Posts Tagged ‘losing weight permanently’

Losing Weight Permanently [BOOK EXCERPTS]

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

“This is not a diet book. Not a book on weight loss with low-fat recipes. And not another volume swimming in an ocean of ‘lose fat’ books that encourage you to add even more stress to your body through roller coaster weight management programs that only exacerbate the challenges you already face. Instead, the central idea throughout Losing Weight Permanently: Secrets from the 2 Percent Club is what we now know to be the only kind of thinking that works: it is the whole-person approach. And it is an approach desperately neded, largely because of statistics like the following from the National Institutes of Health and elsewhere:

  • It’s estimated that 1 in 3 Americans is overweight, an increase of 30 percent in the last 10 years
  • 44 percent of high school girls and 15 percent  of high school boys report that they are trying to lose weight
  • 50 percent of female adults and 24 percent of adult males are on a diet on any given occasion
  • It’s now estimated that 10 percent of Americans have disordered eating

“So, as a nation we have a problem — a serious problem. Unfortunately, the battle of the bulge  for most is not getting any easier. That’s why we are concerned about people and their weight challenges. But, unlike other weight-loss programs, we do not isolate weight as a single issue. We don’t focus on the use of scales or on a daily regimen of checking to see how much has been lost or gained in the last week. Our whole person approach does not encourage people to tally calories, check body fat, or count cholesterol and sodium. This is because people who lose weight permanently do not rely on the stuff most diets are made of.”

14 Excerpts from Losing Weight Permanently

Lose Weight for Good: Introducing Secrets from The 2 Percent Club

Chronic Dieting vs. Permanent Weight Loss: Carol’s Story

Goodbye Crutches: Permanent Weight Loss Action Plan

You are Not a Disease: Emotional Challenges Plus Obsessive Behavior Equals Obesity

Food Quiz: Are You Obsessed?

What You Think is What You Are: Feeding Your Subconscious Mind

From Guilt Cycle to Bicycle: Lose the Rules & Just Exercise!

Want to Lose Weight? Increase Your Activity Level Just 10 Percent Each Month

5 Steps to a Healthier You

Families of Those With Eating Disorders: 12 Characteristics

Building Intimate Relationships: 6 High Dive Principles

Your Relationship With Food: Facing the Truth

Weight Loss: 7 Disciplines to Help You Stay the Course

Raising Children to Resist Eating Problems

The Center for Counseling and Health Resources is a treatment center that follows a model of whole-person care, addressing the physical, psychological, emotional, nutritional, fitness and spiritual aspects of each person seeking help through one of our treatment programs.

If you would like more information about our depression treatment program, please request a free consultation today.

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Weight Loss: 7 Disciplines to Help You Stay the Course

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

During a particularly difficult part of my life, I copied the following words down on a scrap of paper. They are the simple lyrics to a well-known Shaker hymn — a message for all times, an encouraging word for you about simplicity, freedom, humility, and being in a place that’s right.

‘Tis the gift to be simple

‘Tis the gift to be free,

‘Tis the gift to come down

Where we ought to be;

And when we find ourselves

In the place just right

‘Twill be in the valley of light and delight.

Simplicity. Getting the clutter out of your life and focusing on the really important issues like faith, hope, and love. Finding the place that’s right for you, far from the madding array of past guilts, fears, obsessions, and compulsions. Not being afraid to bend your head in humility, recognizing that you wear no shroud of shame when you face your past, but that, in fact, only by turning, turning, and turning again will you make the corrections you must make.

Someone has said we humans have a tendency to crucify ourselves between two thieves: the regret of yesterday and the fear of tomorrow. They rob us of precious years of productive labor and love. We cannot change our past, only accept it. Yet the regrets and the “if only’s” keep us from living in the present and looking to a better future with excitement and joy. So how will you stay the course? How will you remain part of the two percent of people who manage to lose weight permanently?

Let’s look at 7 proven, creative ways to help you meet your objectives.

1) Let discipline start at home. When there is little or no discipline at the center of your life, you leak. If you wish to lose weight permanently, you will not allow the many distractions of life to throw you off course. Be too large for worry, too hopeful for despair, and too committed to ever give up.

2) Discipline your priorities. Just as sometimes there is a difference between a person’s character and reputation, so there is sometimes a chasm between what one says and what one does. Your success depends on being consistent.

3) Discipline your nerve. General Omar Bradley said, “Bravery is the capacity to perform properly even when scared half to death.” Don’t foresake permanent weight loss for lack of courage to do what’s right.

4) Discipline your follow-through. Why do 98 percent of dieters fail to keep weight off permanently? They don’t follow through.

5) Discipline your time. People who lose weight permanently know what it takes to lose it and keep it off. The process cannot be rushed. This is a journey of progress, not perfection.

6) Discipline yourself to what is. “If I were only younger, or thinner, or smarter, or richer, or lived in a different neighborhood, or had a better background….” These are the words of one who lives in a world of fantasy. You will begin to achieve success when you know where the battle lines are drawn, and then fight on those lines.

7) Discipline your disciplines. Real freedom is not staged. It flows. Unless you are careful with the rules you set up for yourself, you may feel there is little joy left for you, with all of these nots cramping your style. That’s why eventually you will want to bury your disciplines deep in your consciousness where they will work naturally for you, not against you.

SOURCE: Chapter 9, “Maintain Membership in the Two Percent Club,” in Losing Weight Permanently by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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Goodbye Crutches: Permanent Weight Loss Action Plan

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

You’ve weathered some great turbulence with diets that haven’t worked. You’ve perhaps exhibited some extreme behavior for which you are not proud. But that is all in the past. None of that matters now because you are on an exciting new pilgrimage of courage and hope.

God has preserved your for a reason: to grow you into the loving, caring person he designed you to be. Your body has proven to be resilient. This means you can go back and recapture the health and vitality you once enjoyed.  You can be among the 2 percent of people who lose weight permanently, and this great venture can start today by following action plans.

Action Plan: Say Goodbye to Your Crutches

1) You no longer need to weigh yourself because weight is no longer an issues. Ask yourself: Do I want to weigh a certain amount, or do I want to feel good about myself and my life? Here’s what I want you to do. Put your bathroom scale in a closet or in the attic where you can get to it if necessary. But try to avoid using it. It’s a crutch.

2) If you have unopened, packaged diet food that’s been in your cupboard for months, wrap it up and put it in the box with the items that follow in #3. You dont need this food anymore. It’s a crutch.

3) You may have items of clothing you’ve been hanging on to since you fit into a size four or five: a pair of jeans you wore in high school, or a bathing suit that looked terrific when you were twenty-one. You may have worn those clothes to draw attention to your body when you were starving yourself down to 101 pounds. Now, you continue to hang on to the false belief that you’ll once again get into them. (You might, but not for the same reasons.) Put all those items of clothing in a box with the packaged food and secure it with strapping tape strong enough to make it difficult to open.

4) Now place the sealed box in your attic or storeroom, where you know you can get to it if necessary. Then, in big black letters write on the box: FALSE CRUTCHES. Put today’s date on the box. You no longer need those tangibles to help you lose weight. However, if you ever feel you need to wear or eat what’s in the box, go get it. We’re not taking things away from you. We are only creating distance between you and the things which are guaranteed to impede your progress.

People who lose weight permanently take the initiative and remove all false crutches from their lives and begin living from the inside out. Please carry out each of the suggestions in this Action Plan now, because they they have been clinically proven to help protect you from sneak attacks which are sure to come.

SOURCE: Chapter 1, Losing Weight Permanently: Secrets of the 2 Percent Club by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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Chronic Dieting vs. Permanent Weight Loss: Carol’s Story

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

You can read part I of Carol’s story here – a story that rings true for millions of Americans  who have been dieting all their lives only to come up short when it comes to losing weight permanently.

In our first counseling session, Carol told me her mother had started putting her on diets at the age of thirteen, when she was in sixth grade. At that time, Carol was the largest person in her class. The boys ridiculed her for her size. On more than one occasion she heard her friends laughing behind her back. She would fight back the tears when she heard them calling her “cow” and “pig” and “monster.” Deep inside she knew they were right. That was how she looked. Worse yet, it was how she felt about herself.

Her weight made her look older than she was. She was a child in an oversized adult’s body. Since she had no real friends at school, she began to walk down a path I have seen all too often — a journey that embraced an intimate, negative relationship with food.

Diets, Pills and Weight-Loss Doctors

Carol would sneak snacks during recess, hide food in her desk, and pilfer sandwiches and cookies from the lunch bags of fellow students. Several times a week on the way home from school, she would pay homage to the corner grocery store where candy, jelly donuts, and half gallons of ice cream were waiting to be her friends. All that food had to go someplace, and without any exercise or care for her body, Carol just got larger and larger.

Her mother assumed the only way for Carol to reduce her weight was to go on a diet, and then another, and then another. When the diets didn’t work — and they never did — she began taking Carol to different doctors in town — weight specialists, they were called — but even ritual appearances in the offices of these medicine men and women did not work. So she began buying diet pills for her daughter, thinking that surely pills would do the trick. They would work for a while, and then Carol would get sick, so her mother would try another brand of false promises.

During this ordeal, Carol’s mother would put her on a scale three to four times a day, hoping, searching, praying for those two or three illusive pounds that somehow miraculously might have fallen from Carol’s body. Carol would stand on the scale and cry as the scale confirmed what she knew would be true: another one, two, three, four, or five pounds. Without knowing it, her mother had set Carol up for failure. She continued to look for the magic pill, the overnight answer, the one diet that would help her daughter shed her unwanted weight, all to no avail.

Carol was learning a lot about dieting. She was also learning that her body was not her friend.

The average person coming to The Center for counseling about weight challenges has been on at least seven diets. These men and women have learned to count calories automatically, have an obsession with cholesterol, know as much about packaged diet foods as the manufacturers of those foods, have fasted, eaten only herbs, wracked their bodies with liposuction, and had their stomachs stapled. Desperate people do desperate things. The trouble is that most desperate people do the wrong things.

People who lose weight permanently dismount the roller coaster of dieting. People who lose weight permanently realize their lives must no longer revolve around food. They know they must take control of their lives and start living as God, their heavenly Father and faithful Friend, intended them to live — with freedom, joy, and an all-abiding sense of self-worth.

SOURCE: Chapter 1, Losing Weight Permanently: Secrets of the 2 Percent Club by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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