Weight Loss: As Simple As “Me Time”?

The National Weight Control Registry (NWCR) project, which began in 1993, has tracked some 4,500 people, all of whom have lost at least 30 pounds and kept the weight off for a year or more. The registry has been trying to find the “key” to their combined success — a trait or similarity, if you will, that could explain their success when so many other dieters fail. In doing so, they tracked magazine reading habits, foods they preferred, exercise programs, even the music they listened to.

While the report tries to present yet another “novel view” of successful weight loss: that methodical, hyper-organized people do better losing weight, so to the key to losing weight lies in becoming methodical and hyper-organized.

Bull.

See, within the report is an even more important finding, one that I’m afraid will be lost in all the hooplah over whether you’re a “Quadrant A” or “Quadrant B” thinker.

What the registry really discovered is that successful weight loss is about quieting the mind and not obsessing.

“All the subjects had incorporated some meditative element into their lives,” Treitler says. “It might have been walking or yoga, but it was self time, a white space where they could disengage from the old, obsessive behavior.” This transformation of identity appears crucial in keeping weight off. Without a new self who’s clearly different from the old, overweight one, it’s too easy to revert to former unhealthy habits.

Out with the stress, in with the calm, off with the pounds. Hmm… I think I’ll go spend some time contemplating my navel now.

Posted by Chubby Mommy in Diets
  1. jae says:

    Makes sense. Stress creates cortisol which maintains body fat, specifically around the middle. If you can maintain stress management it ought to be effective. That’s probably why people find yoga so effective. Kind of hard to quiet your mind with four kids screaming around you though. :)

  2. Annaliese says:

    Huh, I’m one of those “methodical, hyper-organized people” (the only benefit of OCD) so the weight should just be falling off, right? Riiight.

    On the other hand, if weight loss is actually dependent upon “quieting the mind and not obsessing” I am royally screwed.

  3. Chubby Mommy says:

    Exactly! It’s yet another one of those studies that says A works better than B. Except when B works better than A.