Exercise
- You commit to a consistent regularity of activities on a weekly basis that includes aerobic exercise, strength activities, flexibility, core and balance. The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) guidelines suggest 3-5 aerobic sessions per week and 2 strength sessions. These of course can be merged together.
- You enjoy the exercise / activities that you do and there is a continual degree of progression / challenge or variation to your activities. If you become bored or feel no progression, change what you do and try new things.
- The activities don't leave you feeling constantly tired and run down. Recovery is as important as the exercise and the only way that you'll benefit from it.
- Your activities don't put pressure on your relationships with family, loved ones or friends. Try and compromise to include friends and family within your activities and be willing to change what you do to make it accessible.
- How you feel with food can be one of the most telling measures of whether a particular food is good for you. If you feel wrotten after food then the chances are it's not a great choice for you. Always look to better understand which foods sit on your side of the fence.
- Fuel your body with good clean foods and stick to the 80-20 rule. Eat healthy and well at least 80% of the time and treat yourself from time to time.
- Drink water regularly.
- Avoid lengthy gaps between meals or snacks. Fasting for long periods forces the body into a fat-storing state of starvation and unless you're looking to pile it on, try a grazing approach.
- Eat slowly and balance your portion size. Slowing your eating will help you feel more in touch with when you feel full as well as help the digestion process. Eating until your absolutely stuffed is not the way forward.
- Aim to vary the fruits and veg that you eat. Get a mixture of colours on your plate and avoid sticking to the same meals and foods constantly
- Without this, the other two elements will struggle. See your journey as exploring your own health and always stick to things that interest, excite and engage you.
- Although how you see yourself may not seem relevant, we see commitment as mindset and attitude. Like what you see and look at the promise, potential and positives when you see yourself and everything that involves you. If you look in the mirror and dislike the reflection then don't expect weightloss or any transformation to change this fact. We can all connect image with confidence yet it's not the image but the perception of the image that influences confidence. Look at what you have and not what you haven't. Enjoy your capabilities and not things beyond. Believe in improvement.
- Constantly learning will keep you fresh and vibrant. Equally, passing on your knowledge whilst helping others and teaching will help you develop your understanding.
- Finally, the journey is always changing with times that are great and times that don't seem as productive. Take responsibility for yourself and everything that you experience and don't blame...not even yourself. Learn lessons, draw from experience and see things from as wide a perspective as possible. Use milestones and set goals but don't get bogged down into focussing on such microscopic details.

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