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Your
Mind's Role in Weight Loss
By
Jon Benson
Excerpt from 7
Minute Muscle
Our limitations and success will be based, most often, on your
own expectations for ourselves. What the mind dwells upon, the body acts
upon. Denis Waitley, The Power of Flow
It is estimated that we have approximately 65,000 thoughts each day. Ninety
five percent of those thoughts are the same thoughts we had yesterday,
and the day before that and the day before that. And most of the thoughts
we have, be they positive or negative, elicit specific physical responses.
It makes sense to look into this.
Before we get into the science and specifics necessary to think your way
to faster results I want to utterly convince you that success begins and
ends between your ears. If you have any doubts as to the validity of this
claim, read on.
The Mind and Weight Loss
Crum et al. (2007) studied whether the relationship between exercise and
health is moderated by ones mind. Eighty-four female room attendants
working in seven different hotels were measured on physiological health
variables affected by exercise.
Those in the informed condition were told that the work they do (cleaning
hotel rooms) is good exercise and satisfies the Surgeon Generals
recommendations for an active lifestyle. (This, of course, is not true.)
Examples of how their work was exercise were provided.
Subjects in the control group were not given this information. Although
actual behavior did not change, four weeks after the intervention, the
informed group perceived themselves to be getting significantly more exercise
than before. As a result, compared with the control group, they showed
a decrease in weight, blood pressure, body fat, waist-tohip ratio, and
body mass index. These women thought they were exercising and consequently
lost weight, despite the fact that they were doing nothing out of the
ordinary whatsoever.
Beck et al.
(2005) tracked 105 obese individuals. Sixty-two of them participated in
three hours of cognitive therapy per week for ten weeks, while the rest
served as controls. Cognitive therapy helps isolate negative thoughts,
such as I cannot lose weight or I will always be fat.
Eighteen months after the therapy ended, those in the cognitive therapy
group had lost an average of 23 pounds, while the control group gained
an average of 5 pounds.
The Mind and Performance
Marchant et al. (2005) wired test subjects up to weight machines that
monitored levels of electrical activity in their biceps. Subjects were
then asked to think in two different ways while exercising. One was not
targeted while the other was specific to how the muscle was feeling and
functioning during the movement.
Researchers found that the subjects muscles worked more when
they focused on what the muscles were doing. Results indicated that potentially
greater strength would result from engaging in this practice of putting
your mind in your muscle.
Theres more. Scientists in South Africa discovered something peculiar
about fatigue: It doesnt begin in the muscles. You know that burning
feeling you get in your muscles toward the end of a hard set? It comes
from your mind. Biopsies of exhausted marathoners showed plenty of glycogen
(the bodys main fuel) and ATP (a chemical that stores energy); despite
the fact they hit the wall. Their conclusion: Fatigue sets
in not when your muscles run out of gas, but when your brain tells instructs
them to conserve energy.
How powerful is the mind? Australian psychologist Alan Richardson chose
three groups of students at random. None of them had any experience with
visualization. The first group practiced free throws every day for twenty
days. The second group basically did nothing at all. The third group spent
twenty minutes every day visualizing free throws with no additional practice
at all.
Twenty days
later, the group that practiced daily improved twenty-four percent. The
second group didnt improve at all. But the visualization only group
improved twentythree percentalmost as much as the group that actually
practiced! Richardson later noted that the most effective visualization
occurs when the participant both feels and sees what they are doing in
their mind prior to any physical engagement.
Thats not allSmith et al. (1997) demonstrated that participants
who weight trained over a twelve-week period achieve a 30% increase in
strength. Those who only visualized themselves going through the same
training circuit experienced a 16% increase in strength in the same movements.
Now do I have your attention?
Are you ready to find out how to fully maximize the power of that wonderful
computer between your ears and use it to make greater gains in less time?
I thought so.
How Your Mind Fits Into The 7MM System
Your mind, properly focused for just seven minutes, will enable you to
produce far greater physical, measurable results than sixty minutes of
half-ass focus punctuated by cell phone use, gazing at attractive gym
members, or reliving the days problems as you proceed to the next
set. Hopefully this is common sense.
However, theres more to this storya part that is not so common.
Specific thoughts trigger specific reactions in the body, and those actions
have intense effects on everything from hormone secretion to mood. We
will be looking at some of the science behind this phenomenon. For now,
all I ask is that you fully realize the futility of merely going to the
gym, working hard for seven minutes, and expecting incredible results
without fully utilizing every tool at your disposal.
Your greatest tool, bar none, is your mind. Lets dig in
Jon
Benson is the author of 7
Minute Muscle

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