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Monday, October 7, 2013

Change is an Ongoing Process

If you want to change something, there is a defined process or set of steps. Everyone takes all the steps. Sometimes the time lag between steps is brief, and sometimes the duration of one step can be very long. Some people repeat a few steps, but every step is always part of the process. Since I--and many others--are in the "weight change" process, my examples will all refer to that decision.

Step 1: Pre-contemplation
At this point, you don't even think about a change. Life is happening and you are riding along. You rarely consider your weight, because it is not interfering with anything. Changes only occur when someone decides that an improvement can be made. At this point, you are content.

Step 2: Contemplation
Something has happened. You had an "a-ha!" moment, and it might have been an unpleasant finding. Maybe you were invited to a nice event and when you went to try on your favorite slacks, you found that you needed to coat your legs with bacon grease (why do you have so much bacon grease on hand?) and stand on the dresser while your significant other holds them open so you can jump in. In my case, my blood pressure was up to the point where the Red Cross started deferring me from donating blood. And since I worked in an ER, and knew what happens to overweight guys with very high blood pressure, I suddenly saw the problem and realized the gravity of it. In this phase, you do nothing, but you understand that something needs to happen.

Me, at about 290 pounds, in July 2006

This is a step that many people linger on. It is easy to say "I need to..." but making the decision to do something and acting on it, is much harder. And scary.

Step 3:  Preparation
At this point, you have decided what to do and have started. This can be the most exciting step! You finally are addressing the problem and very often, you quickly see initial results. Maybe you join Weight Watchers. Maybe you join a gym. Maybe you buy a bicycle. But whatever you choose, you decide a course of action and begin. In my case, I found a diet plan (The Sonoma Diet) which was very Mediterranean and looked like I could do it. I started eating the Sonoma/Mediterranean way. And I started to lose weight! In the first eight weeks, I took off 47 pounds. Then....

Step 4: Activation
This is where the action step you chose is in full swing. You are firing on all cylinders. You are making progress, and continuing to follow the plan. You may develop a support system around you, finding strength in numbers. At this point, success becomes a self-supporting machine. It gets easy. Until...you...begin...to falter.

Maybe the action plan becomes boring. The food--the same foods every day--becomes tasteless. The bike ride becomes a chore, and now the seat really starts to hurt. You start finding reasons to skip the gym. The losses slow down, and maybe you stall. These are all the mental obstacles that pop up because you have lost the excitement of the Preparation step and forgotten the "a-ha" event that sparked your Contemplation step. This is where the support system is critical. When you find yourself standing in front of the donut display, and you are thinking "will anyone notice if I lick the display case?" you can send a text message to your supporters and gain the resolve to walk past.

But without that team effort, progress can stop. Regression begins at this point, and again, without a cast of supporting characters in your life, the regression will gain speed.

April 2009, after losing 70 pounds.

For me, this did not happen until I was nine months and 70 pounds into the plan. I just sort of stopped. I thought, "Huh. I guess I'm done now." I didn't know about the next step, which is...

Step 5: Preservation
I thought that once I reached my goal, I was done! But in this step, you will continue to learn new habits to lay on top of your bad habits so that you can preserve your success. That takes time. And effort. And you need to keep your focus now, just as when you were beginning your action plan in the Preparation step.

Me? Over the next eight months, I put most of the weight back on. This is not uncommon, and was another "a-ha" moment, which made me re-enter the change process at the Contemplation step and restart from there. Again, this is a common detour that many people make. And like me, many people enter into a repeating loop at this point. I restarted three additional times over the next 13 months, until May 2011 when I found the LoseIt application on my iPod. Once I had my fourth "a-ha" I found a method that has served me well into the Preservation step.

May, 2011, back up to 265. How did THAT happen???

July 2012, about six months at my goal weight, about 185. 
I am still at or under my goal, 15 months after than picture was taken.

Step 6: Termination
This step applies to many changes, but not all. If you are building your home, eventually the builders give you the keys and you move it. Or you find that your retirement fund is large enough that you can stop working, so you turn in your retirement papers and move into the next phase of your life.

Weight loss is a different change, because we keep adapting our thought process. We don't get a hair cut just once, in the style we like and never get it cut again (unless you are my oldest son), because other changes happen around you, and your hair doesn't stop growing. We might continue to work, even into retirement, but the definition of "work" may change.

When we reach our goal weight, the Preservation step may need to become permanent. You may need to carefully consider what you eat for the rest of your life. Or, maybe you can stop being so vigilant. We are all different. Personally, I have been at or under goal weight for 19+ months, and I still measure my food and log everything I eat. It is not a burden, so I have no issues continuing. And my LoseIt app is my security blanket. I know that as long as I am able to log my foods, I can keep the weight off. I worked too hard to go backwards. Might that change? Probably. But I am in no hurry to move to the true Termination step.

Where are you? How many times have you looped back? We need to always remember that restarting is not a failure. Failure is when you never loop back and never restart the change process.

Question: What change you working on? Where are you in this process? Give us the answer below so we can all gain more confidence and success.

Also, go to my Make Your Someday Today podcast and stay current with my changes by clicking HERE.

9 comments:

  1. I am with you Trevor I am in the maintenance step of my life and plan on being there for now on. I do experiment with foods and exercises so I can try different things. Unlike you I do not do the cooking my wife does, and I am so glad that she loves to cook and is welling to support my goals.
    A issue I have is that I have a doctor that says that I am great with my weight where I am, but I have damn insurance company at work that has the BMI chart on the brain. It does not matter that my percent of body fat is 15 and my doctor says that I am great at my weight, and that all of my lab work supports me being very health for my age where I am, I am always hammered to lose more weight. And until I finally retire I am stuck with this insurance.

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    1. Chuck, thanks for your coments. Your success continue to inspire me!

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  2. Wow, very logical explantation of the angst, happiness, sorrow and triumph that I have gone through! The thing that I am working on right now is not being in constant state of panic about my maintenance.
    NOT always feeling like I have to watch every morsel in my mouth. Exercising for 3 or more hours a day. allowing myself to take a day or two of hiatus from exercise with out the constant fear and guilt.
    I am trying to change into a mindset of true maintaining. Of being a normal weight person with a more normal eating pattern. SO SO hard! BUT i have found by relaxing about it, I am starting to have success in this. I just don't want to obsess over my food every moment of every day.

    Thanks for the great post, Trevor! You rock!

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    1. Debio, thanks for that open and honest self-assessment. So often we begin to think that we are alone, and that no one can know how we feel.

      We are not alone!

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  3. Trevor, your blog post is fantastic and spot on! You continue to be such an inspiration -- thank you! For me, I am in "Activation," after having cycled through many gain-loss-gain loops over a significant portion of my life. This time is different, and it is due to the support network on Lose It along with more self-acceptance and less self-criticism. I just posted this on Lose It and it rings true for where I am right now: Had a rough week. Intense at work. Despite that, I lost 2 pounds and didn't have any urges to soothe myself with food -- sugar, carbs or bad fats. Feels good to be breaking ages old habit patterns, but I know the binge eater is still a part of me. I am waving at her now, & telling her it is nice to see her shrinking! ;)

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    1. Cathy, I am excited to read about your success, even when you were challenged!

      We never completely change, but we can learn new habits to old stimuli, and it looks like you are getting very good at that! Congrats and I hope that this week is just as successful (but not as rough!)

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  5. OMG...you have it so right. That is exactly what I have done on numerous occasions. I re-started yesterday and even posted on Loseit asking "Am I a failure?" I am now in the activation phase, logging everything that I eat. I think that the support from others is key. I hope that I find that on Loseit or MyFitnessPal. I have both as ammo.
    Best of luck to you on your life long journey. Thanks for the blog.

    Mark

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    1. Mark, thanks for the response and feedback! We are here to help! Thanks for reading the blog!

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