What Motivates You?
Mike Fohner,
cross country running coach, tells this story about one of his students:
Last year, one of my young
cross-country runners was fully content walking up the hills and avoiding
physical exertion to the maximum extent possible. I tried all sorts of tactics
and motivation techniques…to wits end. Even my “walkers club” (post practice
sprints for those that walk during practice) had no effect. One meet, this
runner unexpectedly knocked 3 minutes off her best time to which I gave a look
of amazement to her parents. They smiled and said, “Well…she didn’t walk…so I
guess we owe her ten bucks!!” So it appears that money is an effective
motivator for all ages!
The statistics
Brace
yourself. According to Rod K. Dishman,
Ph.D., director of the
Behavioral Fitness Laboratory at the University of Georgia, nearly 50 percent
of people who begin an exercise program drop out within the first 6
months. The question is, “Why?” What is it about sticking with a fitness
routine that causes so many people abandon it?
The answer? Motivation. They don’t want
health and fitness badly enough. It is a
simple fact of human psychology that if we want something badly enough, we’ll
do everything we can to get it.
Your
challenge is to find out what motivates you to get serious about fitness and
stick with it.
Unlocking your motivation
Mike Fohner’s
student found that money was the motivation she needed to push her out of her
comfort zone and into a commitment that she previously hadn’t been interested
in.
Bryan Reece
found a different motivation. Told by
his doctors that he was minutes away from a heart attack, Bryan decided to
fight back. Even though he had not been
in a gym in 30 years, he turned his life around and eventually became a finisher
in the Arizona Ironman competition. You
can read his story in the book, You Are
an Ironman: How Six Weekend Warriors Chased Their Dream of Finishing the
World's Toughest Triathlon by Jacques Steinberg.
You do not have to be part of that 50 percent
who quit. You can stay committed and finish
strong. It is all about finding what
motivates you personally.
Here are some
possible motivators for you.
1. Do it
for your health. Consistent exercise and healthy eating are the two very
best things you can do for your health.
You will develop a strong, healthy heart, reduce your chances of many
cancers, prevent diabetes, keep a sharp mind and resist dementia and avoid many
of the common ailments that come with aging.
It is possible to age without decay, and the key to this is exercise and
eating well.
2. Do it to look better. Appearance isn’t
everything, but most of us care how we look.
A strong and healthy person just looks good. And it isn’t all physical. Your demeanor will change as you develop the
confidence that comes from the discipline of fitness. You will appear more energetic and confident
because you will be more energetic
and confident!
3.
Do it to relieve stress. Really! It
isn’t a cliché. Exercising really does
cause physical changes in your brain and nervous system that results in
feelings of calmness and well-being. In
fact, you may get so hooked on the mental benefits of exercise that you will
crave it!
4.
Do it to be strong. If you have never done focused weight training,
then you literally have no idea of the total transformation that you will feel
after just a few weeks. There is nothing
like bending over to pick something up that normally results in discomfort,
strain and even pain, only to find out that it is a piece of cake! And by getting strong now, you reduce your
risk of age-related falls and fractures because you have the core strength and
balance to keep yourself stable.
It is worth
taking the time to discover the powerful motivators in your life. Don’t worry about ‘bribing’ yourself: do what it takes to get yourself moving. Find
out what makes sweating worth it. Find out what you want more than that
brownie. Your health is at stake; in fact, your very life is at stake. It’s
time to transform yourself.
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