It is reported that due to the consumption of energy-dense food,
sedentary lifestyle, lack of health care services and financial support,
developing countries are facing high risk of obesity and the resultant
consequences such as diabetes, and ischemic heart disease. In India, more than
135 million people are affected by obesity. Various studies have also shown
that the prevalence of obesity is more among women than in men. Recent studies
have also shown that globally, approximately 2.8 million deaths are reported as
result of being overweight or obese (Rajeev Ahirwar & Prakash Ranjan, 2019).
The essential part of obesity
treatment is increased physical activity/exercise. It is said that people with
overweight must undertake at least 150 minutes a week of moderate-intensity
physical activity to prevent further weight gain. If, on the other hand, they
wish to achieve significant weight loss, they must exercise 300 minutes or more
a week. Though the regular aerobic exercise is the most efficient way to burn calories
and shed excess weight, even moving around periodically in a day, helps in
burning calories. About 10, 000 steps every day, is a nice goal to reduce
weight gradually.
Along with it, a behaviour modification programme is also necessary.
First, identify the current habits such as stresses, situations that are
contributing to the weight gain, etc. Based on it, work out a plan of lifestyle
changes required and importantly execute it. According to Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, USA losing just 5-10 percent of body weight will bring
significant health benefits.
Interestingly, most of the over-weighing people, heeding to this advice,
make plans for undertaking regular exercise to burn their excess calories. They
all start with a great determination, but many of them, give it off half the
way. It’s not that they aren’t motivated. They do know that overweight is
harmful for them. They do know that their overweight is their esteem-crushing
in a society in which thin is in. And yet, they fail in accomplishing their
goal. And now the question is: why so many failures?
One immediate answer we all come up with is: these people lack
‘willpower’—will power to stay on course. And hence the failure. This is the
commonest cause that we all identify behind all our failures. Now, what is this
willpower? Simply put, it is nothing but putting off what one wants right at
the moment in order to achieve a long-term goal. It is referred to as a resolve
or self-control and involves a number of cognitive and behavioural
characteristics:
- Willpower involves putting off what one want in the short-term to get what he/she wants in the long-term
- Its sustainability calls for conscious effort and also a significant investment of emotional and cognitive resources.
- It is the ability to maintain control to stay on course by resisting urges and guarding from temptations.
It’s needless to say that to accomplish anything in life we need to
exercise ‘self-control’. Think about some of your past achievements of which
you are indeed proud of, you would realize what an amount of hard labour you
were to put on in pursuing it, the grit with which you were to resist all
temptations to relax in order to stay focused on the goal and ultimately
achieve it. The research of psychologists, Walter Mischel et al (1989)
had shown that kids who were able to delay gratification had better grades,
better academic test scores, and higher educational attainment. Later research
by Angela Duckworth and Martin Seligman (2005) found that self-discipline played
a greater role in academic success than IQ. Other researchers like Moffitt TE,
et al (2011) have also found that people with higher self-control have better
relationship skills, suffer fewer mental health problems, and have overall
better physical health.
We all have this important element for success, ‘self-control’, albeit
some have more of it while some are endowed with less of it. It is also true
that even those who have a lot of self-control sometimes run out of it. For
instance, people who have succeeded in accomplishing goals by dint of
self-control, suddenly find themselves running out of it. For, self-control,
like any other muscle, also suffers from fatigue. In other words, self-control,
like any other muscle, can also be built up and strengthened with time and
effort
Based on several studies, psychologists have found that ‘self-control’
muscle can be improved/strengthened by adopting a few strategies such as:
Use willpower muscle
to strengthen it:
Your self-control
muscle is like any other muscle of your body. If it is not used, it won’t get
much exercise, and when it doesn’t get much exercise, it gets weak over time.
On the other hand, if you get regular workouts by putting it to regular use,
your self-control muscle grows stronger and stronger enabling you to achieve
your goals. Mark Muraven in his 2010 paper published in J Exp Soc Psychol
stated that “by practising small acts of self-control, overall self-control
capacity can be increased”.
Pump it up:
Psychologists Mark
Muraven et al (1999) say that by simply working on one’s self-control muscle
regularly, one can strengthen one’s self-control significantly. This practice
is no doubt, will be hard in the beginning, but if you hang on to it, it
becomes much easier as the days roll on. And, as your muscle strengthens, it is
sure to impact every aspect of your life for the better. Also remember, it gets
exhausted by overuse. So, adopt right practice. Instead of completely spreading
your will power on many goals at once, focus your will power muscle on one goal
at a time to accomplish.
Improve your
self-awareness:
In the normal course
most of our choices are made on ‘autopilot’ mode, without knowing what is
really driving them or what effect they will have on us. So, the first step in
attempting to change our behaviour is to create ‘self-awareness’—the ability to
recognize what we are doing as we are doing it. This awareness, the idea of our
thought process, underlying emotions, and reasons for such acting, helps us in
making better choices. Lack of self-awareness results in distraction, and
distracted people are more prone to yield to temptations. That weakens
self-control.
Use distractions:
When you are facing a
temptation—whether it’s the desire to eat, sleep, spend, indulge in some other
undesired behaviour—try looking for some type of distraction, such as the one
used by the children in Mischel’s classic experiment where children closed
their eyes or, turned their eyes away from the treat, to strengthen their will
power to not to eat the treat.
Do it for Your-self:
Research indicates
that when people do exercise to lose weight for their own reasons are more
successful at it than when they undertake it for pleasing others. Internal
motivation is always stronger in keeping you focussed on the goal than the
external motivation. So, own it up: “I am exercising to lose weight for my own
sake, for keeping myself healthy, for presenting myself more smartly”. This
awareness and its assertion are sure to keep one glued to his/her chosen path.
Meditate:
Neuroscientists say that brain changes based on what we do continuously i.e. if we practice a certain behaviour, we are strengthening the neural connections for that behaviour, and because of which, our brain makes itself more accessible for that behaviour and hence that behaviour is likely to occur. It means, if we practice worrying, one gets better at worrying, for the brain region associated with that activity will grow denser. Similarly, if we practice concentration, we will get better at it. So, we can also train our brain for better self-control. And meditation is one of the best ways to achieve it. Indeed, meditation has a wide range of skills that are associated with self-control: attention, focus, stress management, impulse control, self-awareness, etc.
Maintain blood glucose levels:
Recent research findings reveal that
self-control is said to rely, at least partly, on the amount of glucose in
bloodstream. Multiple studies revealed that a person’s blood glucose turns
significantly lower after undertaking self-control-depleting tasks such as
thought suppression, controlling attention, coping with the thoughts of death
etc. In such circumstances, it makes sense to try a snack or a drink made with
sugar. However, the best way to maintain a constant supply of blood glucose
over a long haul is to eat protein and complex carbohydrates.
Be Enthusiastic:
Nothing is possible
to accomplish without enthusiasm. For, enthusiasm is an essential element to
keep one’s pursuit alive. None of the above can get operationalized unless one
has unflagging enthusiasm to pursue the goal. Indeed, it is due to waning
enthusiasm that most of the obese people are often found to give off their
exercise half the way. That is what Lakshmana tells Sri Rama when he was
lamenting at the absence of Sita in the hermitage:
“Śōkan vimuncārya dhrtin bhajasva sōtsāhatā cāstu vimārganesyāh¸
utsāhavantō hi narā na lōke sīdanti karmasvatiduáskarēsu” (3.63.19)
— O noble prince, give up grief. Take courage. Show enthusiasm to search
and find Sīta. Enthusiastic people will not get
despondent in carrying out the most difficult tasks”.
So, it is evident from the foregoing that we can cultivate
‘self-control’, develop it and make it stronger (or, weaker) by regular workouts
over time. Builders of self-control often say that it develops from trying and
failing, trying and failing and in the process succeeding with small gains and
staying focused on whatever being attempted with a little better each
time. Therefore, what is needed
is: ardent practice!
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