Welcome to week 10 from the Lifestyle Medicine team.
Welcome to Week 10, at this stage hopefully you've taken all of our Lifestyle Medicine advice on board and you’re on track to achieving your weight loss goal! Well done on your journey so far, we’re really excited for you. We understand how much effort losing weight takes, so we’re really happy you're here.
The next step in your weight loss journey, in many ways, is the most important one: maintaining the weight you've lost. For many, this could be the point in the past where you dropped the focus on managing your behaviours to support your healthy weight. It’s common to stop paying attention to what you’re eating and drop healthy habits that you've created, and then to regain some of the weight lost after achieving a weight loss goal (1). If that was you in the past, then we would love you to enjoy your achievement for the long term and to commit to making this your most successful weight loss journey ever.
The key to lasting weight loss is to hold onto the healthy habits that you have made and to turn them into long term patterns (2). Don’t worry, this section is nothing new. If you’ve been following our advice, you simply need to turn your new habits into long term healthy habits for life. This can help you to stay at the weight you feel happy at and improve your long term health with behaviour patterns that will soon become automatic.
Maintaining Muscle Mass
This is essential during weight loss to help maintain your weight loss (3). This important aspect of maintaining weight loss starts while you're losing weight. Your body composition (the percentage of fat, muscle and bone in your body) is vitally important to how your body burns calories after weight loss. Slower weight loss has been found to be associated with keeping a higher percentage of muscle mass following weight loss. This is helpful because your muscle tissue is more metabolically active than fat tissue, and overall, your basal metabolic rate (BMR) will be higher. This means you’re less likely to regain the weight you’ve lost because more of your body tissues are burning calories, even at rest. Fast weight loss on the other hand has been associated with increased loss of muscle, which slows your metabolism, your BMR, making you more prone to weight regain following weight loss. It's therefore helpful to lose weight slowly to help prevent weight regain (4). Adding in a little additional resistance or strength training 2-3 times a week can also help in terms of maintaining muscle mass and reducing body fat (3).
Your “why” - Connecting with your deep seated and emotionally meaningful reason that led you on your weight loss journey is still important. It leads you to develop your grit, that combination of passion and perseverance that can really take you to your goal (1). Being clear on your “why”, your motivation to change your weight, remains vital to hold onto and to come back to if challenges appear on your way. This can help to anchor your motivation long after you've reached your goal as you establish the newer healthier you, your new weight, and your new normal. Do you have any visual prompts like before and after photos? Have you been keeping a journal that can remind you of how you felt before that you can compare to how you feel now? We recommend that you find these items because they can help you to keep your focus and remind you of where you've come from, your journey to this point. Celebrating your achievements can help to maintain your focus and success.