Read The Blood Sugar Solution 10-Day Detox Diet: Activate Your Body's Natural Ability to Burn Fat and Lose Weight Fast Online

Authors: Mark Hyman

Tags: #Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Diets, #Health & Fitness / Body Cleansing & Detoxification

The Blood Sugar Solution 10-Day Detox Diet: Activate Your Body's Natural Ability to Burn Fat and Lose Weight Fast (33 page)

BOOK: The Blood Sugar Solution 10-Day Detox Diet: Activate Your Body's Natural Ability to Burn Fat and Lose Weight Fast
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Today’s Focus: Move

If you’ve been resisting exercise, you’re not alone. Eighty-eight percent of all Americans don’t get enough exercise. But your body is growing stronger and healthier with each passing day on the detox, so now is a good time to look inward and explore what might be getting in the way of your getting moving.

So many of us have deeply held beliefs about our ability (or more often, inability) to exercise. Some of these beliefs were hatched early in life, through messages we received. One 10-Day Detoxer named Angela, who had had childhood asthma, had spent her entire young life on the sidelines or relegated to only the most boring of physical activities. While the rest of her class did physical education, Angela was sent alone and humiliated to ride a stationary bike in the athletic training room. She grew up with a belief that “I can’t do anything that involves physical activity.” Boy, what a bummer of a belief!

By the time she hit her forties, Angela’s weight had ballooned to 267 pounds. She had lower back pain, knee pain, and swollen ankles, all of which required her to walk up stairs at a creep, pausing with each step instead of taking them one after another. It hurt just to get in and out of a chair. As Angela put it, “I felt physically uncomfortable all the time. Pain and discomfort were my normal—and I was ready to let them go. The exercise part of the 10-Day Detox plan actually concerned me more than the food changes. I knew it all worked together to heal—the food and exercise and other means of self-care. And that’s what I wanted, enough so that I was willing to do it.”

So Angela shifted her negative belief to “I can find a physical activity that will work for me.” She put on a pair of sneakers and for the first time started walking on a regular basis. She stuck to it—no excuses (and this was January in Minnesota!). One step after another, Angela
literally walked away from her self-sabotaging beliefs and into a healthier mind-set. Two months later, she wrote to me, “I’ve still got a long way to go, but for today I feel so much better than I did less than two months ago. My body moves easier and sleeps better. Instead of taking me fifteen minutes to walk from the parking ramp to my office at work, now it only takes ten minutes. I might still be large on the outside, but inside I feel like a supermodel. And with all this energy to burn, I found an exercise I absolutely love—water aerobics. It’s so much fun! And it’s easy on my joints and has no impact on my asthma. I actually look forward to water aerobics and go three times a week. That is truly miraculous to me.”

We are all busy with the demands of work and family, and many of us believe we simply don’t have time to exercise. Yet Americans somehow find two spare hours a day to spend browsing the Internet. We spend more time watching cooking on television than we do exercising, and certainly more time watching sports than doing physical activity ourselves.

In my lectures, I often share a funny cartoon. It shows a doctor saying to his patient, “What fits your busy schedule better, exercising one hour a day or being dead twenty-four hours a day?”

When it comes to exercise, little bits do count. Something is always better than nothing! Just the act of taking more steps every day is great. Park farther away from work. Take stairs instead of elevators or escalators. Get a step counter (like a FitBit) and have competitions with friends, family, or coworkers to get to 10,000 steps a day. Or just wear your step counter every day; when you quantify your steps, you’re motivated to take more. Find a friend to walk with. Or walk around in circles when you’re on the phone!

Strive to fit in exercise wherever and whenever you can. If you look for opportunities, you’ll find them. When I’m on the road, I always bring a pair of running shoes so I can go out for a quick thirty-minute run between commitments. I recently found a new seven-minute interval-training workout that I can almost always fit in right when I
get out of bed, or before having dinner or going out (see the box
here
for more about interval training). It just takes a little planning and intention.

One of the best ways to get yourself moving is to set up the triggers in your life that make it easy to do the right thing. I hate push-ups but realize I need to do them if I want to keep my upper body toned and strong. So I decided to do them right before I get in the shower. Since I shower every day, I am always reminded to do my push-ups, which take less than a minute. Simple, automatic, and easy (well, easy to remember, still hard to do!). It has made a huge difference for me. I started with ten push-ups and can now do forty to fifty at a time.

If Angela can overcome her exercise hurdles, you can overcome yours. All you need are some strategies for releasing your limiting beliefs around exercise as well as real, proven ways to motivate yourself. Read on.

Strategies for Motivation

Pair up with a buddy or join a fitness group.
Research has shown that people who are held accountable to others are more likely to stick with an exercise routine. And peer pressure—of the best kind—is a great way to push yourself to do more. I recently went skiing with some friends who took me on a steep double-black-diamond off-trail run—the kind where you needed an avalanche beacon and shovel. Normally I would have said no way, but they assured me I could do it. These are friends I trust, so I took a deep breath and went down… and LOVED it! I was able to do much more than I thought I could with the encouragement and support of friends.

Find a reason.
Why are you looking to get in shape? Is it to be able to live pain-free? Is it to be a healthy role model and live a long life for your kids? To feel good about yourself? To fit into your clothes better? Or maybe to look good for someone you love? That’s okay! Whatever it takes, connecting to your reasons is one of the greatest motivators for change.

This program is just the kick in the rear I needed to turn my life around. I’m recently divorced, age fifty-two, and would like to meet someone new. However, I know I need to take care of myself and get in shape if I want to attract a man who is fit and active! I’m doing this for myself, first and foremost, but also for my two kids and my future partner. This program made all of this possible… or should I say probable!

—SARAH PETERS

Spend some time and effort to find a physical activity that you enjoy.
Personally, I hate going to the gym—I’m much happier playing tennis or basketball, skiing, riding my bike, doing yoga, or doing some other kind of sport. For some people it’s dancing; others love power yoga. Find what you love and it’ll feel like fun, not torture.

Have fun exploring fitness gear.
Take a trip to a sporting goods store and treat yourself to something that feels fun and exciting to you, like new sneakers, a jump rope, an exercise top, or a pair of good swim goggles. Or just pick up a few good fitness magazines to take home and read. You don’t have to spend a lot of money to feel inspired.

Set up your automatic triggers.
Put your exercise clothes on first thing when you wake up every day, no matter what. Have your workout playlist on your iPod or your DVD ready to go in the DVD player and set a timer to remind you to hit “play.” Sign up for an exercise class that you have to show up for at a certain time each day or week. Whatever it takes to make exercise an automatic part of your routine, do it.

Set goals.
Sometimes having a goal helps motivate you. Maybe you want to take a special hiking trip with your kids, or do a fifty-mile bike ride, or run a race. Whether it’s a 5K walk or an Ironman triathlon, having a goal keeps you going. Every summer, I ride around an island off Cape Cod with some friends, and it definitely motivates me to get on my bike and get my butt in shape! Having something to work toward often means the difference between doing something and doing nothing. Plan something, and when that something happens, plan something else. Just keep moving and moving forward. It gets easier and more fun with each accomplishment!

Take a little extra time tonight to answer the journal questions
and explore the beliefs and fears about exercise that might be getting in your way. You’ve come really far these past four days, and now you have a unique opportunity to make some deep and fundamental shifts where it really counts.

BOOK: The Blood Sugar Solution 10-Day Detox Diet: Activate Your Body's Natural Ability to Burn Fat and Lose Weight Fast
13.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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