The hosts discuss their weight loss challenge and invite listeners to join. They reflect on their recent food habits, share their motivations and set goals. They explore the concept of weight fluctuations and the importance of tracking food and exercise habits. They discuss measuring body fat percentage, managing indulgences, and anticipating obstacles. They invite listeners to participate and share their own plans and obstacles.
Setting realistic weight loss goals and not solely focusing on the number on the scale is crucial for long-term success.
Being accountable and tracking progress through tools like MyFitnessPal, Apple Watch, smart scales, and before-and-after pictures can help individuals make better choices and stay motivated.
Deep dives
Setting Goals for Weight Loss
In this podcast episode, the hosts discuss their personal weight loss challenge. They acknowledge that disruptions to their normal routines, such as weddings and travel, have led to weight gain and the desire to improve their habits. One host aims to lose 10 pounds before January 14th, while the other aims to break through a weight plateau and reach 170 pounds. They emphasize the importance of setting realistic goals and not solely focusing on the number on the scale.
Accountability and Tracking
The hosts highlight the significance of accountability in achieving weight loss goals. They mention using the MyFitnessPal app to track their food intake, as well as alert features on the Apple Watch to keep each other informed about workouts. They also discuss the value of taking before and after pictures, as well as using a smart scale like Withings to monitor weight and body composition. They emphasize that tracking progress and staying accountable can help individuals make better choices and stay motivated.
Anticipating Obstacles and Resources
The hosts address the importance of anticipating obstacles on the weight loss journey. They mention upcoming travel, work deadlines, and the holiday season as potential challenges. They recommend getting ahead of these obstacles by planning and modifying habits accordingly. The hosts also mention additional resources like the book 'How Not to Die' by Michael Greger and 'Atomic Habits' by James Clear, which provide insights and strategies for healthier habits. They encourage listeners to join them in the weight loss challenge by setting their own goals and finding accountability.
Takeaway:Over the next 13 weeks I plan on losing 20 pounds by doing three things: making myself more accountable, tracking my weight and food intake, and anticipating any weekly obstacles that might arise. Want to join me?
Estimated Reading Time:2 minutes, 30s.
Podcast Length25 minutes, 27s (link to play podcast at bottom of post).
Between now and January 14th (the next 13 weeks), I plan on losing 20 pounds, going from 190lbs to 170 lbs. Of course, a 13-month weight loss challenge is anything but a long-term solution to eating better and living a healthier life. But I plan on experimenting with that idea, too.
Lately, I’ve been slacking in the healthy eating department. Between work travel, writing deadlines, and personal events—including getting married and going and on a honeymoon—my food habits have slipped, and I’ve become a tad heavier than I’d like. Nothing crazy, just some extra weight that it’s now time to kick. It’s time to bring more awareness back to eating, and develop some healthy eating habits that stick.
In this week’s episode of Becoming Better, my cohost/wife and I dig into this challenge (she’s planning on losing 10 pounds along with me).
My question for you is, want to join us? At the end of the episode, we put a call out, asking if anyone listening to the episode—and now, reading this post—is game to participate in this same challenge with us, to lose a specific amount of weight by January 14th. If you want to join, just shoot us off an email with how much weight you plan on losing by January 14th. Set a calendar reminder to follow up on that message when the 14th comes around, to let us know how it went! We’ll expect your response
If you’re looking for some inspiration for what to do differently—beyond bringing some awareness to what you eat, and reconnecting with what constitutes a healthy diet, perhaps by reading my favorite food book How Not to Die—below are the three main strategies we’ll be using to keep ourselves motivated!
1. Accountability
Accountability can help immensely in the formation of new habits. Here are a few ways we plan on becoming more accountable for the next 13 weeks:
By finding an accountability partner. I’m partnering with my friend David—who wants to shed a few pounds as well. I’ll also, of course, be partnering with Ardyn at the same time.
By tracking each other’s activity (through the Apple Watch Activity app).
By developing joint rituals, like eating and working out together more often.
2. Tracking
In addition to taking before and after pictures, we’ll be tracking our progress through daily weigh-ins on our smart scale, which allows us to see how our weight changes over time. I’ll also chat on a regular basis with my accountability partner (every week or two), so we can chat about how things are going, and whether we’re on track to meet our goals. In addition to recording weight, Ardyn and I (and my accountability partner David) will be recording everything we eat in MyFitnessPal, the popular food-tracking app, to curb overeating.
3. Anticipating Obstacles
When you try to develop a new habit without first anticipating obstacles that might get in the way of the habit, you’re far more likely to fail. For this reason, I’m making it a weekly ritual to anticipate any obstacles to eating healthily every Sunday, when I also plan out my week. Obstacles are infinitely easier to deal with before they arise, rather than after.
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If you have a few pounds to part ways with, I hope you’ll join us on the challenge!