The Ultimate Weight Loss Guide: Creating Healthy Habits

Carter Good
Carter Good
Published in
5 min readApr 26, 2016

I’ve received a lot of emails in the past six months from folks asking how to lose weight and keep it off.

You see, most people don’t have a hard time losing weight initially. Early in a diet phase, the body hasn’t adapted to the new low-calorie intake.

It’s not until a few weeks pass that things such as hunger, lower energy, slower metabolism, and general lethargicness begin to creep in.

The emails I normally get from people come in two parts:

The first email is asking for advice for actually losing weight. I usually point them towards other posts I’ve written on the topic or towards programs that I’ve personally used to lean down such as The Aggressive Fat Loss Program.

I don’t hear back for a few weeks or months and assume everything is going great… and then I get the second email.

“Carter! I lost weight but then started to gain it all back again!? Like…WHAT THE HECK!?!?!”

Millions of people have successfully lost weight using a number of different weight loss approaches. Losing weight in the short term is actually pretty simple. If you have discipline and commitment sticking to a low-calorie eating plan, you can expect to drop pounds and inches from your waist.

The real challenge comes with sustaining the new lean body you’ve acquired.

Don’t get me wrong; It took hard work and dedication to lose 140 pounds, but I am prouder of the fact that I have been able to sustain that weight loss over the past three years.

I wrote my newest ebook Think Yourself Thin to go into greater detail of how I’ve been able to do that, but I wanted to make sure I wrote about it here on my blog as well!

This is going to be a 3-part series explaining the best practices I have come across for not only losing weight but sustaining a healthy body forever!

So without further ado, here is Part One.

Part One: Developing Healthy Habits

The first part of this series is going to talk about the importance of establishing healthy habits.

As you know, there are both good and bad habits. Your goal should be to have as many good habits as possible and in doing so reverse or eliminate the bad ones that are causing you to struggle with weight.

Firstly, How do Habits Work?

One of my favorite books of all time, The Power of Habit, has taught me quite a bit about habits and how they work in our day to day lives.

I recommend you get this book if you don’t already own it (I own three copies myself…), but here are some key takeaways:

1. Our eating habits, spending habits, and social habits are all dictated by our cravings and desires.

We crave love, so we go on dates.

We crave comfort, so we constantly distract ourselves with goods and entertainment.

We crave sugar, so we devour a sleeve of Oreos

2. All habits, good and bad, follow the same pattern than author Charles Duhigg coined “The Habit Loop.”

Here is an illustration of what it looks like:

3. The idea of Keystone Habits, which are habits that cause a domino effect in your life. By changing one keystone habit, you automatically create a bunch of new habits.

For example, say somebody decides to start eating a healthier diet.

If they manage to keep it up, they’ll likely have more energy during the day. This will lead to them to be more productive at work, more social and outgoing. She could then even get a promotion or find a better job.

(This is the “domino effect” that keystone habits have the potential of creating)

How to Create Healthy Habits

I believe that learning how habits work and how to create/alter them is one of the key components of a successful weight loss plan. This is especially true if you want to avoid the weight regain that many people struggle with after losing weight. (source)

Your mindset towards health, food, and your body is what will ultimately dictate your success or failure in losing weight. Healthy Habits play a big part of this “mindset”, so it’s important you learn how to create them.

Creating a new habit is actually quite simple. All you have to do is use the Habit Loop chart I provided above as a blueprint.

1. Set a reminder for your new habit

Good practice for this is to use a reminder (or “cue”) as something that you already do. If you want to start flossing more, use the “cue” of brushing your teeth as a reminderto floss.

Yup… it’s that simple!

2. Don’t make the habit too difficult

If you try to make a life changing habit right off the bad, you’ll probably fail to stick with it.

Instead, start small.

Make small healthy changes and over time, these will add up to make a big difference for your health and well-being.

3. Remember to reward yourself!

Don’t forget about the reward…without it, the habit loop wouldn’t be complete! You are creating small habits, so it follows suit to use small rewards.

Something as simple as a “go me!” or “you’re on a role!” will work here…

Something I like to do is set a reward that I get after following a habit for an extended period. Ideally, this reward will go along with your new healthy habit.

For example, If you made the habit of drinking less soda and more water during the day, set the goal (reward) that you’ll buy yourself a fancy water bottle after thirty days of consistently following your healthy habit.

I did this for myself and bought this sweet thermal flask that keeps beverages cold/warm. It’s also BPA free and stainless steel… it’s pretty BA if I say so myself ;)

Conclusion

It may not seem like much, but creating these small, healthy habits can really add up. One small habit might not make much of a difference, but 5,10,20+ and you’ll start to see some seriously epic changes to your health and well-being!

What’s even better is that creating these habits becomes easier and easier as you go along. Once you’ve created your first small healthy habit, the next ones will be cake ;)

Click Here to read Part 2 of The Ultimate Weight Loss Guide…

Originally published at www.envisionbeingthin.com on April 26, 2016.

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