Oh god, if I have to eat another salad I am going to turn green!
I am sooooooo over going to the gym…
Why can everyone else eat fun stuff but I have to eat the dull stuff??

Boredom happens–unfortunately boredom often spells the end of many weight loss journeys.

So how do we overcome it so we don’t throw in the towel on our weight loss and ourselves? With thin thinking of course!

Get ready to get excited about boredom!

Join me for the 83rd episode of Thin Thinking, where we get inside the mechanics of weight loss boredom–how to recognize it, own it and then move through it so it doesn’t derail you and your weight release journey.

In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

The reasons why you feel boredom during your weight loss journey

Is it really boredom that you are feeling, or something deeper going on?

How to shift out of boredom and move forward on your journey

Links Mentioned in this Episode

If you’ve ever felt that way while trying to lose weight, you’re not alone. Boredom is one of the most common reasons people abandon their weight loss journey.

At the beginning of a diet, everything feels exciting. The plan is new, motivation is high, and the scale often moves quickly. But eventually the novelty fades. Meals start to feel repetitive. Workouts feel routine. The scale slows down.

That’s when boredom creeps in — and when many people quietly drift off track.

But here’s the surprising truth: boredom usually isn’t the real problem.

In fact, what most people call “boredom” is actually a mindset signal. It’s your brain telling a story about your journey — and that story can either sabotage your progress or strengthen your commitment.

Clinical hypnotherapist and weight mastery expert Rita Black teaches that long-term weight success is largely mental. In fact, about 80% of weight struggles come from mindset patterns, not food itself.

The good news? Once you understand why boredom happens, you can learn how to reframe it and stay engaged with your goals.

In this guide, you’ll learn practical mindset hacks to beat weight loss boredom and stay consistent long enough to achieve lasting change.


Why Do People Get Bored While Losing Weight?

Weight loss boredom often appears after the “honeymoon phase” of a new diet ends.

When you first start a program, everything feels exciting. There’s structure, clarity, and the promise of transformation. Your brain gets a rush of dopamine — the reward chemical — from seeing progress and trying something new.

But over time several things change:

  • Meals start to feel repetitive
  • Workouts feel routine
  • Weight loss slows down
  • Motivation fades

Suddenly, the same routine that once felt empowering starts to feel restrictive.

Instead of excitement, the brain experiences monotony.

And when boredom sets in, the mind begins negotiating:

  • “I’ve been good all week — one treat won’t hurt.”
  • “I’ll restart the diet on Monday.”
  • “Maybe this plan just isn’t working for me.”

These thoughts slowly chip away at consistency.

But here’s the key insight: boredom is often just a mental frame, not a real obstacle.

The behavior itself — eating healthy meals or exercising — isn’t inherently boring. It’s the meaning we assign to it that determines how we experience it.

That means boredom can be reframed.


Are You Actually Bored — or Telling Yourself a Boring Story?

One of the most powerful mindset shifts is recognizing that boredom is often a story your brain tells.

Instead of saying:

“This diet is boring.”

Try asking:

“What story am I telling about this experience?”

Consider everyday habits like brushing your teeth or cleaning your home. These tasks aren’t exciting, yet we do them consistently because they support our well-being.

Weight mastery works the same way.

The deeper motivation isn’t excitement — it’s commitment.

When people reconnect with their deeper purpose, routine behaviors stop feeling dull and start feeling meaningful.

Think of your weight loss journey as a hero’s journey.

Every hero faces obstacles. Not just dramatic ones, but subtle ones too — frustration, impatience, and boredom.

When you reframe your journey this way, boredom becomes a challenge to grow through rather than a signal to quit.

Instead of seeing yourself as someone stuck on a diet, you begin seeing yourself as someone mastering your mind and habits.

This perspective aligns closely with the philosophy behind Shift Hypnosis — lasting change happens when people understand and retrain the mental patterns driving their behavior.

Shift Hypnosis Voice & Tone Gui…

Once you see the journey differently, boredom loses much of its power.


How Can You Make Healthy Eating More Exciting?

Many people believe healthy eating is boring.

But the truth is that boredom usually comes from repetition, not nutrition.

Most people cycle through the same few meals — whether they’re eating healthy or not. The difference is simply awareness.

To re-energize your eating routine, try these strategies.

Explore New Foods

Give yourself permission to experiment.

Spend extra time at the grocery store looking for:

  • New vegetables
  • Different protein sources
  • Unique seasonings
  • Healthy recipe ideas

Even one new meal each week can add variety and excitement.

Take a Cooking Class

Learning new cooking techniques can transform healthy eating from a chore into a creative outlet.

Many people discover they actually enjoy cooking once they expand their skills.

Focus on Curiosity

Instead of thinking:

“I have to eat this.”

Try asking:

“What interesting meals could I create that also support my goals?”

Curiosity activates your brain’s reward system and turns routine behaviors into exploration.

Remember the Variety Myth

People often believe unhealthy eating is more exciting.

In reality, many “junk food routines” are just as repetitive — the same fast-food orders or snack foods over and over.

Healthy eating actually offers more variety, not less.

You just have to explore it.


What Should You Do When the Scale Stops Giving Dopamine Hits?

Early in a weight loss journey, the scale can feel thrilling.

Every drop in weight delivers a little dopamine boost — reinforcing the behavior.

But eventually the scale slows down.

This is completely normal, but it can feel discouraging.

When the dopamine reward disappears, motivation can drop too.

To avoid this trap, shift your focus away from the scale alone.

Create a Bigger Vision

Instead of obsessing over the next pound lost, focus on who you are becoming.

Imagine yourself:

  • Living confidently in your body
  • Taking better care of your health
  • Being a role model for your family
  • Maintaining your ideal weight years from now

This long-term vision provides deeper motivation than short-term scale results.

Celebrate Non-Scale Wins

Track other forms of progress, such as:

  • Increased energy
  • Better sleep
  • Improved fitness
  • More confidence

These wins often appear before dramatic weight changes.

Reward Yourself Along the Way

Small rewards can maintain motivation when progress slows.

Examples include:

  • Booking a massage after a milestone
  • Buying new workout gear
  • Planning a weekend trip
  • Treating yourself to a new experience

These rewards reinforce progress without sabotaging it.


How Can You Challenge Yourself So Weight Loss Stays Interesting?

Another major cause of boredom is lack of challenge.

When routines become automatic, the brain disengages.

The solution isn’t abandoning your habits — it’s deepening your skills.

Weight mastery is not about being “good on a diet.”
It’s about developing lifelong abilities.

These include:

  • Mindset management
  • Nutrition awareness
  • Exercise consistency
  • Self-monitoring

Here are several ways to add challenge and growth.

Try New Forms of Exercise

Changing your workouts keeps both your body and brain engaged.

You might try:

  • Strength training
  • Dance classes
  • Hiking
  • Pilates or yoga
  • Interval training

Learning new movement patterns stimulates your brain and keeps exercise fresh.

Run Skill Challenges

Short challenges can sharpen habits.

For example:

  • Measure your portions for one week
  • Track protein intake for five days
  • Try a new workout style for 30 days

These mini-experiments turn weight management into a learning process rather than a rigid routine.

Become a Scientist About Your Habits

Curiosity creates engagement.

Instead of judging your habits, observe them.

Ask questions like:

  • How do different foods affect my energy?
  • What workouts improve my mood the most?
  • When do cravings appear?

This mindset transforms weight loss from a boring chore into a fascinating personal experiment.


How Do You Handle the “Inner Rebel” That Wants to Quit?

Sometimes boredom isn’t boredom at all.

It’s resistance.

Inside most people are multiple voices:

  • The inner coach that wants growth
  • The inner critic that judges mistakes
  • The inner rebel that resists rules

When the rebel voice gets loud, it often says things like:

  • “This diet isn’t fair.”
  • “Everyone else gets to eat whatever they want.”
  • “I’m tired of doing this.”

Trying to suppress this voice rarely works.


If boredom is leading to cravings or “why not” moments, listen to Episode 71 — The 5 Ps of Impulse Control, where Rita walks you through a simple framework to manage urges and stay consistent even when motivation fades.

Instead, acknowledge it.

Think of it like a child expressing frustration.

You might say internally:

“I hear you. This feels hard right now.”

Once the rebel feels acknowledged, it often calms down.

From there, walk through the full consequences of the behavior it wants.

For example:

“Yes, that cookie would taste good. But how will I feel afterward? Tomorrow morning? Next week?”

This mental exercise shifts your brain from short-term gratification to long-term thinking.

Often, the craving loses its power once you see the full picture.

The key is compassion combined with leadership.

You don’t silence the rebel — you guide it.


Conclusion: Boredom Is a Signal — Not the End of the Journey

If boredom shows up during your weight loss journey, it doesn’t mean you’re failing.

It simply means the novelty phase has passed.

And that’s actually where the real transformation begins.

Long-term weight mastery isn’t built on excitement.
It’s built on mindset, curiosity, and commitment.

When boredom appears, try these shifts:

  • Reframe your journey as personal growth
  • Add variety to food and exercise
  • Focus on the long-term vision instead of the scale
  • Create new challenges to deepen your skills
  • Lead your inner rebel with curiosity and compassion

Remember: the goal isn’t to stay entertained.

The goal is to become the person who consistently takes care of themselves.

And once that identity clicks, boredom stops being a threat — it simply becomes another step in your growth.

If you want to explore the mindset behind lasting weight release, you can dive deeper into the tools and strategies inside Shift Weight Mastery, where hypnosis and behavioral psychology help retrain the thinking patterns that keep people stuck.

Because the real key to lasting change isn’t just what you eat.

It’s how you think.


FAQ: Weight Loss Boredom

Why do people get bored while dieting?

Most people get bored because the initial excitement fades. The brain stops receiving dopamine rewards from novelty and rapid progress.

Is boredom a sign my diet isn’t working?

No. Boredom usually signals that the routine phase has begun. This is actually where long-term habits develop.

How do I stay motivated when weight loss slows down?

Shift your focus from the scale to long-term identity and non-scale wins like energy, fitness, and confidence.

Can changing workouts help with weight loss boredom?

Yes. Learning new forms of exercise stimulates your brain and keeps motivation high.

What is the “inner rebel” in weight loss psychology?

The inner rebel is the part of your mind that resists restrictions and seeks immediate gratification.

How can I make healthy eating less repetitive?

Experiment with new recipes, ingredients, and cooking methods. Variety helps keep healthy eating interesting.

If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy these related Thin Thinking episodes:

Rita Black: Oh God, if I have to eat another salad, I’m gonna turn green. I am so over going to the gym! Boredom happens. Unfortunately, boredom often spells the end of many weight loss journeys as well. If boredom happens, then how do we overcome it so that we don’t throw in the towel on our weight loss and ourselves? With Thin Thinking, of course. So come on in and get ready to get excited about boredom.

Rita Black: Did you know that our struggle with weight doesn’t start with the food on your plate or get fixed in the gym? 80% of our weight struggle is mental. That’s right. The key to unlocking long-term weight release and management begins in your mind. Hi there, I’m Rita Black. I’m a clinical hypnotherapist weight loss expert, bestselling author, and the creator of the Shift Weight Mastery Process. And not only have I helped thousands of people over the past 20 years achieve long-term weight mastery, I am also a former weight struggler, carb addict and binge eater.

Rita Black: And after two decades of failed diets and FAD weight loss programs, I lost 40 pounds with the help of hypnosis. Not only did I release all that weight, I have kept it off for 25 years. Enter the Thin Thinking Podcast where you too will learn how to remove the mental roadblocks that keep you struggling. I’ll give you the thin thinking tools, skills and insights to help you develop the mindset you need, not only to achieve your ideal weight, but to stay there long-term and live your best life.

Rita Black: Hey everybody, come on in and get started with me. I am excited because this weekend I am going to be getting the dirt ready for my fall winter garden. Do I have any other gardeners out there who are excited about dirt? I’m also gonna be planting California poppy seeds. I did this way too late last year. This was something that I learned. I have a friend who’s a gardener and she came over to my house and she was looking at some things, because I get some advice from people, you know, I really am into mastering my garden. And so I – killed a lot of plants this year, I grew a lot of plants, had some, a lot of success. But you know, you kill a few plants along the way. It’s a great metaphor for any mastery journey. No mastery journey looks perfect. So I asked my friend who knew, knows a lot more about gardening than me. Hey, you know, why didn’t my California Poppies grow? And when she said, when did you put them seeds in the ground? I was like, Well, you know, February, she was, Please, you’ve gotta start in October. Who knew? So I never realized, I always thought pops were kind of like weeds and they just grew really fast, but they actually need some time to put down roots and grow.

Rita Black: So I’m very excited because I love California poppies. I used to think that certain aspects of gardening were really boring, you know. All I was into was the glamorous stuff, the planting, the seeds, planting what I was gonna grow, picking whatever the flowers or picking the fruit or the vegetables. But as I’ve gotten into gardening more like, like for instance, I used to think dirt was boring. I thought I had friends who were gardeners and they would start to talk about the different levels of pH and acid and the fertilizers. And I was like, Ah, that’s boring. I don’t, I don’t, I’ll just put some dolmen in the ground and it’s gonna work and, and the seeds will grow. And that’s that, you know, end of story. But as I’ve gotten more sophisticated, well sophisticated probably isn’t the best word for it, but as I’ve gotten more into gardening and the more subtle levels of gardening, let’s say, I have began to really get into dirt and appreciate dirt and the kinds of dirts and the different micro climates, my garden, I mean, it’s fascinating when you get underneath the surface of all of that.

Rita Black: But I used to think that always boring. So I work with a lot of people and I see a lot of journeys to weight mastery. And let’s face it, one of the fastest, fastest roads to falling off your weight release journey is getting bored. Am I right? So I wanted to dive into this and dig into the dirt of weight loss boredom today. And will you dig with me? Friends, can I say enough puns for you today?

Rita Black: So let’s start with where we are usually not bored, which is at the beginning of a diet or a plan of some sort. This is the glamorous and sexy part of weight loss, right? So first of all, it’s new and exciting. We’ve got this new plan, we’ve got a lot of steam under our belt. We’re gonna lose some weight. We’ve got the, the different things, the specific foods we’re going to eat and the way it’s gonna change our life. And our dopamine and reward brain is engaged, right? So we’ve got a little bit of high, it’s kind of like a new relationship, right? We’re kind of in love with the idea of the diet and love with ourselves being in the diet. And there’s a, a structure, therefore a lack of chaos. And we love that because we spend a lot of our time struggling with our weight in a lot of chaos, inner chaos, external chaos. So the fact that we are in a structure and we are, we know our place in the structured, man that feels so good and the focus, we know what we’re gonna do and not do. This makes us feel safe. And there’s a willingness. Why? Because we’re in so much pain. It’s so painful to be in that chaos and to feel out of control and to be gaining weight.

Rita Black: So we’re so willing, we’re so willing at this point, and we start off and it’s all amazing. We’re compliant. We feel great. We get on a scale every morning, or maybe we do and we’re losing weight or our clothes are fitting our us better. Let’s somewhere along the way things begin to change. The honeymoon is over. We’ve now been eating this thing a week, two weeks, a month. And as there’s a little sameness to that food and there’s not so much dopamine floating around in our brain anymore, we have the structure down. So guess what? That structure begins to feel like it’s hemming us in. It kind of feels monotonous. And guess what? We’re getting on that scale and we’re releasing that weight a little more slowly, way less fun. The dopamine hit on the scale has been replaced by frustration and anxiety. I’m not doing this right. Why did I not lose weight yesterday? Why did I gain weight? Diet isn’t working, my body’s broken. We start to have limiting beliefs. So those limiting beliefs that had gotten pushed to the back of our mind are starting to find their way back to the front of our mind. We feel a bit restless. We’re stuck in a feeling of sameness. It’s presenting us as one big snooze fest. And this is where we might find ourselves slipping, getting off track, reaching for things that aren’t on plan. Well, you know, I’ve been so good. Just have that one thing tonight. Ooh, well okay, since I had that one thing, I might as well have this other thing. And then, hmm, well I’ll have that thing too. And then tomorrow I’ll just get back right on that diet and I’ll be good. Oh, maybe not. It’s the weekend. We’ll get really back on it on Monday. I promise we are gonna be so good on Monday. Just you watch me, I’m going to just do like this diet, like it’s never been done.

Rita Black: So that sound familiar? So if you’re feeling bored, here’s some advice. Well, here’s a way to look at it. I’m gonna go out on a limb here cuz I, this is a little radical you guys, but I’m gonna shake this up a bit now and I’m gonna put it out there to you that you are not really bored when this is happening. You’re not really bored, but your brain is telling you a boring story about what you’re doing and who you are being, your relationship to your weight mastery journey has gotten boring and it needs a reframe. So I would like to look at what you may consider boring through some new eyes and offer you some thin thinking.

Rita Black: So first of all, the, you know, we get that sensation, the honeymoon is over. It’s not as fun as it used to be. And I get it. You know, the fun wears off on a lot of things that we’re committed to, right? I mean, I think about things like marriage. Those of you who are married less than seven years, maybe you won’t laugh as hard as those of us who’ve been married for many, many years. This year was 33 for me, you know, and I have the, I am married to the man of my dreams, my soulmate. I love him dearly. But you know, sometimes marriage can be monotonous and boring. And, and, and again, I go back to, it’s not really boring, but it’s the story we tell ourselves. So other things, like even children can be boring, love my children. But being a parent sometimes can be monotonous and boring. But I’m still committed to my children. I’m still committed to my husband. Having good dental hygiene, brushing your teeth, it’s not the most exciting thing in the world, right? But I do it every day, couple times a day, three times a day sometimes. And I stand there and I hum or I think about other things, but you know, not the most senti leading thing in the world. But I do it because I’m committed to my teeth. And even having a clean house, sometimes people are really excited about cleaning the house. I’m not one of those people, but I do it because my life works better when my house is clean. So some things are not always exciting, but our commitment to them is, you know, my commitment to my children, my commitment to my marriage really thrills me. Even though the actual, you know, my commitment to my weight mastery has never been boring. It’s always been exciting because I’m committed to being free. I’m committed to, to that person I am when I’m taking awesome care of myself.

Rita Black: That’s never boring. That’s never boring. So I want you to start to look at your weight mastery, you know, and this idea that it’s boring. And think about your commitment to yourself and think about the fact that you are really on a hero’s journey. Because sometimes I think the way we see ourselves becomes boring, right? Oh, I’m on this diet, I’m just struggling because we, we, we really put our struggle with our weight in this place of shame in our brain. And, and yeah, that can get boring. You know, being ashamed of ourselves, ashamed that we’re like this struggler and we’re struggling away and we don’t like to see ourselves this way. So when we go on a diet in the beginning days, we start to see ourselves in a different way. Maybe hold ourselves with a little more pride. But when things start to get a little little same, that feeling ashamed starts to come back.

Rita Black: Or we start to feel less good about ourselves. And I wanna remind you your commitment to your weight mastery journey. You’re a hero. You know, heroes have obstacles always thrown at them. Even boredom. And overcoming boredom is an obstacle that expands you and makes you more of you. And I think when we get bored, I think we go to our place of shame, our place of like, why do I even have to lose weight in the first place? I’m a loser because I have to lose weight. What other people are luckier than me? You know, we can go to a very negative limiting place instead of remembering who you are. And I want you to remember who you are. You’re a hero on a powerful journey. And every obstacle you overcome, even boredom you are doing, you are expanding yourself. You are becoming more of who you are.

Rita Black: It’s a journey of self realization. There’s, yes, weight loss is included, but this was really about your becoming your best self, stretching past where you stop and taking a hundred percent responsibility. Folks, that makes it more exciting when you take a hundred percent responsibility for your weight mastery journey, that you’re not a victim of anybody or your circumstances or anything. It gets exciting really fast because you have to hold yourself accountable and you have to get really creative. And sometimes you have to have uncomfortable conversations with yourself or with other people. That’s not boring, that’s kind of exciting and it definitely stretches you. Hey, and it’ll, let me remind you, it’s not weight loss’s fault. You know, I think we think, oh, weight loss, so boring weight loss is weight loss. You’re bringing the boring to it. You’re making it seem boring. You are calling it boring.

Rita Black: Weight loss is just innocent. It’s just the act of releasing weight and all the other crapola that you, you put on it, you pile on it. That’s your stuff. So get a hundred percent responsibility, blah blah, responsible, and start putting some of that crapola in the doggy do bag, putting that in the trash and starting to clean up and take responsibility and be powerful. And remember, you are a hero. I remember maybe some of you remember with me, Mary Tyler Moore’s show, maybe some of you younger folks on in syndication a couple times. And I don’t know if you remember the newscaster Ted Baxter. He was a silver head, silver haired, smooth talking, a bit of a dumb blonde, but very handsome, played by Ted Knight, I believe. Brilliant, brilliant comedian. And Mary Tyler Moore played this news producer in this. And she was, you know, sort of a female ahead of her time, you know, a first producer of a TV station in Minneapolis. And there was an episode where this was probably a few seasons in, I think it was seven seasons, eight seasons long. It was about halfway through the show. And she used to live in this one, one room apartment, sort of a studio apartment. And she had a girlfriend upstairs and she went through this depressed time where she just says like, life, my life is so boring. And she said, I just get up and I eat breakfast and I go to work and I eat lunch and I work some more and I go home and I eat dinner and I go to bed and then I get up and I do it again and again and again. And she’s just sitting there very moly. Everybody else around her is kind of going, Yeah, yeah, I get it.

Rita Black: But Ted, the anchor man, he’s like, Well Mary, I have the answer for you. And everybody turns and looks at him with expectant eyes and he says something, but it’s not even what he says. It’s the way he said it. It’s so simple and it’s so brilliant. But it’s such an idiot sivant sort of thing to say. He’s like, Well Mary, you’ve just got to eat breakfast in the morning and then you’ve got to go to work and then you eat your lunch and then you do more work. You know? And so he’s like, he’s very animated as he’s, you know, very excitedly eating breakfast and excitedly going to work. And, and that is so true that you could have this frame on your life like it’s boring this frame on the way you eat. Like it’s boring. You can have this frame on your exercise and think it’s boring.

Rita Black: Or you can start to get curious about it and go, How can I bring some excitement to this? Because the more we just put that word boring over everything, the more it suppresses it and brings it down in our brain. And let’s open up and let some light in and start to reframe how we see these things to ourselves. If you’re bored with food, well then get excited about some food. You know, find some new recipes. Think of go to the grocery store, give yourself extra half hour to look for things outside of what you normally get. We tend to eat the same foods and folks, can I just tell you, you know, the bad things you eat, you eat about 10 of the bad meals and you eat when you’re eating healthy,10 good meals. You know what I mean? Like, so it’s not like when you’re eating bad that it’s so much more variety.

Rita Black: In fact, it’s probably a lot less variety than when you’re eating healthfully. So don’t tell me eating healthfully is boring. There’s nothing boring about it, but our approach to it can become stagnant. But that’s up to you. You gotta, you’ve got to bring some excitement. Same thing with exercise. Change it up. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve changed, learned new exercise. We have a woman in a group who brings all these wonderful different new exercises. She finds a centric, she gone, you know, she’s always trying new things. And I think it’s so smart because it keeps us in the game. It keeps us exciting. Even planning. I think the more you plan, I think we think of planning as boring, but planning really gives you a structure and a feeling of safety that sometimes allows you to experiment within it.

Rita Black: And last but not least, create a mantra. Create a mantra that is a mantra that is going to make you excited about getting up and living your day. I had today, we had a meeting with my group and when somebody had been just in this place and she created a mantra that she said, I’m not my feelings, I’m not my emotions, I am the actions that I take. I love that. And she just started to take simple actions that she was putting off or avoiding and it made her feel so good. She said she had been so productive over the last few days. So create a new mantra for yourself.

Rita Black: Okay, another cause of boredom. You’re releasing weight more slowly and definite. That’s a cause of the lack of dopamine. I think one of the things that we do is really put all the attention on the scale. It’s all about the weight loss we run to see how much weight we’ve lost or how our clothes fit us. And I wanna remind you that the long term journey, I mean, I get it, it’s exciting in the beginning. It’s a transformational process. You’re seeing the scale go down, but we can become addicted to that. And you know, we’re used to our dopamine hit the scale’s down so when it doesn’t go down or it doesn’t go down for a few days or a week, it becomes really hard for us because that feeling, we kind of almost go through withdraw because we’re not getting our fix on the scale. And then we become an interested in the diet rather than really looking at this more as a holistic approach. It’s not just about weight, but it’s all about the bigger picture. You can negate the process by just looking at your weight you wanna create.

Rita Black: So here are some things you can do. You can create a sexier vision of who you are becoming. Because I think sometimes, like I said, we start to look at ourselves kind of as in the same old red, oh here I am struggling with my weight and oh gosh, this is boring and I’ve gotta be on a boring diet and I’m a loser. Rather than being on a journey of who you are becoming, you know, really create that vision of you 20, 40, 60 down pounds out the scale or ideal weight, not when you reach your weight, but five years into it. Who is that you out in your life living fully because that you it did not take no for an answer. That you had resilience and tenacity, that you is out in their life being a leader in their life. Because when you release weight and keep it off, others watch you and they’re like, Wow, I want some of what they have now.

Rita Black: They might not need release weight, but they see that journey and they’re like, That person did something, I want that too. So don’t underplay the powerful journey that you’re on and the example that you are setting for your kids, for your friends, for the people in your community. I, you have a saying alone we diet, together we shift. We can shift this world just by starting to truly shift ourselves. Create rewards that entice you along the way. I can’t tell you how motivating this is when you know you’re gonna get a massage, when you reach that 20 pound goal or when you’ve gotten used to, you know, when you’ve worked up to going five days to the gym, you know, having, going away for a trip to the beach for the weekend, you know, or buying yourself a new exercise product or a new outfit to exercise.

Rita Black: Give yourself rewards along the way. Treat yourself of start living your life now and stuff that scares you and that represents who you are becoming. Again, going back to that sexy vision is that you dancing will take some dance lessons. Is that you traveling, take a foreign language class, Do the things you’re putting off, you know, Oh, I’ll do that when I get thin. Really well start doing it now because putting all those things onto when you get thin, that’s gonna make getting thin really scary in your subconscious mind. So liven up your weight, really journey by living your life. Now let’s do it. Come on. What, what are you gonna do by the end of the year that you’ve never done before that will say to you, I’m on an extraordinary journey of weight mastery. Maybe it’s taking a cooking class, a healthy cooking class.

Rita Black: Maybe it’s putting yourself on a dating app, a safe one, of course. But you know, putting yourself out there, making a new friend, starting a walking group. Do something that represents to you that is, this is just not about running and getting on the scale that, but that this is about who you are becoming. Okay?

Rita Black: Another reason for being bored is you might not feel challenged. That happens a lot of times. So one of the things that you can do is to deepen your journey by deepening your skills. And what I mean by that is, just like with me in gardening, there’s many surface things with weight loss that are the glamorous things. Weighing yourself, you know, the actual diet itself. Certain things that you would think about when you go on and go on a diet. But I’m talking about there’s really a skill set of weight mastery.

Rita Black: And that whenever I’m feeling, you know, bored, maintaining my weight, I always just kinda look at the skills that I use at like, for instance, exercise and say, Okay, well how can I deepen my relationship with exercise? You know, can I learn a new aspect of exercise? Can I lift a heavier weight? Can I challenge myself by running a little further? Can I do a more advanced version of what I’m doing with regards to food? There’s often I’ll deepen my skills of, there’s so many things with food, you know, right now I’m really focusing on longevity. So I’ve learned more about what foods to eat that are, you know, aligned with longer lives. That’s a whole other episode. I’ll attack that. It’s a, I’ll share the book I’m reading with you. But yeah, so I’m kind of tweaking the way I’m eating right now and that I’ve, it always challenges me. You know?

Rita Black: I have been maintaining my weight now 40 pound weight release for 27 years and in that time I’ve radically reshifted and deepened my relationship with food. I’ve have a much better understanding of all foods and how they interact in my body. That’s from observing and being a scientist about that. I’ve, I’m really more clear like what supplements I need to eat or take to augment my health and maintain my blood sugar and to keep my muscles good. I, you know, so that’s what I’m saying is there’s never, don’t ever tell me while I’m bored with the food, you’re being boring with the food. And I don’t mean this in a me way. I mean to inspire you, take that word boring away from your vocabulary. Look under the lid and start to get curious about how you can deepen your relationship with the aspects of the, the skills that you are.

Rita Black: Because I really look at weight mastery as developing skills, not being good on something, right? Like not being a good on a diet. So what are the skills that you’re practicing and how can you deepen them? And to add to that idea, I was just looking at my notes, you know, in, in our Money Mastery group, we do a challenge every month we challenge ourselves, you know, we’ll challenge what do we do? We did a measuring challenge to, you know, measure our food cuz a lot of food packaging actually ironically is inaccurate. So we all discovered that when we did the challenge. But it’s, it’s this idea that we’re over practicing a skill that we may not be doing or that we don’t do very often just to sharpen that skill so that, you know, when you measure something and then you stop measuring, you have a much better idea of how much you’re putting in your body and your mouth.

Rita Black: Because our eyeballs are not very accurate judges. And as we discovered, neither are the packages that foods are, the FDA can be or FDA has said that food companies can be up to 25% inaccurate in their calorie reporting and their nutritional reporting. So bear that in mind. But you know, we did that challenge and we learned something from that challenge. We deepened our skill. And that’s what I mean by challenging yourself. There’s nothing boring about weight mastery journey. It’s a hero’s journey. And I know I’m saying that many, many times, but I want you to get it.

Rita Black: Let’s see. Now the other thing that you might be feeling boring about or that the feeling boredom might be coming from is your inner rebel resistance is a cover up for different feelings. So it might not really be boredom, but boredom seems a lot safer than the other feelings that might be going on. We have this inner rebel within us. I know we talk about the inner critic a lot. Well, you know, in our inner rebels, that part of us that wants to say it’s not fair being on a diet, it’s not fair, it’s boring. I wanna be free, I wanna be free to whatever I want. It’s not fair, it’s not fun. I don’t want to, this is, sucks. So everybody gets to do it and I don’t, Right? Here’s what you wanna do is you wanna acknowledge you’re inner rebel. You don’t wanna push it down because it just gets louder. Haven’t you noticed? But you can acknowledge them, say, Oh, okay, you’re not having fun, I get it. Or you wanna be free. I understand. Oh, you don’t wanna do this. I really understand. You know, cuz I think the more you acknowledge that part of you, the more it quiets down.

Rita Black: It’s kind of like a child when they feel acknowledged, they kind of calm down. So once you do that, I want you to take that child, that little inner rebel within you, and I want you to walk with them through to the end. Like, Oh, I don’t want, you know, it’s not fair, it’s not fun. I wanna eat that chocolate chip cookie. It looks so good. Yum, yum, yum. Okay. In a rebel. Well, let’s think about that. Okay, we could eat that cookie, but then, you know, how’s it gonna taste? Oh, it’s gonna taste amazing. Okay, okay, well, how’s it gonna feel after we eat the cookie? Well, you know, maybe our blood sugar is gonna be spiked. Maybe we’re gonna feel a little full, our, you know, feel a little off and balanced and how are we gonna feel tomorrow? How are we gonna feel the, you know, and when you walk through like a binge or when you walk through over eating, when you walk through a food choice or when you walk through a lot of these things with your inner rebel through to the end, and when I call it the end past the fun part, what you’re really doing is retraining your mind to think the long game versus the short game.

Rita Black: Our inner focus, our dopamine center is so focused on impulsive short term gratification. But when we start to acknowledge this part of ourselves and we start to pause, acknowledge the desire, and then walk that desire through to the end point, often that desire for that thing, the color sort of drains out of it. If you so to speak, that rebellious part of us becomes a little more rational and willing to actually get curious about something that would really be fulfilling rather than what it thinks would be fulfilling. And to focus how powerful what you’re doing is not shameful, but how powerful it is. You don’t have to do it. You can say to your inner rebel, you get to do it. You know, you’re really dealing with a childlike part of yourself. So you can talk to that part. Say you really, you’re on this powerful journey.

Rita Black: Isn’t that exciting? It so much of our journey of weight mastery is the way we communicate with ourselves. We can beat that rebel down. We can say shut up, we can try to put it in the closet, but it’s still gonna be there, still gonna be banging. It’s much better to be reasonable and rational with it and to let it have a voice, but to also be the parent and to say, I got that. Yeah, you really wanna do that. Well, let’s think that through. Is that really the best? And is that really aligned with who we are becoming? And often, like I said, that rebel calms right down.

Rita Black: So I hope you didn’t find this boring. I hope this was helpful for you. And if, and speaking of which, if you want some shows from me, well let me know. I, I’m, I’m many things, but I’m not a mind reader. So if you’re sitting here going, God, I wish you would talk about X, Y, Z. Well there is a place in the show notes where you can just say, Rita, will you talk about X, Y, Z? And I will take you up on it. I, it might not be the next episode, but I will read your request and I will do my best to take you up on it. So please let me know and please share in the show notes. Any other comments or questions, just go for it. I’d love to hear from you. Have an amazing week and a very exciting week and a non boring week.

Rita Black: Remember that the key and probably the only key to unlocking the door the way struggle is inside you. So keep listening and find it. Do you wanna dive deeper into the mindset of long-term weight release? Head on over to www shift weight mastery.com. That’s www shift weight mastery.com, where you’ll find numerous tools and resources to help you unlock your mind for permanent weight release tips, strategies, and more. And be sure to check the show notes to learn more about my book From Fat Thinking, Unlock Your Mind For Permanent Weight Loss.

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