
Absolute willpower (In just 3 easy steps)
You can turn weak, underutilized self-control into strong, tough resolve that will help you meet your fitness and weight-loss goals.
Story by Angela Hynes
The ad that used to challenge "Bet you can't eat just one" had your
number: That first potato chip inevitably leads to a near-empty bag. It only
takes the aroma of cookies baking for your determination to eat fewer
sweets to become as soggy as a dunked biscotti. And your resolve to walk
three mornings a week was a goner the first time it rained and the urge to
snuggle in bed for another half-hour was too powerful to resist. You
know what to do to lose weight and be healthy; you just seem to lack the
willpower to do it. However, research reveals that you can train and
strengthen your willpower much as you would your muscles.
But should you even try? In some circles, willpower has become almost a
dirty word. For example, TV shrink Phil McGraw, Ph.D. (aka Dr. Phil) has flatly
stated that willpower is a myth and will not help you change anything.
According to weight-loss expert Howard
J. Rankin, Ph.D., a consulting clinical psychologist
at the Hilton Head Institute in
Hilton Head, S.C., and the author of The
TOPS Way to Weight Loss(Hay House,
2004), however, you can learn to resist
temptation. But doing so requires meeting
it head-on.
At first, that might seem counterintuitive.
"Most people think that the only way
of dealing with [temptation] is by avoiding
it, but that simply reinforces their powerlessness,"
Rankin says. "Self-control and
self-discipline are the most important
things we need to live an effective life."
Lack of willpower (or "self-control
strength," as researchers call it) is implicated
in a number of personal and societal
problems, agrees Megan Oaten, a
doctoral candidate in psychology at Macquarie
University in Sydney, Australia,
who is conducting cutting-edge studies
on self-control. "If you think about
the overconsumption of unhealthy
foods, lack of exercise, gambling and
drugs, then self-control could be one
of the most important medicines for
our time," she says. "It's very positive,
and it's available to everyone."
Practice makes perfect
Ah, you say, but you already know
you just don't have much willpower.
According to Oaten, there are individual
differences in our capacity for
self-control, and you may indeed
have been born with less potential in
this area. But Oaten's studies have
shown that practice levels the playing
field. "While we find initial differences
in people's self-control abilities, once
they start exercising it the benefits
apply equally to all," she says. If you picture
self-control as functioning like a
muscle, she adds, "we have a short- and
long-term effect from exercising it."
In the short term, your willpower can
"hurt" much like your muscles do the
first time you subject them to a good
workout. This is especially true if you
overdo it. Imagine going to the gym for
the first time and trying to do a step
class, a Spinning class, a Pilates class and
a strength-training workout all on the
same day! You might be so sore and
tired that you'd never go back. That's
what you are doing to your willpower
when you make New Year's resolutions
to eat less fat and more fiber, exercise
regularly, cut out alcohol, get more sleep,
be on time for appointments and write in
your journal daily. "With the best intentions,
you can overload your self-control
strength, and it can't possibly cope with
all those demands," Oaten says. "In that
case we can predict a failure."
However, if you start out sensibly, taking
on one task at a time, pushing
through the initial discomfort, improving
your performance and sticking with it no
matter what, just as a muscle strengthens,
so will your willpower. "That's the
long-term effect," Oaten says.
The willpower workout
Rankin, who did seminal studies on self-control
at the University of London in the
1970s, has devised tried-and-tested
exercises that you do sequentially to
power up your willpower. "This technique
does not require you to do any-
thing you haven't done already," he says.
For example, you occasionally resist
dessert; you just don't do it often enough
to make a difference, or with the awareness
that each time you do it you are
strengthening your willpower. The following
exercises can help you systematically
and mindfully deal with food-related
temptations.
Step 1: Visualize yourself
resisting temptation.








© 2008 Weider Publications, LLC, a subsidiary of
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READER COMMENTS
Yes, visualization may sound silly but it really does work. When I had to begin waking up at 5 a.m. in college I would always hit the snooze button for 15 minutes before actually getting out of the bed. Then I began to visualize myself getting out of the bed the first time the clock went off and soon I WAS able to get up with no problems.
— Tiffany
This looks like something I'll try! Shape rocks.
— Kimber