{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Think Yourself Younger, Slimmer, Stronger","description":"Think Yourself Younger, Slimmer, Stronger Could you think yourself younger? In this post I\u2019m exploring the question why can\u2019t you lose weight from an angle I bring up from time to time. It\u2019s popping up now because of several recent conversations I\u2019ve had. I\u2019m an exercise psychology expert in addition to a movement specialist and hormone-balancing exercise expert. A recent program, observations of students, and the interpretations of results prompted this episode. Work In vs. Work Out We mindfully create instances where we\u2019ll exercise. Then we mindlessly go about it. We tack words on to it that are counter to making it fun, have to, should, ought to. We call them workouts. There\u2019s little joy in them. Yet they\u2019ve become mandatory because the movement in our lives has dwindled to nothingness for many of us. We don\u2019t do chores in the morning, we don\u2019t shovel (we use a snow blower), we don\u2019t wash dishes we use a dishwasher, we don\u2019t make food we use blenders or microwave pre-prepared meals or eat out. We don\u2019t walk or ride bikes we commute and complain about the parking lot being too far from our building. We put our washer and dryers in our master bedrooms so we don\u2019t have to go up and downstairs. We\u2019ve made everything so convenient that we don\u2019t have to move very much unless we choose it. If you didn\u2019t experience joy in movement early in your life, or you are self-conscious or in pain during movement now, you have some obstacles.&amp;nbsp; Those obstacles are already there before you reach a starting point. Then you question, what do I do? You have a limited amount of time, or limited window of willpower or discipline and if you\u2019re stuck with incongruent, conflicting messages about what works, the moment will pass without you having done anything. Mindless exercise happens when you\u2019re listening to music, you\u2019re not even noticing the things along a path or you\u2019re staring at a screen on a piece of cardio equipment. You\u2019re purposefully dissociating from the moment. You finish without having ever really having connected any joy with the movement. You may experience some endorphins and even some serotonin but you won\u2019t enjoy the same benefits as a vacation as when you workin. This is not yoga. Because yoga has become a brief pit-stop on a mat in Lululemons where we\u2019re still comparing our poses to the next person or judging our own inability to balance in a pose. We go because we know we should. We don\u2019t practice yoga, we do yoga. It\u2019s so very different. It\u2019s a means to an end. It\u2019s a physical pursuit or task. Yes, it may be motivated by the need for flexibility, which is a means to an end, yet, yoga is so much more or can be. Noticing&amp;nbsp;is what we\u2019re talking about. Noticing while you\u2019re exercising for instance the difference between the way each repetition feels, or the way your right compared to your left side feels. If you are a nightshift nurse on your feet caring for individuals and you\u2019re suffering from adrenal exhaustion yet beating yourself up about not exercising regularly to help you get weight off, you have an opportunity.&amp;nbsp; That is an active job. You\u2019re doing what we call Non-Exercise Activity Time or N.E.A.T. and there is a possibility that if you shifted your thoughts from calling it work to calling it exercise you can physiologically change the results of the same activity. If you think of it as \u201cwork\u201d rather than exercise it has a different physiological effect on you. It\u2019s been proven. It\u2019s called the mind\/body unity theory. Changing the way you think \u2013 the language you use- will change you physiologically. I named our newest program STRONGER not by accident. It is meant to from the moment you register instill a feeling that you will become stronger, that you are already stronger, and make you think of yourself as stronger. Not, thinner, fitter, curvier, but stronger. Which serves you so well in every area of your life. Will it create a more thin, fit, healthy you? Likely, yes. But striving for thin is not necessarily going to make you strong. In fact, it\u2019s likely to make you weak and obsessed. Changing the way you think and what you want \u2013 that\u2019s what I\u2019m talking about.&amp;nbsp; That serves you so much better than trying to exercise while your circadian rhythms are already causing fatigue. Learning to sleep when you can sleep, and to eat foods that serve you best on those days is a wise decision toward health and optimal weight. If you\u2019re pretending and you know you\u2019re pretending, your body is going to be where your mind is. Once you start something to improve yourself, you start weight training because you are going to get stronger, and improve your health and longevity, or you start drinking smoothies with protein and vegetables, and you believe you are healthier, you are. It is called, and we know it works, the placebo. A lengthy article in Prevention magazine last year shared emerging research about it. In so many trials the placebo effect in fact works as well as the drug. What is called the control group can do as well as the key subjects. There are dozens of ways to exercise to improve health. There is no one right way. Cross fit, and I choose this one because of it\u2019s controversy, but if you prefer you can choose long endurance running or Ironman distance triathlon. There are so many scientists, doctors, strength &amp;amp; conditioning experts and others who believe that these or one of these extreme types of exercise is not healthy. Yet, there are athletes in each and every one of them that are thriving examples of health and wellness. Not obsessed but love their activity and thrive with energy, strength, endurance, and fully function well \u2013 in fact so much better \u2013 than many who do far less. Work vs. Play I call this the \u201cjoy factor.\u201d It\u2019s the difference between work and play. And it\u2019s the difference between sticking with it no matter what and having an obstacle, life event, or stress interrupt you in such a devastating way you fall off the bandwagon and get run over by it.&amp;nbsp; Why can someone do Tabata intervals and someone else endurance running and both be in optimal shape? Why can someone eat a plant-based diet and someone else eat animal protein and both seemingly thrive?&amp;nbsp; Why can someone whose had bacon and eggs for breakfast for decades and someone who has fasted regularly both be centenarians who still live independently? In part, due to a commitment to what they believe is healthy. That may be a moving target during your life. You may determine that the way your body is responding now to something that once you have sworn by isn\u2019t working. So you go about finding a new fit\u2026 if you\u2019re listening right now that may be exactly the case.&amp;nbsp; In fact, you believed so hard for so long that something was the right thing that it can be hard to let go of. That, not your body, can be the biggest obstacle for finding your best fitness and energy after 50. Our science and the way we were conditioned and socialized was so very different than what will be true for today\u2019s 20-somethings. At least that is my hope. There is not necessarily one magic bullet that is the same for all of us. There is not necessarily one magic bullet the same for each of us our entire lives. There is a sense of conviction and then mindful and conscious awareness about doing it, following it, and believing it that has to exist as we create health paths. The College Experience Between 1998 and approximately 2008 I was teaching a 200 level course for Kinesiology students. It consisted of a lab and lecture and the purpose was to teach them the physiology of exercise by having them self-test and experience the effects of conditioning. During both semesters for that decade I often taught two sections with about 25 students in each, or about 1000 students collectively. This phenomena of work vs. play or workout vs. joy was evident in two ways among these primarily 19-to-22-year-olds. First, they would show up and might have a two-mile walk\/run in class, outdoors when weather permitted. These were students who wanted to be personal trainers, coaches, physical therapists, or athletic trainers and many of them had been high school athletes or exercised on their own. But they usually gave about 50% effort during the workouts. It was a chore, a have to, a satisfaction of the required course. Many of them would leave after class and head to the rec center for their \u201creal workout.\u201d&amp;nbsp; They weren\u2019t lazy. But when it was for a requirement, a course, an imposition, it was work. The second thing I learned after about eight years of teaching without allowing any use of ipods (before phones had music) was how very devastating that was for them. Many of them were so used to using music to motivate \u2013or to distract them \u2013 that they couldn\u2019t perform the 1.5 mile run for pre and post assessments at the same level as they could if they were allowed the music. They\u2019d never learned to enjoy the activity. They\u2019d learned to avoid paying attention to their body and to distract themselves from the unpleasant task of breathing harder, and increasing circulation. A few of them, the collegiate athletes in my courses, were used to the no-music rule. They were the high performers. The handful of those students I still hear from or connect with on social media are still active today. You can begin choosing something that is a means to an end. But you\u2019ll potentially not stick with that thing unless you love the thing. Collegiate gymnasts, swimmers, basketball and football players were among the student athletes that populated my courses. Beyond college many of those athletes don\u2019t continue participation in their sport (and logically gymnastics or football are not conducive to it) \u2013 they also don\u2019t participate in the conditioning activities that they were put through during college. Running or lifting for conditioning was work. Unless an athlete truly falls in love with the activity, the means to an end is not enough to encourage them to continue. Group fitness instructors are similar. Many of them started as students in the front row of classes. Once they begin teaching their own joy of the activity changes. Group fitness instructors often seek something else for their own pleasure. They become runners or practice yoga as a student to satisfy their own missing mindful way of exercising that disappears when you do it for someone else (or something else like a paycheck). The Midlife Experience Back to you\u2026 and midlife exercise and hormones. Up until a point what you think will work, will work. Up until a point, because physiological actions or inaction will affect your body and health. But your psychology \u2013 the way you think and believe about something will also change your physiology. So if you believe in me for instance, if you believe that I have done my research and you can trust me or any fitness professional to have filtered information specific to you, then you will go through a program more fully believing that you feel stronger, more energy, that you will sleep better. If you believe that eating less animal protein and eating plants primarily will improve your health, physiologically it will. At least to a point. Your physiological body will show you the specific results in the amount of lean muscle and fat you have. Your presence of frequent illness or injury will tell you that you\u2019ve over or under done it eventually.&amp;nbsp; How you feel never lies. It is always feedback for you.&amp;nbsp; If your belief about aging is that it is natural to gain weight, get fat, and the likelihood of disease is most related to genetics and not to epigenetics (or what you do and your environment) then you will age in that way.&amp;nbsp; If your belief about aging is that we are in a time when we have the power to change how we age by the application of how we move, what we eat, how we think and who we spend our time with, then you will age very differently. If you\u2019re interested in applying the power of your thoughts in combination with exercise and want to learn more about STRONGER, Flipping 50\u2019s newest program, I\u2019ll share the link to join us in the show notes. It\u2019s flippingfifty.com\/any-age and that\u2019s where you\u2019ll be first to know about the early, early bird registration within the next two weeks. Wayne Dyer Knew It This is really about creating what we want to be. What we want to be true. If you\u2019re more interested in asking, \u201chow can I\u201d&amp;nbsp;do it, than asking, \u201ccan I\u201d&amp;nbsp;do it, then you\u2019re a perfect candidate. How we think about things changes things. I went \u2013 just this last weekend \u2013 home for a funeral. I threw the trip together in a day and wasn\u2019t even there for 16 hours. I had so many expressions of sorrow and people sending condolences but it wasn\u2019t that. Your thoughts change everything. Mine were gratitude for the ability to drop everything and go, for the time however short it was to be with family and express their importance in my life by being there. I felt good, not sadness after being there. The warmth of your thoughts and perspective around an event shapes the event. There have been awful and tragic events happen in the last few years to my family members and I. But in the frame we put on things comes the way we deal with them. Hormones and stress may have robbed you of the energy, the body, you had but some of the reasons have been good \u2013 family, career you\u2019ve loved, choices you might not change \u2013 and it\u2019s your belief about whether you can change the outcome that really will determine whether a program will work for you. Even a program based on the physiology of hormone balance along with psychology of aging better, has to be something you are not pretending to believe but truly believe can help you. For more details about STRONGER, join me here: https:\/\/www.flippingfifty.com\/any-age  Subscribe in iTunes by  clicking here to take Flipping 50 wherever you go. &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; ","author_name":"The Flipping 50 Show","author_url":"https:\/\/www.flippingfifty.com\/podcast","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/7005082\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/item\/7005082"}