3 steps to successfully maintaining weight loss
The conundrum of maintaining long-term weight loss is well documented. People who have lost weight only to regain it back know all too well that losing weight is actually easier than maintaining the weight loss. That’s why people who have lost weight and have been successful in keeping the weight off, have been studied to figure out what are they doing to achieve the accomplishment of not regaining the weight back. Whether they are maintaining a 10, 20, 30 pound or more weight loss, they tend to have common methods of success. There are a variety of techniques successful weight maintainers follow but three strategies are standouts in preventing a weight gain relapse.
Frequent self-weighing
A very simple method with immediate feedback showing you how you’re doing is to step on a weight scale every day but only one time a day. A 2015 study in the Journal of Obesity showed frequent self-weighing along with recording the weight was effective in achieving sustainable weight loss.
The best time to step on the scale is first thing in the morning after waking up and after going to the bathroom. Weigh with little to no clothes on and then record the weight – either in a notebook, on a graph or Excel spreadsheet or whatever you prefer. Do not weigh yourself again until the following day. Recording the weight gives you a visual aspect helping you keep track of how you are doing.
Daily weighing is a method of consistent self-monitoring giving you more control of managing your weight. It helps you to “catch” when you’re weight begins to go up on the scale soon enough before it can get out-of-hand. It also makes you more conscious of what you’re eating thus reinforcing behaviors that led to the weight lost to begin with or what’s working in keeping the weight remaining stable. If you step on the scale and you’ve gained weight, you can think about what happened the day before to cause it and then can make adjustments where needed such as reducing portion sizes of food, frequency of snacking, dessert eating, choosing healthier foods or increasing exercise. If your weight is going in the right direction or remaining stable, its positive reinforcement to keep doing what is working for you.
Daily physical activity
Any person who has lost weight and has kept it off will tell you regular physical activity is a major player in accomplishing this goal. The National Weight Control Registry keeps track of people who have lost at least 30 pounds of weight and have kept it off for at least a year. Daily physical activity is one of the characteristics ranking high in their success rate.
The key is once you’ve lost the weight, exercise needs to continue without making any excuses or finding barriers why you can’t do it. Physical activity needs to become a daily routine in your life that if you don’t do it, you crave it and will fit it in any way you can. How much daily physical activity you need will depend on several factors – age, your diet, how much time throughout the day you are inactive sitting around and such. The point is to find your niche of what you enjoy doing but to mix it up with different types of physical activity movement frequently.
Include aerobic exercise – walking, jogging, running, bicycling, swimming, hiking. Include strength training exercise – lifting weights, push-ups and pull-ups. Include flexibility moves – yoga, pilates, stretching. By incorporating aerobics, strength training and flexibility into your daily physical activity, this gives you a well-rounded exercise routine getting you and keeping you in shape.
Having self-efficacy
A key factor necessary to keep the weight lost gone for good is self-efficacy. A research article in the Journal of Obesity addressed this important behavior for successful weight maintenance. Self-efficacy is a person’s belief in their ability and capacity to accomplish a goal or to deal with the challenges of life. Losing weight is an accomplishment but if you lack the trust in yourself or you feel you lack personal control in maintaining this achievement, it’s quite easy to fall back into old habits putting you right back where you started from. Various setbacks in maintaining weight loss can challenge your self-efficacy. One example is eating more than you should have on a given day. If you have self-efficacy, you view the setback as an opportunity to learn how to deal with it better next time, not allowing it to completely undo your weight loss efforts.
Self-efficacy is gradually increased as you lose weight. You see and feel the results of this achievement in making important strides in improving your health and you identify the techniques that allowed you to achieve this goal of losing weight. As the weight is lost and you reach your goal, you are proving to yourself that you can revamp your lifestyle to be consistent with maintaining a healthy weight.
Putting it all together
After going through the effort of losing weight, maintaining your new weight will be your next worthwhile goal. By utilizing frequent weighing, daily exercise and having self-efficacy, along with a healthy dose of discipline and self-control, you can and will be successful at sustaining your weight loss and moving on into a new phase of wellness.
ABOUT CHERYL MUSSATTO | REGISTERED DIETITIAN
Cheryl Mussatto has over 30 years of experience as a Registered Dietitian and has worked in a variety of settings that cover a wide span of nutrition experience. Currently she works as an adjunct professor for two community colleges, Allen Community College in Burlingame and Butler Community College in Council Grove, Kansas teaching two courses, Basic Nutrition and Therapeutic Nutrition. She is a consulting dietitian for the Cotton O’Neil Medical Clinic in Osage City doing individualized nutrition counseling. Cheryl also is a contributing author for osagecountyonline.com, an online newspaper and Edietitians, a global free nutritional and health magazine. Her articles for both publications pertain to nutrition topics that cover a diversity of health and nutrition interests for the general public. She is also certified as a health and wellness coach. Visit her website atwww.eatwell2bewellrd.com and Facebook page: Eat Well 2 Be Well.