Are your relationships sabotaging your weight-loss efforts?

VIEW GALLERY: Magda's amazing weight loss
Thursday, May 28, 2009
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You and your changes impact the people around you and just as powerfully, the people in your life impact your life and lifestyle
VIEW GALLERY: Magda's amazing weight loss
Page 1 of 3: The importance of healthy relationships in achieving goals
Whenever you set out to achieve anything in life there are always changes that need to occur. Your changes will affect the people around you and you need to be aware of this fact. To reach your desired destination you need to plan.

This includes your direction, how you are going to get there, the obstacles, and the support systems you require. Having a good support system is vital to achieving and sustaining any goal, but in particular weight and health goals. Your achievements can be greatly weighed down by an unhealthy support system.

On your weight loss and health journey, your greatest successes and challenges will be with the people closest to you. The changes that you make in your daily life, your lifestyle, your body, and your self-esteem will affect everyone around you. Any changes you make will result in stress for some of the people around you. Communication is the key to reducing stress on relationships during times of change.

You and your changes impact the people around you and just as powerfully, the people in your life impact your life and lifestyle. You need to identify the healthy and supportive relationships in your life and those that will sabotage you, in order for you to achieve your goals. There are 3 main types of people in your life:

  • Cheer Squad – these people support you no matter what. They are there for you when things are going good and they praise your efforts. However, when things are not so good, they are there to pick you and your spirits up and help you get back on track.

  • Unconscious Saboteurs – more than likely these are the people closest to you such as your family, friends and colleagues. They appear supportive and they believe they are being supportive. However, they may say things or behave in ways that nudge you off track. They do not purposefully go out of their way to sabotage you, they are acting out of habit or what they think is right.

  • Saboteurs – these people are consciously trying to stop you from achieving by saying things, behaving in certain ways or putting obstacles in your way. They may appear to be supportive on the surface but underlying, they are plotting their next move. Unfortunately, Saboteurs can be family, friends, colleagues and acquaintances and can be difficult to spot.

Sabotage has nothing to do with you or your goals! Sabotage is all about the person responsible for the sabotage and their issues. Both the Unconscious Saboteur and the Conscious Saboteur try to interfere with your planned journey for the same underlying reasons - they are trying to protect themselves.

The main reasons for sabotage:

  • Fear – they fear change and they are trying to protect the status quo. They are afraid of you changing and leaving or them having to change.

  • Love – their self-worth is bound with your relationship, love and acceptance. They may feel rejected by changes in your assertiveness, confidence and the likes. They need to be reassured. They are most likely to be food pushers.

  • Control – power and manipulation is the weapon – they are extremely judgemental, critical, guilt-inducing and employ emotional blackmail. They will try to undermine your personal power and control as they fear change and your success.

  • Rigidity – they are highly resistant to change, remaining inflexible and will try to undermine your commitment and motivation. They may overtly rebel, pick fights or subtly rally the troops against you. For example, if mum is trying to change eating patterns to help her and the family to lose weight, dad will not eat the food or bring fast food home even though mum has just cooked a nutritious meal.

  • Jealousy – they will put on a facade of being a supporter but they are plotting to sabotage you because they do not want you to be successful. They may say things to you like, “you are losing too much weight; don’t you think you are taking this diet thing too seriously?” They will also tend to push food.

Dealing with sabotage comes down to the same basic principles:

  • Be prepared – know your Saboteur and their sabotaging ways and don’t get sucked in.

  • Assertive Communication – stick to assertively responding and not reacting:
    - Clearly state the specific behaviour and/or situation
    - State how that makes you feel
    - Ask for what you need from them
    - Ask them to please behaviour differently in the future with a specific behaviour

  • Responsive Listening – listen to them rather than hearing through emotion or habit
    - Listen without interrupting
    - Listen to words and emotions – what is the message
    - Summarise the message back to the person – this will give them an opportunity to respond if you did not get the message accurately
    - Ask them what they need from you

As long as you remember that the sabotage is not about you! It is about the other person’s insecurities and the need to protect themselves and their relationship with you.

Some helpful hints and tips when dealing with Saboteurs:

  • Everyone communicates differently – some people are more open and honest, others are more emotional, others are less expressive through words and more through body language. You may need to alter your style to suit the person you are communicating with.

  • Habitual reacting and hearing – if we experience certain behaviours or words or situations enough we tend to react automatically to the situation without really listening to or seeing what has happened. You may do this and so may the Saboteur. Check your own emotions and responses and watch for automatic reactions from the other person. Sometimes the written word bypasses this response.

  • Express your needs – if you don’t ask, you don’t get! People are not mind readers or needs readers. If you need someone to change their behaviours or words then you need to assertively ask for what you need.

  • Gradual changes – making major changes and/or many changes will cause distress to any relationship and is also unsustainable long-term for you. The more gradual the changes the more likely it will be sustainable and the more likely it will result in minimal distress to relationships.

  • Negotiation – some changes may need to be negotiated for success to occur. This is important if you have a Saboteur as you may be able to negotiate and use some of their own emotional or achievement currency to find a balance.

  • Involvement – if people are involved in something or invited to get involved, they don’t feel left out or wondering. They will understand what you are trying to achieve and may be more likely to start taking an interest and get involved.

  • Reassurance – spending quality time with loved ones, telling and showing them how much you still care for them will reduce their stress.

    If you want to be successful, maintain personal power and control here are the steps you need to take in identifying and negotiating with your support system:

    • Step 1: Know what you want to achieve and what you need from each of the people in your support system.

    • Step 2: Identify who in your support system fits into each of the 3 categories – Cheer Squad, Unconscious Saboteur and Saboteur.

    • Step 3: For those in the Saboteur categories write down what you believe is their underlying reason.

    • Step 4: Write down how you think they have sabotaged you in the past. For example, do they push food, do they make sly comments, is their self-worth tied up in your relationship? Write down as many things as you can think of. You may want to keep an open diary as things may come up in the near future.

    • Step 5: Write down how you could counteract the sabotage. Use the hints and tips above. The more prepared you are for sabotage, the easier it is for you to stay on track and stop falling into other people’s traps.

      The key to your success is a healthy support system. You can turn Saboteurs into Cheer Squad members with some work. It is also important to realise when to distance yourself from certain Saboteurs as some of them can never be negotiated with, and will always remain poisonous to you and your goals. Try and find as many people as possible that fit into the Cheer Squad category. Surround yourself with these people as they are the ones you will gain support from when times are the toughest and they will keep you motivated.

      Kellee Waters
      Psychologist
      Hypnotherapist
      Fitness Coach

      www.mindandbodypower.com.au
      Kellee@mindandbodypower.com.au

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User comments
hands up if you hate hubbys that can eat anything and stay ridiculously thin... *raises her hand* My man, whilst not my husband yet..eats so much junk food it's not funny, and i can't even grab one ounce of fat on him, i'm so jealous and he doesn't help by eating junk food in front of me!
This is in fact the biggest problem I have faced in regards to weight loss. Refusing food is hardly the problem - dealing with negative vibes from saboteurs is! I've been accused of "selfishness" (going to the gym 3-4X a week, about 30-40 minutes each session is not too much). I've also been teased about eating "too little" when I refuse food when I am not hungry. Now, I am not underweight or anorexic - in fact, these are the very people who tease me about being CHUBBY! The funny thing is, these people are skinny and eat slowly and don't have problems with their eating habits like I do (I am the one who overeats). And yet they give me a hard time when I cut down my food intake. It's very hard to keep from being bitter. They are the ones close to you and are supposed to want the best for you and your health, and yet they are the ones who make it hard for you. Yes, YOU choose to eat properly and exercise, but against pressures and negative vibes, the effort is tripled.
My hubbie refuses to go to counselling for his undermining and meanness. Firstly he uses my fat to make jokes in front of people, secondly he undermines any attempt at weight loss on my part. He is not easy to get rid off and unfortunately I don't have any support system, so it's years and years of trying to be healthy, but my internal and external demons chase me down and stamp out any motivation. HELP
I think the key to reach your goal are determination and you should remain optimistic that there will be a great possible result. Im 26 years old and when Im in my early 20's Im a bit chubby. Im happy now with what I have achieve. I woke up early in the morning to have my jogging even in winter time and its tempting to stay longer in bed.Once you have determination in what you are doing you will overcome those obstacle that may comes your way.
I'm 25 and have gained 30kg twice in my long lifetime. You don't need to surround yourself with positive snakes-in-the-grass people who will support you through every second step. As easy as it may get you are the only one in control of your mind, body and spirit, besides the government. And by letting the negative in,it just makes it easier for you to focus. You can't do anything you wish to achieve in this life, especially if you take a few steps forward and just a few more back. If you have the people you want there to support you no matter what, the end result is like mixing urine and vodka, outrageously good.
this was a great article! i'm 14 and i have had issues with my weight. I lost 11Kg resently and my grandmother isn't particually happy about it, she harrases me about me being anoxexic - i'm 173cm tall and 69Kg - i'm still technically over weight. and this article gave me great advice, hopefully it will help me!
Saboteurs most certainly ARE the most difficult to spot. I have only recently been able to loose a significant amount of weight by having a people diet. I found that the very people who appeared to want the best for me were.... in fact terrified when my weight loss goals actually suceeded and it was amusing to see the people who used to be my friends, duck and weave when I began to attract substantial attention from the opposite sex and completely alter the dynamics of the group. I was no longer the fat tag- along, but soon became a threat.... thus, chips, dips, dinners out and party food soon took the place of nightclubs and one particular friend of mine insisted my boyfriend was only after my money... what money. She could not accept that for once, people preferred me. Thus prooving this articles statement about a saboteur trying to do these things to protect themselves. Oh yes, get rid of those friends.
This article is spot on! Although it is mostly directed at food the insight that the article offers can be applied to life generally. Stay focused, know your goals and don't let anyone stop you from reaching them!!!!
no matter how close u r people like to see u downfall i do my own brainwaving and go for it hook line and sinker i am sick of been nice it does not pay .
Having almost lost a very close friend to anorexia I feel I must point out that it is possible to take things like diets too far. People have and do contract and suffer from body dysmorphia and far too often, people die from this. My point is, be very careful throwing labels like "food pushers" around. If your "cheer squad" list all seem to be migrating onto your "saboteurs" list then maybe your lists are *** and they actually do have a point. If you're doing this stuff, then pay special awareness to your body max index and your basic nutrition If you are making a change in your diet make it a long term, informed and sustainable change, not just some short term starvation programme. Any GP can give you the basics and don't forget a sustainable programme of exercise (sustainable in this case meaning don't overtrain and burn yourself out).

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