How To Get Your Best Body Ever In 2006
We all know what follows after the Christmas holiday season: New
Year's Resolutions!
It's that one (and sometimes only) time of year that many people
tend to think about what it is they want to achieve with their
health and fitness goals.
So they'll embark on their journey to a new physique, telling
themselves that this will be "THE" year they totally get in
shape.
But for most, it's short lived. Like a couple of weeks, tops.
Why does this occur? Why do so many people call it quits well
before their body even stops aching from the new-found exercise
routine they just started.
Here's why: They haven't made fitness a habit.
Virtually everything you do in life is the result of habit. How
you drive to work, what you do in the morning to get ready, what
you eat for dinner. All habits.
The way you walk, talk, think, spend money, it's all the result
of your habits. In fact, it's been said that 95% of what you do
in a given day is all based upon your habitual behavior.
And these habits can be the obstacles to your achieving the
fitness goals you want to achieve. The way you think, feel, and
act are roadblocks that stand between the body you currently
have and the physique you really want.
Habit is comfort. It's that "zone" that doesn't make you think
too hard or fail at anything. In the absense of some outside
force, you're going to keep doing the same thing indefinitely.
Not because they work, but because they're comfortable.
And believe me, comfort can kill goals.
Let me ask you a question: If what you're doing isn't working
for you, if you're not losing the weight you want or gaining the
muscle you desire...
What makes you think it's going to, any time soon.
Look, habits are only good if they get you what you want. It's
when they stop you from achieving your goals that you have to
either modify or change them completely.
And that's how you're going to make 2006 better than 2005. By
changing your unproductive habits.
You need to start by "thinking" differently. Instead of focusing
on all the things you can't achieve, start habitually thinking
of all that's possible for you to accomplish with your fitness
levels.
Instead of thinking that you're too fat or you're too lazy,
start thinking about how you'd feel with your perfect body. The
amount of muscle you want, the energy you'd like to have, the
strength you'd like to feel.
Start to see yourself as thin, or toned, or muscular, or
whatever it is you want to be. You have to think it before you
can have it.
>From there, you'll begin to make better choices in your
nutrition and workouts. Those choices, if you stay with them,
will develop into new, more empowering habits that will help you
succeed, not hold you back.
Changing habits that are no longer consistent with what it is
you want to achieve is one of the hardest, yet most important,
things you'll ever do in your life.
Your job, from here on out, is to form good habits. And in order
for you to stay with them, you need to keep doing them for at
least 21 days. That's just about the time it takes to bring a
new habit into lasting effect.
If you're not gaining the muscle or strength you want, you have
to start forming new and improved habits in the gym.
If you want to lose some fat weight, you have to make better
nutrition habits. Start planning out healthy meals, in advance.
Prepare large amounts of healthy foods and store them in your
fridge to have on hand when you need something quick and healthy.
Do yourself a favor. For the next 21 days, feed your mind better
thoughts that will lead to better choices. This will flow right
into the typical New Year's resolutions time period.
Those better choices, if you stay with them for that 21 days,
will lead to better habits.
And it's your habits, each and every day, that will determine
your levels of muscle and fitness. Change your daily habits so
that they serve you, not stop you, from making 2006 better than
2005.
Make this coming year different. Be different from everyone
else. Resolve to make it the year you get the body you've always
wanted.