WHAT ARE THE MAINTENANCE AND RELAPSE STAGES?
In
the maintenance stage, you’ve been exercising regularly for long enough
that it’s become a habit. You’ve created a routine that works for you,
and (if you’re doing it right), you’ve started seeing the benefits you
originally wanted in your life. There are still a few traps that can
derail you, though. When this happens, and you find yourself no longer
exercising, you’re in Prochaska’s ‘Relapse’ stage. Most ‘traps’ will
either involve a change in your life circumstances, a change in your
goals, or a combination of both – so if you’ve been exercising regularly
for a while and suddenly find motivating yourself difficult, ask
yourself what’s changed.
CHANGES IN CIRCUMSTANCE
If
your circumstances have altered, you’ll usually be well aware of what’s
happened and how it’s affected your motivation. For example – you might
enjoy exercising in a gym, then take a sudden drop in income that
doesn’t allow you to keep your gym membership. Your working hours might
change, making your original workout timeslot unavailable. Someone you
exercise with might decide to stop, or you might injure yourself
somehow. All these things will disrupt what was an effective routine,
and if you don’t actively plan to work around the disruption, it can sap
your motivation to keep exercising.
If this applies to you,
imagine you were back in the Contemplation stage, and look at the
motivation suggestions for this stage. Revisit your main goal for
exercising. Is it still valid? If so, move through the suggestions for
the Preparation stage. Your initial ‘how’ no longer works – so what
needs to change? If you can no longer keep the routine that used to
work, what can you still do that’s convenient, enjoyable and affordable?
If you’ve kept a fitness journal, go back through the entries you made
when you were setting up your routine. What did you think of to try
then (and didn’t end up using) that you could experiment with now?
CHANGES IN GOALS
If
your circumstances haven’t changed, it’s likely your goals have.
Perhaps your initial goals aren’t relevant any longer? If this is the
case, don’t beat yourself up about it – instead, ask yourself what you
*do* want now. Perhaps you started off enthusiastic about training for a
triathlon, but quickly found the required time and effort unbalanced
your life. Perhaps you began wanting to lose 20kg, then realised as you
had to replace your entire wardrobe that you actually preferred being
curvy – now you just want to feel healthy and energetic. Remember, it’s
your life and no-one can tell you what your goals should be. It’s OK
for goals to change – what’s not OK is to keep grimly putting time and
effort into something you don’t actually want any more.
Remember
there’s a difference between wanting to take a day off, and losing long
term motivation. Part of any successful plan is allowing yourself
occasional rest days. Taking one or two every week doesn’t mean you’ve
moved into Relapse – in fact it’s necessary to avoid overtraining. It’s
also OK to vary your workout intensity from week to week – alternating
weeks of pushing yourself with weeks of coasting. This strategy (called
‘periodisation’ when it’s done to a specific plan) is actually far more
effective for reaching fitness goals than pushing yourself as hard as
you can every single workout. If you’re starting consistently skip
workouts though, you need to figure out why and do something about it.
GETTING HELP WITH MOTIVATION
Finally,
as we suggested for those in the Action stage, if it’s getting harder
to stay motivated despite all of the above suggestions, think about
working with a personal trainer. In fact, a trainer can help you manage
your motivational difficulties whatever stage of Prochaska’s model
you’re at (or even if you’re not quite sure where you are right now!)
If you’ve thought about hiring a trainer in the past, but the time has
never been right, Optimum Life Ltd has an offer that might convince you
to finally make the investment in yourself, your health, and your
happiness. If you e-mail us on mailto:optimumlife@xtra.co.nz during
October, you’ll be able to sign up for a full Total Fitness Membership
at a 25% discount - only $US30 per month (when you consider that most
trainers charge between $50-100 per session, you can see why it’s such
good value!)
As you can see from this article series, the
question of how to motivate yourself to exercise isn’t an easy one to
answer (if it was, we’d all be exercising regularly, and there’d be no
need for this article!). The best way to motivate yourself depends very
much on where in the stages of change you are at the moment with respect
to exercise. Figure out where you are in the model, then try the
relevant suggestions for getting yourself moving. If you have any
questions, comments or feedback, please don’t hesitate to contact us –
we’d love to hear from you. Otherwise, may every day bring you closer
to your Optimum Life.
About the author:
This article © Tanja Gardner, Optimum Life Ltd. Please feel free to
reprint it in whole, as long as this resource box remains intact.
Optimum Life Ltd (http://optimumlife.co.nz) provides balanced fitness
and stress management services to clients worldwide. For details of how
we can help you achieve your optimum fitness on a budget, visit http://trainerforce.com/optimumlife
Fora copy of our free 'What is Optimum Fitness?' Report and
Checklist, please send an e-mail to mailto:optimumlife@xtra.co.nz with
'Please send Fitness Checklist & Report' in the subject header
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