Make it and keep it
- Share via
June Casagrande
“This year, it’s going to be different. No excuses. No slacking
off. This year, I’m going to get in shape.”
Sound familiar? If this once-powerful pledge is beginning to sound
like a tired refrain, it’s time to stop kidding yourself about
getting fit.
If it didn’t work last year or the year before or the year before
that, it’s time to do something different. That’s the only way to
make your 2003 New Year’s resolution the one that finally sticks.
Every new year, personal trainers see a fresh crop of resolute
health buffs, and every year, there follows the steady decline in
workout attendance that separates the ones who really mean business
from the ones who were just kidding themselves all along.
The key, pros say, is to be realistic from the start.
“Wanting too much too soon is probably one of the biggest reasons
people fail their New Year’s resolutions. That’s probably the second
biggest reason. The biggest one is just flaking out,” said Paul
Redman, a personal trainer who often works at Newport Fitness.
Redman, who looks at every new year as an opportunity for a fresh
start, said that goals must be reasonable and, even more important,
they should be very specific.
“You need a very specific plan,” Redman said. “That plan should
include several small goals that look toward a big goal. Obviously, I
believe that hiring a trainer can be a good goal. Then set some
positive rewards when you’ve achieved your goals: Send yourself to
spa, on a shopping spree -- something you only get if you hit your
goal.”
Set out not to lose weight, not to get “ripped,” he said, but to
feel better and be healthier.
“It’s about feeling good. The weight loss will come naturally if
feeling good is your goal,” Redman said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.