the 30-pound target.

Change your habits in stages.  This week it may be more fruits and vegetables.  Practice that until you feel you’ve got it! The next habit is to increase your water consumption, especially before and during a meal. Maybe the next stage is smaller and more frequent meals. After that, try increasing your exercise to three times a week. Then, maybe find a buddy to walk with several times a week.

Plateaus and setbacks are inevitable. Don’t let them get you down. It takes time to build up your metabolism and progress is not going to come in a straight line. As long as you are changing your behavior, you should feel good about yourself.

Plateaus also are an indication that it may be time to try something different. Try
varying your form of exercise or the frequency. Take another look at your
eating – for instance, are you consuming too many simple carbs?

If 30 pounds was your goal, consider taking a break after losing the first 10 pounds. Concentrate on just maintenance for a while.

Remember that losing pounds or inches is a matter of changing your behavior and changing  it forever. A smaller number on the scale or tape is a sign of progress. But, more importantly, so are the better feelings – more energy, fewer digestive problems, improved moods and after a while experiencing the urge to binge less often.

The post-holiday blahs can provide the motivation. With some self-assessment and changing of behaviors, this New Year’s resolution can be one you attain.

White, a registered nurse with a master’s in public health, is general manager of advocacy programs for McGregor and Associates. The San Diego firm administers health care coverage for 50 school districts through California Schools VEBA.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 24, 2013 at 08:39 am
I believe the Edgmoor Community Garden is no longer operating. There has been some discussion ofRead More starting a new one somewhere else in the city, but I don't think that has happened yet. I'll check with some of my contacts and see if I can post info for those interested in taking part in a new garden. If you find out more, please post info here. (http://santee.patch.com/groups/politics-and-elections/p/join-edgemoore-in-growing-a-community-garden).
Doug Curlee May 23, 2013 at 12:18 pm
sluggo..this is just a guess, but I think it's a good one..trying to build any kind of trap thereRead More might well fall within the protected riverbed right of way for the san diego river..thereb y guaranteeing years of paperwork and public hearing before you could stick a shovel in the ground for anything.. doug
Mayor Randy Voepel May 23, 2013 at 11:59 am
That section is Cal-Trans and they run that intersection. Also the area next to the intersectionRead More where a runaway feature could be installed, belongs to the City of San Diego not Santee. Santee has asked for various mitigations and Cal-Trans has only responded with more "rumble strips". Very frustrating to everybody in Santee Sluggo including this Mayor.
Fotis Tsimboukakis May 21, 2013 at 03:56 pm
I think the communities, Santee here, should band together and raise that money for schoolRead More supplies,instead of the teachers. I for one would throw in the first $100. I think between the residents and the local businesses we could raise the $10,000 to $15,000 that I am guessing would be needed. In Scripps Ranch, where both my kids attended school, the parents banded together and covered a HALF A MILLION shortfall in no time about 9 years ago during the cuts. And you don't have to have kids in school now to contribute. I don't anymore,BUT GOOD PUBLIC education with the right tools BENEFITS ALL AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICA MOST OF ALL. So I am first.
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 03:53 pm
Thanks for posting this. I also added this to our events list. In the future I suggest posting anRead More announcement and event for maximum exposure- http://santee.patch.com/posts/event/new Good luck with the fundraiser!
RainWaterSystems May 17, 2013 at 10:58 am
That's awesome! We wish you success and recovery. We suggest two books; A Purpose Driven Life byRead More Rick Warren and Think and Grow Rich by Napolean Hill. I hope to be in a position to hire a salesman this fall.
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 10:34 am
Anyone else recommend a Santee family owned business that's outside the city?
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 02:31 pm
Search for "Quail Brush" in the search bar in the top right corner.Read More http://santee.patch.com/search?keywords=Quail+Brush
Retha Knight May 17, 2013 at 11:05 pm
Where do you type what you want to view, like "Quail Brush"?
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 10:01 am
No drop down menus, just click the header links for more options. For story categories click newsRead More and look on the left hand column. I know the redesign will take a bit to get used to, but I really think it will be a better site for community engagement, and easier to use. Feel free to post your feedback to the redesign on the boards, I'll check it out and respond, but you might also send your feedback straight to Patch headquarters with this form- http://feedback.aol.com/rs/rs.php?sid=patch Engineers will be furiously tweeking the new site based on your suggestions.
Mike Walker April 23, 2013 at 01:20 pm
this is why the battlefield has changed temporarily from the political arena to the Energy Arena.Read More Co Gen Tricks and the usual suspects are making their big money bet on two inevitable facts that will force the hand of the CPUC and CEC to place a new gas power plant somewhere in the area. 1) the Electric Vehicle Mandate. 2) voltage support (power factor) needed by the industrial wind and solar farms in the desert. There is more to what meets the eye with the aggressive push by the usual suspects to cover our open spaces in the East County with these poorly sited RE projects. More wind and solar farms means more gas power plants. There is only one way to fight the destruction of our open spaces, and that is with roof top solar, conservation, energy efficiency and community owned energy districts. The fisrt thing that needs to be done is the City of Santee exempt residential scale PV installs from needing a building permit. Australia, Germany and the State of Vermont do not require a Building Permit to install PV.
Retha Knight April 23, 2013 at 03:48 am
Well said Stephen! Knowledge is TRULY power! The fight is not over! Cogentrix is just onceRead More again playing their wait, wait, wait game in the public eye and playing their lobbying game behind closed doors.
just my opinion April 22, 2013 at 01:04 am
Stephen, well said!!!!!