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While there are many good weight loss programs out there, the biggest problem people encounter is actually staying on their diet of choice. Support groups, community forums, online weight trackers, trainers at your gym are but a few of the factors that have an effect on how well you do on a diet, but the food and nutrition aspect is foremost and requires a bit of planning.
Without it, you are destined to fail. So get off the procrastination wagon, start planning your meals, and give yourself a head start with your weight loss. The best diet in the world won't work for you if it involves eating foods you dislike. With a food plan, you are in control. The details of the plan itself are entirely up to you. It's possible to construct a diet that consists of foods you enjoy, cooked in a manner acceptable to you, with preparation time that fits your lifestyle, at a cost that fits your budget.
Your plan may involve eating the same menu everyday. This method eliminates stress because it eliminates the need to constantly count calories. You can spend an hour or two finding recipes that work for you and stay within your allotted calorie (or point or carb) count and devise a shopping list. You might plan two or three different options for each meal so that you will have, for example, one of three breakfast menus you can choose from on any given day. It can be both fun and challenging to plan well-balanced, nutritious meals that fit your lifestyle and please your palate. You can also get help from the hundreds of cookbooks that are published each year. (The library is also a good source for finding cookbooks that match your dietary restrictions.)
If eating the same menus day after day is unappealing, you can try one of the numerous successful diet plans; or you may want to join a diet club such as Weight Watchers or TOPS (Take off Pounds Sensibly). Or you may want to participate in a weight control class sponsored by your health plan. Going with a nationally published diet offers the benefit of a diet that is already balanced, calorie controlled, and in place. The same is true with the diet clubs; additionally some people benefit from the group sessions that provide nutritional education and motivational support. Many people find the weekly weigh-ins, at the diet clubs, help them stay on track. If planning meals is not your forte or you hate counting calories, then investing in a diet plan where meals are delivered to you may be the best option. Plans allow you to input likes and dislikes and come up with a meal delivery plan that works for you, whether it is one meal a day or three. The meals are pre-portioned; calorie controlled and fit it well with busy lifestyles. They can also be a good option for a working parent who still has to cook meals for the rest of the family. It saves having to prepare two meals every night.
Often diets fail because over time boredom sets in; the dieter loses interest and gradually just stops dieting. There is no law that says you must stay on one particular diet until you reach your goal. Mix it up a little. Your plan can be that you will switch between diets after a designated length of time, or after you have lost a specific number of pounds. This plan works well because you have pre-planned a way out of the boredom often associated with long-term dieting.
Picture your meals on a grid like that found on graph paper: Each diet meal rates a check mark in one square of the grid. At the end of the month, try for as many checked squares as you can manage; and determine to get as many, or more, checks the next month. When you eat a meal that's not on your diet, and we all do once in a while, remember it's only one missed meal, one missed check in a square. That's the only thing it represents. It does not represent failure in any way; it only represents one missed diet meal. Keep working on your plan; keep checking those blocks, and before long you'll be feeling healthier, happier, and rightfully, very proud of yourself. Make your health and your diet your number one priority. Think of it as a cumulative process, not an all-or-nothing proposition.
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