Picking My Battles
Making new habits is simple. Simple because you only have to do something for 14 days until it becomes a habit. Unfortunately, making new habits is not easy; if it were easy, we would all eat healthy food, exercise, and have tidy homes. I have been making great strides in the exercising more area. I have also been doing a better job of self-care (daily showers!), getting more work done, only letting laundry go two weeks before getting done, doing at least one load of dishes a week, and keeping up with bills. Given that I am forever fighting the urge to want to do anything besides hang out under the covers all day, I think I've been VERY productive.
I admit that there is a LOT more that needs to be done, and many more areas for improvement. However, there's only so much energy to go around, and fighting myself all day every day uses most of that up. The result is that some things have to slide. My main area of failure--healthy eating. It's never been much of a priority for me to begin with and--let's face it--I'm still grieving and food is one of my main comforts. Moreover, having added exercise to the mix, my bad eating will not be *as* problematic, and it sure as heck beats out-of-control-spending. So, I'm not working on the food stuff. Not yet, anyway. Instead, I'm picking my battles. I know me. If I try to take on too many things at once, they will all fail. Each one will receive less of my attention than it needs to be successful, and I will quit them all. I have chosen to focus my energy on self-care, exercise, and work. These three things are my top priorities. Once I have managed to get these things to the point that they are automatic, I will attempt adjustments in my other bad habits. It's not ideal, but I would rather succeed at adding exercise than fail at changing both food and exercise.
And, at least on the exercise front, I am proud to say that I am making progress. I have completed seven workouts since the first of the year; my scale told me I am 9 pounds closer to my goal weight; and I am able to exercise for longer before feeling tired (although the whole back pain thing has been putting a cramp in my efforts). It's not a perfect plan, but I am not perfect--in fact, I'm actually working on remembering that perfection is unattainable.
This is my truth. Your mileage may vary.
I admit that there is a LOT more that needs to be done, and many more areas for improvement. However, there's only so much energy to go around, and fighting myself all day every day uses most of that up. The result is that some things have to slide. My main area of failure--healthy eating. It's never been much of a priority for me to begin with and--let's face it--I'm still grieving and food is one of my main comforts. Moreover, having added exercise to the mix, my bad eating will not be *as* problematic, and it sure as heck beats out-of-control-spending. So, I'm not working on the food stuff. Not yet, anyway. Instead, I'm picking my battles. I know me. If I try to take on too many things at once, they will all fail. Each one will receive less of my attention than it needs to be successful, and I will quit them all. I have chosen to focus my energy on self-care, exercise, and work. These three things are my top priorities. Once I have managed to get these things to the point that they are automatic, I will attempt adjustments in my other bad habits. It's not ideal, but I would rather succeed at adding exercise than fail at changing both food and exercise.
And, at least on the exercise front, I am proud to say that I am making progress. I have completed seven workouts since the first of the year; my scale told me I am 9 pounds closer to my goal weight; and I am able to exercise for longer before feeling tired (although the whole back pain thing has been putting a cramp in my efforts). It's not a perfect plan, but I am not perfect--in fact, I'm actually working on remembering that perfection is unattainable.
This is my truth. Your mileage may vary.