Will Power and Outsourcing Self Control Key Factors in Keeping Diet Resolutions

will power control

Will Power and Outsourcing Self Control Key Factors in Keeping Diet Resolutions

Will Power Control Key Factors Let’s just say that my “Post-holiday, Back-on-the-Fat-No-More” bandwagon was rather disappointing.

OK, so it was more than rather disappointing. The disappointment was epic. Epic because I did all the things I needed to do and was supposed to do. Things like watch calories, eat tee-tiny portions and exercise five times this week. I get tired just thinking about it.

I even went to that special Fat Yoga class I signed up for. OK, so maybe it’s called something like “Yoga for Weight Loss and Weight Management,” but since I’m not a big fan of euphemisms,

I call it my “Fat Yoga” class to distinguish it from the other classes I attend like the “Hotter-than-the-Dickens Yoga” (my Monday night hot yoga class,)

or the “I’m-staring-at-my-toes-because-I-can’t-do-that-pose Yoga” class (my Wednesday night Power Yoga class)

or the “I’ve-fallen-and-can’t-get-up yoga class” for the other Thursday night Power Yoga Plus class.

Will Power Control Key Factors Jeepers.

Despite my best efforts, my weight remained unchanged this week, but my resolve to finish out this “Frying In My Own Fat” Weight Loss Challenge remains strong especially after reading this New York Times article.

According to the article, people fail to keep their New Year’s resolutions (or any resolution for that matter) because they simply run out of will power.

The Will power apparently is a “real form of mental energy, powered by glucose in the bloodstream, which is used up as you exert self-control.”

And, sadly, once Mr. Will Power is gone, well chaos ensues, and you fall off whatever fat-no-more bandwagon you were on and become part of that 36 percent who break their resolutions by the end of January or that 56 percent who cave in by July.

The article gave a bunch of tips on how to stay the course.

Will Power Control Key Factors One was to outsource your self-control by holding yourself accountable to friends or publicly pre-committing to your resolution. (Sort of like what I’ve been doing here.) I’ve always said public humiliation is a great motivator. There are even APPs to help you with that.

So apparently I’m just going to have to try harder and watch my internal Will Power meter because I am not giving up on this fat-no-more thing.

No siree, Missy. I’m determined not to be a resolution failure statistic.

Maybe Week 2 of my Fat Yoga class will wring out a pound or two this upcoming week, and Mr. Willpower will remain strong.

How’s that for a bit of outsourcing self-control? And I didn’t have to go off-shore to do it either.

 

Carol Richtsmeier teaches journalism at a public high school in Texas where her students and publications have won numerous local, state and national awards. She chronicles her teaching escapades in her blog at mybellringers.blogspot.com. …