By Martha Beck, PhD
Author of
The Four Day Win

Sources by Amanda Bach
One of my all-time
favorite clients was a professional baseball player I’ll call Dan, who
was
making the transition from athletics to civilian life. Dan was an impressive
specimen in every way: smart, funny, energetic, and incredibly fit. At the
time he consulted me, I was doing a lot of my usual traveling and public
speaking. Between my erratic scheduling, sleep loss, lack of access to
healthy food, and adrenal burnout, I’d gained several pounds and fallen off
all the various wagons of healthy eating and exercise habits. I kept meaning
to cut back on the flan and get back to regular exercise, but I never seemed
to find the time or energy. Then one day, when we were talking about his
baseball career, Dan tossed out an offhand comment that would change my
muscle tone forever.
“Ninety percent of being
in shape,” he said, “is getting to the gym.”
For me it was, as Oprah
might say, a lightbulb moment. Right then and there, I decided that I would
re-establish a pattern of going to the gym -- not
doing anything at the gym, just
getting there. So the next
day, I dropped off my kids at school and drove directly to the gym, where I
parked my car, listened to a song on my favorite radio station, started the
car again, and went home. The next day I did the same thing . . . and the
next . . . and the next.
By the 4th day, my new
daymap pattern came very easily -- my brain and body
expected to drive to the gym
after taking the kids to school. Then I knew I could safely up the ante --
a little. For the next 4
days, after arriving at the gym, I went in and pedaled a stationary bike for
approximately 3 minutes, just long enough to listen to another favorite song
on my MP3 player. My next 4-day win consisted of increasing my pedaling
sessions to 7 minutes (two songs). When that felt habitual, I added one
round of circuit training with light weight to my cycling routine (I bought
a few new tunes from the Internet as a reward).
After the third 4-day
win, something rather dramatic happened. I’d been increasing
my workout by
tiny increments, but suddenly, my body took over and decided it
loved the gym. I no longer
needed a reward for showing up and exercising; in fact, I felt edgy and
disappointed if I didn’t get a chance to lift weights (please remember, I’d
previously chosen this form of exercise because I find it inherently
enjoyable). Despite the chaos of my schedule, my sometimes-crippling
autoimmune disease, and my utter athletic ineptitude, I’m now something of a
gym rat.
Whatever your preferred
exercise, you can increase your own activity to healthy levels by using a
similar 4-day win strategy. As your very first action on your 4-day win
exercise program, I’d like you to modify your daymap so that you show up in
an appropriate place to exercise, at approximately the same time, for 4
consecutive days. What exercise you
choose to do is less important than your arrival at the designated location.
Reprinted from: The Four Day Win: End
Your Diet War and Achieve Thinner Peace by Martha Beck, PhD.
Copyright © 2007 Martha Beck.
(January 2007;$25.95US/$33.95CAN; 9781594866074) Permission
granted by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus, PA 18098. Available wherever books are sold
or directly from the publisher by calling at (800) 848-4735.