How To Loose Weight By Sticking To Any Diet, Chapter 4
March 15th, 2010How To Stick To Any Diet: Kay Morton
Chapter Four
Seeing Your Way through Thick to Thin:
How You Can Put Your Body Image Ahead of that Tantalizing Piece of Chocolate Cake
Imagine what it would be like to have the perfect body. Really imagine it. What are you wearing? Have you discarded your oversized sweat pants and baggy tee shirts for a form fitting slinky black dress?
Visualization is an empowering concept that is finding its way into the mainstream. Athletes do it to catapult their performance to the next level of competition. Life coaches prescribe it as a form of motivating exercises for their clients.
Successful dieters do it to set goals for themselves and find inspiration for what it is they’re working so hard towards. If you see it, it becomes more of a reality for you than if you can’t imagine ever being thin again.
In this chapter, we’re going to teach you how to use visualization as a powerful diet aid. We’ll also show you the benefits it can have over your progress when temptations show up on your doorstep and you have to muster the courage to defeat them.
What Is Visualization?
Simply put, in the realm of dieting, it’s seeing yourself thin - picturing what it would be like if you were a healthy size 12 instead of a 22. Imagining how you would look as a size 6 instead of a size 16.
But there is much more to the visualization process than images and photo ops. It encompasses all five of your senses - sight, taste, sound, smell, and touch. The cruxes of making it work for you it to make it as real as possible.
Let’s take two people’s experiences with visualization. Sandy is just starting out. She hears the word visualization and automatically thinks one thing - picture. She is able to picture herself thin. Like a third party looking at a still photo Sandy imagines her new image.
Sandy likes what she sees, but it’s not very real to her. It’s like picturing a unicorn - it’s a beautiful sight, but it’s not very realistic and she knows this. Her visualization doesn’t take long to collapse and she gives up on the process.
Heather, on the other hand, has been practicing visualization techniques for quite a while. She’s read about the process and it working hard to make it work for her. Heather uses visualization on a continual basis - throughout her day, as a means to keep her on plan.
How Does Visualization Work?
Close your eyes and picture yourself thin. Was it like looking at a photograph? There are two ways to visualize - both can be helpful, but only one will show you what it will be like to live in your new skin as a thin, healthy person.
One is to visualize yourself the same way everyone else does - from the outside looking in. This is the way Sandy uses visualization, but it’s not a complete method because she’s not imagining with all five of her senses.
The second way is to visualize from inside your own skin - as if you were looking out of your own eyes at the world around you. Can you see how thin you are? Yes. How do you know you’re overweight right now? You use mirrors. You look at your stomach hanging over your pants. You try on clothes and see the bulges in certain areas around you hips and thighs.
Both of these methods can be combined to offer you a comprehensive picture of your future life - if you take the measures necessary to follow through with your weight loss plan.
To intensify the experience, you need to do more than just see things. Whenever you visualize, you have to hear the sounds around you. Imagine your husband telling you that you look great!
Hear the waves at the beach as you picture yourself walking along the shore in a bathing suit for the first time in years - unashamed at how you look and not worried about comments people may have made when you were overweight.
Visualize a setting where you are eating according to your lifetime maintenance nutrition plan. Picture yourself preparing a healthy meal and sitting down at the table to enjoy it without binging on unhealthy foods.
What does the food taste like? Don’t imagine cardboard rice cakes or whole grain bread if you don’t like them - visualize tasty foods that are good for you - prepared using one of the new recipes you’ve learned that make diet foods taste like they’re not even diet!
Visualize your new self in a scented scene. It could be a new perfume you’re wearing with a beautiful new dress as your husband takes you out for an evening to celebrate your success.
Or, you could visualize yourself in a botanical garden having a picnic in a new sundress - with the fragrant scent of budding spring flowers blooming all around you. It could even be the smell of your husband’s cologne as he embraces you because your newfound body image has rekindled the flame that has long since been dead.
While you’re visualizing using your sight, smell, taste, and sounds, you should also incorporate touch. Picture yourself sliding on a small pair of jeans. Feel what it would be like to not have to struggle with a button or hold your breath getting in and out of clothes.
Feel yourself sitting down in a movie or on an airplane and not squeezing between the arm rests. Feel the energy you have now. Can you jog a mile when before, you wouldn’t have been able to walk a quarter of a mile?
All of these senses link together to give you a realistic image of what you want your life to be like when you succeed with your weight loss goals. You have to know where you’re going if you want your map to success to be accurate in getting you to your destination.
What Can I Get Out of Visualizing Myself Thin?
Visualization does more than just make you excited thinking about how sleek you’re going to look in the future. It prevents bad behavior from making you stumble over common diet obstacles that could plague your efforts.
Whenever you’re faced with a tough craving, for example, call on visualization to help you see that eating a box of cookies is going to make you wait longer to reach your goals. Instead of reaching your goal in 6 months, those cookies could cause a delay of 3 extra weeks.
It can also help you stop patterns of self-abuse that many chronic dieters face during tumultuous times when trimming calories from their eating plan. In mid-binge, you can visualize your future progress and put aside the sabotaging meal and be back on track that instant.
Giving up is a big problem for those who go on diet after diet and yo-yo their way to bigger sizes as the years wear on. Visualization gives you hope that here really is a light at the end of the tunnel. If you can see it, you can be it.
How to Perfect the Art of Visualization
No one can be a master at visualization the moment they first try it. Inevitably, you’ll leave off a very important aspect of the imaging process that needs to be incorporated into your scenes.
You can become better at visualization by practicing different scenes that motivate and inspire you to succeed with your weight loss efforts.
Try different images, such as:
Romantic scenes (with complete adoration from your loved one).
Career scenes (where you’re standing at the head of the board room giving a confident presentation, not hiding in the back of the room stuffing your face with donuts).
New family lifestyle scenes (more energy for the kids or a fun camp-out that you couldn’t manage as an overweigh person).
Shopping scenes (imagine you’re trying on all of the latest styles, in smaller sizes than you’ve work in years).
All of these images will boost your realization that you don’t have to live the rest of your life as a fat person. It’s hard being overweight. You’re labeled. You’re depressed. You see no end in sight to the humiliation you feel as you walk through the grocery store wondering if everyone is staring at what goes into your basket.
Your romantic life may have become stagnant because you don’t feel comfortable being sexual in your own skin. Or, your spouse may not be attracted to you anymore since you’ve gained weight. It’s a harsh reality, but one that can be changed if you do the work and stick to your diet using the tips we’re outlining for you here.
Some people shun the concept of visualization just because they think it’s too hokey or weird for them to try. Amazingly, though, chronically overweight individuals will try dozens of pills and wonder plans to try to lose the weight.
Don’t overlook the power of your own mind when it comes time to defeat the patterns you’ve put in place to ruin your health and pack on the pounds over the years. While visualization may be a new concept to you, it’s certainly not new to many successful individuals, and what worked for them just might work for you, too!
Nothing Tastes as Good as Thin Feels
Have you ever heard that saying? Think about it. How much do you want to lose weight? How bad is it gnawing at you to be thin and attractive and healthy once again - or for the first time ever in your life?
You have to be ready to do it before any method of diet and weight loss is going to work for you. Are you ready to trade in your favorite food indulgence for a smaller size waist?
You need to start weighing in on the pros and cons of whatever you put in your mouth. Don’t silence your conscience anymore when it’s trying to tell you that you shouldn’t be eating that second slice of New York Cheesecake.
Use visualization to help you stop, think, and picture what that cheesecake is going to do to your body - to your progress. Yes, you can use visualization to picture what could happen if you veer off the path of weight loss success, too.
Some people do use negative visualization as a form of preventing themselves from falling off the weight loss wagon. But if you do use that method, then you also need to counter it with positive images of your future healthy self, so that you know what it is you’re working towards.
Visualize Your Portions
Visualization isn’t only about your body image. While that is a great tool for picturing yourself thin and setting new goals for yourself, visualization can also help you in another way.
As you may already know, Americanized portions of food are out of control! We super-size everything for pennies extra, or else we don’ feel as if we’ve gotten a good deal.
In restaurants, you don’t even have to ask for super-sized food, they simply serve a platter piled high with fried food and meals smothered in gravy. Food chains are competing to see who can serve more for less!
When you buy a hamburger at a fast food chain, you probably think it’s a single serving. Well our single servings have grown from 1 ounce of meat in those burgers back in the 1950s to 6 ounces in today’s world!
We are so accustomed to our giant sized servings that whenever average folks were asked to show what a single serving was, although they pared it down from a super-size serving, it was still a gross over estimate of a real single serving.
You need to learn how to visualize your portions so that you don’t go overboard in caloric intake. Bringing your portions under control will help you get your weight under control.
Did you know?
A single serving of fruit is the size of a tennis ball.
A single serving (1 ounce) of cheese is the size of four dice?
A single serving of bread is the size of 2 cassette tapes?
A single serving of pasta or cereal is the size of a hockey puck?
A single serving of a baked potato is the size of a computer mouse?
A single serving of chicken is the size of a bar of soap?
When you begin picturing your food portions the right way, it will help you reign in the calories that are causing your weight to skyrocket. From now on, get a doggie bag for half of your entrée in a restaurant. Use smaller plates or bowls to keep you from filling a platter to the outer edges.
Measure your food, if you think you have a problem with portion control, and when you measure it, ingrain that image into your mind so that you can call upon it the next time you need to visualize correct serving sizes.
Don’t forget that the key to visualization is allowing yourself to believe that you can reach your goals. Picture you loving your new body, not practicing self-loathing. Every time you visualize, picture you making healthier choices, like preparing a small salad instead of a bowl of ice cream.
Create a Good Visualization Setting
The best way to visualize anything is to do it without interruptions. Find a comfortable spot in your home or office and pick a relaxing way to sit or lie down. Make sure there are no loud noises. It’s okay if you hear the sound of a clock ticking - some people prefer to have a steady rhythm to visualize by.
Before you launch into a visualization scene, you need to be completely relaxed so that you can tap into your subconscious mind. That way, you’ll be recording new behaviors, even if they’re only in your mind - it will become more doable for you.
Take several deep breaths and allow your body to relax. Then, slowly see the picture coming into focus as you prepare your mind to imagine all of the sensory aspects of the scene - the way you look, the sounds filling the air, the scent of your surroundings, the way your food tastes, and the feel of your now thinner skin.
Practice this scenario until you begin to feel comfortable and at ease using visualization techniques to help you through tumultuous times when you’re making lifestyle changes such as your dietary habits.