Anonymous wrote:Yes. There's a trip I've been wanting to take. I'm currently 240lbs. Once I'm in the 190's I'm booking it. I haven't been in the 190's in decades.
https://greywolfexpeditions.com/kayaking-tours-vancouver-island/women-only-kayak-retreat/
Anonymous wrote:This was very effective for me. I made a list of rewards to get at every 5lbs lost. It looked something like this:
185 -- start
180 -- new Jo Malone perfume
175 -- hike in SNP with dogs and DH
170 -- reflexology foot massage
165 -- new Onitsuka Tigers
160 -- weekend at Williamsburg Inn
155 -- shopping trip to Georgetown
150 -- GOAL Cartier watch
I typed it in a pretty font, put it up on the wall of my office, and at each little goal as it was reached I put a sticker next to it. It was very motivating to see the stickers add up.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know but I'm there with you, OP. I have a lot of diabetes in my family and I'm in my forties, so I know my time is ticking and I really should make positive changes now so I can live and feel better later in life. I know this. But that still didn't stop me from drinking too much (two glasses on wine) last night and eating a cookie for breakfast. INSERT HEAD SLAP EMOJI.
Help!
Anonymous wrote:For those of you who’ve made slow gains over time, what are some of the motivational strategies you used to stay the course?
I know, I know, health and strength should be the ultimate rewards, but sometimes it feels like a slog and short term rewards help us to keep going, especially when progress is slow.
Here’s mine: For every week I stick to my program, I tuck some money into my savings account. After 6 months I plan to go shopping for new clothes that fit.
Please share your own motivational tips and tricks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you who’ve made slow gains over time, what are some of the motivational strategies you used to stay the course?
I know, I know, health and strength should be the ultimate rewards, but sometimes it feels like a slog and short term rewards help us to keep going, especially when progress is slow.
Here’s mine: For every week I stick to my program, I tuck some money into my savings account. After 6 months I plan to go shopping for new clothes that fit.
Please share your own motivational tips and tricks.
where is that money coming from? i don't get your logic.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you who’ve made slow gains over time, what are some of the motivational strategies you used to stay the course?
I know, I know, health and strength should be the ultimate rewards, but sometimes it feels like a slog and short term rewards help us to keep going, especially when progress is slow.
Here’s mine: For every week I stick to my program, I tuck some money into my savings account. After 6 months I plan to go shopping for new clothes that fit.
Please share your own motivational tips and tricks.