Eating one healthy meal isn't hard. It's not even hard to eat three healthy meals in a single day. The hard part is making changes in your daily life so that you start eating healthy every day—and keep eating healthy every day.
If you're having problems staying with your plan, don't worry. You're not alone. You'll be glad to hear that there are plenty of tips and tricks you can use to get yourself back on track and stay there.
If you haven't started a healthy eating plan yet, it may be helpful to read:
Key points
It can be frustrating to start a new habit like healthy eating and then have to stop because something gets in the way—illness, travel, or even just having a bad day. Your goal is to get back in the habit and find a way to make it a routine part of your life.
Remember that you can't create a habit overnight. Keep at it, even if you slip up along the way. It can take as long as 3 months of repetition to form a habit, so every day is a step in the right direction.
Here are three important steps:
In order to stay with your healthy eating plan, you need to make healthy eating a daily habit.
A habit is something you do almost without thinking. When a task like brushing your teeth or eating lots of vegetables becomes a regular habit, it's much easier to keep doing it over the long term. But it takes patience and practice.
A habit is something you do almost without thinking. When a task like brushing your teeth or eating lots of vegetables becomes a regular habit, it's much easier to keep doing it over the long term. But it takes patience and practice.
Your reasons for wanting to eat healthy are really important. Knowing your reasons may help you keep going. What makes you want to eat healthy?
It’s not always easy to make healthy eating a lifelong habit. But taking the time now to really think about what motivates or inspires you will help you stay with it.
Tips for staying motivated
It's easier to stay with a healthy eating plan when you're clear about why you want to do it.
Update your goals
When you first started your healthy eating plan, you probably had one or more big goals in mind, like controlling your high blood pressure or lowering your cholesterol.
Are those goals the same today? Or do you need to change them?
Getting past slip-ups
Everyone has slip-ups. But there’s a difference between slipping up and giving up. Going back to your old eating habits for a while is a slip-up. It doesn't mean that you're a failure.
When you slip up, don't get mad at yourself or feel guilty. Think of it as a learning experience. Figure out what happened. Why did you stop? Think of ways to get yourself going again. Learn from your slip-ups so that you can keep on toward your goal of eating healthy.
For some common reasons for slip-ups, and suggested solutions, see:
Tips for maintaining your healthy eating plan
Remember that healthy eating means eating a wide variety of foods in the right amount:
Feeling guilty is the right response when you let your healthy eating habits slip.
When you slip up and get off of your healthy eating plan, don't get mad at yourself or feel guilty. Think of it as a learning experience. Figure out what happened and why you slipped. And then come up with ways to get yourself going again.
When you slip up and get off of your healthy eating plan, don't get mad at yourself or feel guilty. Think of it as a learning experience. Figure out what happened and why you slipped. And then come up with ways to get yourself going again.
There's something wrong if you've tried a new healthy eating step for 4 weeks and you still don't feel like it's become a habit.
If you would like more information on healthy eating, the following resources are available:
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Last Revised: February 4, 2011
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