Go Ahead, Do it Wrong
When I was
in high school I was known to get myself into some pretty hot water
every now and again due to my “independent” nature. I remember
distinctly one time when a buddy and I decided, while on the bus to
school, that learning wasn’t exactly the way we wanted to spend that
spring day. We jumped off at the next stop and spend the day walking
around downtown Chicago and seeing what kind of trouble we could get
into. The next day when I was called into the Principal’s office, I got
a got an encouraging speech about how miserable I would turn out if I
continued hanging around with hooligans and was told I would be
suspended from school for three days. It seemed counterintuitive to me
that my punishment for skipping school would be to miss some more
school. They wanted me to do more of what I was being punished
for doing initially? After an additional three days had passed without
hearing about the fall of the Prussian Empire or Pythagoras, I learned
how much I truly appreciated my free time and really started disliking
school. It didn’t make sense to me then and it doesn’t make sense to me
now.
Does the
logic seem a little flawed to you as well?
It’s equally
as ludicrous to punish yourself for slipping on your diet or missing a
workout by doing more of what you’re trying to avoid. Ever been on a
diet and during a temporary moment of weakness you give in and have a
cookie or two? What happened next? For a lot of us, we felt guilty and
threw up our hands and said “The heck with it” and two cookies turned
into a whole box and then we sprayed whipped cream into our mouths
straight from the can. Okay, maybe the last part is a stretch, but you
get my drift. You made a small, virtually negligible error and instead
of correcting it when recognize our transgression, we exacerbated the
situation by doing more of what we felt bad about, and then we felt
worse, so we ate more cookies, and felt even worse, and yadda, yadda,
yadda.
Lots of
people are either in the gym every day or six days a week, or never.
They’re either eating miso soup and steamed carrots three times a day,
or cold pizza for breakfast and beer for dinner. Black and white, on or
off, there’s a better way.
Children
crawl before they walk and walk before they run, know why? Because it’s
a universal principle, but we keep trying to avoid it? Every January
1st people flock to the local gym and skinless chicken breasts sells out
of the grocery store by 9AM. What makes people think they’re going to
transition from couch tater and Ding Dog eater to a strict lifestyle
requiring Buddha-like discipline literally overnight? Get gradual about
things. I know lots of self-improvement books tell you major paradigm
shifts and massive action is the best and quickest way to change. Maybe
in some instances
this
is true, but not when starting diet and exercise. How about you try
something like going to the gym three days a week to start with, or two,
or taking a walk everyday? Maybe you could eat a healthy breakfast and
work on lunch next week or the week after. Have fruit with that greasy
burger instead of fries.
Baby
steps.
Don’t go
into the gym on January 1st nursing a hangover and try to
bench double your bodyweight. Take a jog, go light, get used to being
there. Take the first couple weeks to just ease yourself into the
lifestyle, crawl before you walk and walk before you run.
Quit beating yourself up over slips, do you think I never go
off my diet or skip workouts? Sure I do. So does everyone else,
including professional athletes and Olympians. What makes the
difference between success and failure is not how often you fall but how
often you rise. Next time you’re ch ewing
that second cookie and you realize it’s not what you planned on and feel
guilty for it, stop.
Don’t eat
any more. Don’t make yourself feel worse by doing more harm. Don’t let a
slip turn into a slide.
Two cookies
every now and again won’t make any difference, an entire box can negate
everything you’ve done all week. Make your correction and get back on
course. Maybe you got tied up late at work or your kids were sick or
you just plain blew off your workouts for a few days. This doesn’t mean
that you should worsen the situation by getting discouraged and
depressed that you failed again and take another week off from
exercise, or year, or whatever. Correct it and get back on course.
When Tom Brady throws an interception does he go mope on the sideline,
eat some doughnuts, and sit the rest of the game out because he made a
mistake? Nope. He learns from it and the very next play he’s trying
again. He has great successes and great errors every game. He’s
constantly correcting until the impact of the successes outweigh the
impact of the errors just a little. Remember when the Patriots won
Super Bowl XXXIX and Brady was voted MVP and all the players lifting him
up in a celebration of victory? Remember how many interceptions he
threw that game? Me neither. When you’ve reached your goal and you’re
standing victorious nobody is going to care that you had 2 cookies you
shouldn’t have once in awhile either. Get over it and start again.
I want to be clear that I’m not saying it’s ok to constantly skip
your workouts and eat junk.
Far more
often than not you should be busting your butt and enduring what you
need to in order to achieve your goal, but we must be realistic. You
won’t always do it right, you won’t always do the best you can, and life
will give you knocks that will mess up everything. When these
inevitabilities happen, let’s not lose sight of reality or abandon our
health completely. We’re trying to prevent the yo-yo thing. Slimming
down and fattening back up again and again. You can’t make a temporary
change have permanent impacts. So often we start an eating or exercise
plan and make it so terribly strict that we just count down the days
before we can return to our old ways of behaving. Is it really
surprising the weight comes back when you return to what you were doing
before? Everyone wants everything RIGHT NOW. Everyone scoffs at 2
pounds a week. They read about the “diets” where they can lose up to 5
times that amount the first week! Go ahead, see if you don’t bounce
right back where you were. Nobody wants to creep along at 2 pounds a
week and I admit it doesn’t typically impress. If you tell somebody
you’re losing a pound and a half a week they’re not exactly pounding
down your door to know your secret. But tell them you lost 100 pounds
last year, and their ears perk up. Do most things right
consistently and you can do anything. Forget about 30 pounds in 30
days, I’ll take the consistent 2 pounds every time. The tortoise beat
the hare in the end remember?
The message is that you don’t need to kill yourself and do everything
absolutely perfectly; you’re not either “on or off”.
Start working out, don’t put it off until you have the time to “do it
right”. Go ahead and do it wrong, halfway is better than no way.
Do you have
a big stain on your tie from that Arby-Q you ate for lunch? Doesn’t
mean you can’t have chicken and veggies for dinner and minimize the
damage. Start having a diet soda with your pepperoni double crust
pizza, I don’t care if it makes sense. Do something in the right
direction. Small changes stack on top of one another and eventually
become major changes. Above all, when you slip and fall, don’t stay
there, rise again.

About the Author:
Rich
Butkevic is the owner of
www.MadisonTrainer.com, a Certified Personal Trainer by the
ISSA, a nationally recognized fitness author, and triathlete.
He trains individuals of all levels utilizing a method that
centers on efficiency, functionality, and simplicity. He is
known for his ability to motivate his clients and maintain
enthusiasm and consistency. By ensuring his programs fit into
the lives of his clients, he is able to boast a much higher
success rate than many of his peers. His in-depth assessments,
cutting edge nutrition knowledge, and personalization make his
programs stand out as recognizable and uniquely effective in the
industry.
Rich can be reached
at
www.MadisonTrainer.com
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