Weight Loss Information

Weight Control Tool: A Food Journal


All the weight control experts recommend keeping a record of what you eat. Seeing your daily intake in black and white reality can boost your pride in your self-discipline, gently confront you with some less than stellar choices you've made, or cast you into a morass of guilt and depression when you face the epicurean debacle that your food intake represents.

A food diary can become so much more useful for your weight wars if you use it as a tool for self-exploration and self-discovery. It allows you to create an oasis of support that anchors you in a world tossed by competing priorities, overwork, incredible dietary temptations, and social pressures that all lead to frustration, inwardly directed anger, diminished self-esteem, and terminal fatigue.

What do we need to do to create such a tool?

1. Buy a good spiral notebook with lots of pages and a hard cover - you're going to keep this for a long time so avoid anything that's going to easily fall apart.

2. Enter the date you started your journey: this is the baseline against which you will compare your entries for the next several months. Under the date, enter the following information as accurately as you can make it, as of this very moment:

Age Height Weight Measurements

Waist

Bust

Hips

Thighs

Upper arms

Clothing size

Type of hairstyle

Any daily exercise obtained

Today's primary mood

Self-Appraisal (find 3 adjectives for each area)

General appearance

Size and shape

Personal characteristics

Interpersonal relationships

Self-value

Family or romantic relationships

Level of self-satisfaction

3. Each day, you are going to enter not only what you ate, but the thoughts and emotions that accompanied the food. Note: Don't become obsessive - it more productive to keep this daily but if you run out of time and energy now and then, skip it, and get back to it when you can.

4. It is going to take some thought and memory-searching to ferret out what you need so find yourself a quiet spot where you can be alone and quiet. Keep your book there, close at hand, so you can quickly visit when you want to record anything that occurs to you.

5. Start teaching yourself to identify the inner landscape that accompanies your food intake. Focus on the moments before you ate: How did you feel at the time? Were you (genuinely) hungry - create a 1 to 10 rating scale for yourself, ranging from "not really" up to "starved, faint, light-headed." Were you bored? Were you anxious and trying to calm yourself down? Were you angry and stuffing that anger down your own throat? Were you feeling sorry for yourself? Were you with good friends and just wanted to be part of the group? Were you just not thinking? Were you trying to punish yourself -or someone else? You may find that you ate several times a day for the same reason or that the triggers to eat differed throughout the day depending upon the circumstances and people involved at the time.

6. Once you have jotted down everything related to the minutes before you ate (you may start out with very little to say but as you warm to this exercise, you will find yourself recording more and more information), consider how you felt directly afterwards. Did you feel satiated and serene? Did you feel proud of your food choices? Were you satisfied with all your selections? Did you feel stuffed and uncomfortable? Did you feel guilty about the choices you made? Were you angry with yourself for giving in to temptation and blowing your diet for the day? Did the food make you light and energetic or heavy and sleepy? Did you think about tomorrow morning's weigh-in with dread or anticipation?

7. Take a look at the day from the perspective of now (last thing in the evening or a look back the following morning). Try to look at your entries as if they belonged to someone else. As a dispassionate third party, what are your conclusions about the individual who recorded this data? Is this a self-aware, consciously motivated person or someone who lives on auto-pilot with little planning or direction? Is this someone who has internalized their diet goals and attempts to control their environment and intake? Is this an individual who merely 'talks the talk" but pursues actions that break those verbal rules? Is this a happy person who is cheerfully continuing the weight struggle with a sense of humor and self-forgiveness? Or is this someone who resents the conspiracies of nature which attempt to load on as much fat as possible, to ward off some improbable future famine?

8. If you are generally satisfied with the day's food intake, give yourself a mental pat on the back and relish the day's accomplishment. Promise yourself that one great day proves forever that you can do it. Identify a small, non-edible, reward for your self-discipline, inner strength, and personal commitment. Record your conclusions and bask in the self-satisfaction you so richly deserve.

9. If you feel disappointed in what you read, remind yourself that it is only one day in a lifetime of thousands of days. Forgive yourself and start over. Think about one or two changes you can make so the following day's record will not be quite so disappointing. Guard against swearing that today will be perfect: you are not going to get there overnight but you will get there, over time, slowly, one step at a time. You are learning to take baby steps that will nudge your food intake into closer alignment with your goals. You are going to gradually add techniques to your arsenal of weapons to keep temptation at bay. The simple fact of intake awareness will keep slowly propelling you towards the goals you have so carefully set.

10. At the end of your entry, enter your weight for the day - it will always fluctuate a little bit but will show you how you are doing when viewed over a period of time.

Virginia Bola is a licensed psychologist and an admitted diet fanatic. She specializes in therapeutic reframing and the effects of attitudes and motivation on individual goals. The author of The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual, and a free ezine, The Worker's Edge, she recently completed a psychologically-based weight control book: Diet with an Attitude: A Weight Loss Workbook. She can be reached at http://www.DietWithAnAttitude.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Examiner.com

Weight Loss Examiner
Examiner.com - Sep 5, 2008
These websites were picked by the Weight Loss Examiner as useful resources. The weight-loss drug Alli has been running a new batch of TV ads showing ...


Seattle Sutton's Healthy Eating Seeks Weight Loss Clients for New ...
MarketWatch - Sep 4, 2008
Those who are selected will appear in the new commercial totaling their weight loss results and celebrating their combined success. ...


Fars News Agency

High-Protein Breakfast Helps Weight Loss
Fars News Agency, Iran - Sep 6, 2008
According to the study published in the British Journal of Nutrition, a high-protein breakfast creates a greater sense of sustained fullness throughout the ...


Best Syndication

Discover the 6 Benefits Bananas Provide to Help You Achieve ...
Best Syndication, CA - Sep 5, 2008
Eating too much of any one food is not the best way to achieve a healthy weight loss, we all know that. But some foods eaten on a regular basis can provide ...


Weight Loss Improves Urinary Incontinence in Overweight and Obese ...
DG News - Sep 5, 2008
By Laura Gater CHICAGO -- September 5, 2008 – Initiation of weight loss should be considered a first-line approach to the treatment of overweight and/or ...


Winning at Weight Loss Takes Team Effort
WSET, VA - Sep 5, 2008
When people joined a group based weight-loss program with friends and family, they lost more weight and kept it off better than those who joined the same ...
Experts Weigh in on Low-calorie Sweeteners and Weight Gain WSET
all 2 news articles


Hawaiian trip may be won for weight loss
Valencia County News Bulletin, NM - Sep 5, 2008
After losing 57.4 pounds in the nationally run Weight Loss Challenge, Segura is in the running for a free vacation trip to Hawaii. "I am excited about being ...


Safe, Simple and Scientific Secrets to Successful Weight Loss
WSET, VA - Sep 5, 2008
But what if you applied the concept of sustainability to your weight-loss and health-improvement efforts? The results would be life altering, ...


Weight loss
Planet Thrive, NY - Sep 5, 2008
I understand that unexplained weight loss is one of the symptoms of lyme borreliosis. I'm trying to understand why the weight loss. ...


Daily Mail

Photographing meals 'could help weight loss'
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Sep 3, 2008
Taking a photograph of your meal before you eat it can encourage weight loss, a new study suggests. By Kate Devlin Medical Correspondent Slimmers began to ...
The flash diet: Taking photos of meals helps slimmers lose weight Daily Mail
all 3 news articles

Weight-Loss - Google News

home | site map
© 2006