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Archive for September 2011

Lynn Johnston blogs about how to take control of your life 10 minutes at a time using the kaizen approach: http://www.smallstepstobigchange.com

Each week, readers of her blog receive a small, simple step they can use to improve some area of their lives.

She's the author of The Kaizen Plan for Decluttering Your Computer and The Kaizen Plan for Healthy Eating.

Lynn lives in central Texas with her husband. Her hobbies including reading, writing speculative fiction, and cheering on the anoles in her backyard vegetable garden.

Email: kaizenlynn AT gmail DOT com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Kaizen-Plan-Take-Control-of-Your-Life-10-Minutes-at-a-Time/128938320505399
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/TheKaizenPlan

EXCERPT FROM THE KAIZEN PLAN FOR HEALTHY EATING:

We all know how important it is to eat healthy foods, but knowing and doing are not the same thing. Our eating habits are established when we're too young to make good choices ourselves, so we learn to eat what our parents eat. As we grow up, our food choices are influenced by those around us and we might try new dishes here and there, but chances are the patterns are already set by the time we're teens. By the time we're old enough to think rationally about what we should eat and why, we've been in the habit of eating the same types of foods for maybe a decade and a half. And the longer you've been stuck with a habit, the harder it is to break.

The good news is there's a way to make it easier to break those habits. We humans are wired to resist big changes because the risk of losing what we've got right now is high with a big change. But we've also evolved to adapt to small changes almost without noticing, because if we couldn't handle the little day-to-day changes life inevitably throws at us, we would never have survived as a species.

The Kaizen Plan for Healthy Eating takes advantage of your natural ability to adapt to microchanges with minimal effort. Other books will tell you to throw away all your junk food and replace it with foods you may not like yet and might not know how to prepare to your own tastes. The cold turkey approach fails because it triggers the automatic resistance that kicks in whenever someone tries to force us to do something (even if that someone is ourselves!).

I say, leave the junk food there for now. Let me introduce you to some small changes—so small you'll barely feel like you're changing anything. Over time, you'll find yourself eating less junk food naturally, because you'll have gradually trained your taste buds to enjoy healthier meals. You'll start to crave the good stuff because you'll have discovered it makes you feel better and you have found ways to prepare it so you like how it tastes.

In this book, I've broken down the elements of a healthy diet and identified one or more small changes that address each element. You're probably already doing some of the things suggested here. If so, good for you! Please choose the small steps that complement what you're already doing right.

This is not a weight loss plan, although if you implement the changes suggested in this book, you may find yourself dropping excess pounds. If your goal is to lose weight, the changes you make as you work through this book will make it easier for you to adapt to a reasonable weight loss plan later, and will build up your body so it can adapt more quickly to exercise.

This approach is not a quick fix. If you make one small change a week, you could easily spend an entire year improving the quality of your diet. But because those changes happen gradually and relatively painlessly, they'll stick with you.

What is Kaizen?

Kaizen is a Japanese word meaning "continuous improvement" and it's used in the business world to describe the approach of accomplishing things by making a series of small, simple changes that result in gradual improvement. It's the approach Japanese businesses took after World War II to remake their manufacturing industry and turn companies like Honda and Toyota into the world-renowned corporations they are today.

But the kaizen approach isn't limited to business. It can be applied to any goal or project that can be broken down into smaller steps. The biggest benefit of the kaizen approach is that it eliminates overwhelm. All you have to do is focus on one small step at a time.

What is a Kaizen Plan?

A Kaizen Plan is simply a set of small but doable steps taken one at a time. Each step addresses some aspect of the problem you want to solve or the goal you want to achieve.

The effect of a Kaizen Plan is cumulative. Each small step you take synergizes with the others, so life gets better faster than you’d expect.

Each step in a Kaizen Plan has to fit several criteria:

- Simple. A plan consisting of complicated, difficult steps is a plan that never gets executed.

- Short. A change that requires you to set aside a large block of time is a change that doesn't get made. But a change that you can do in a few minutes is much easier to squeeze into your busy schedule. Most of the changes I've suggested can be done in just a few minutes per day.

- Personalized. The most effective small steps are the ones that directly address your needs. Always feel free to modify any of the suggestions in this book so they work for you, or use them as inspiration for coming up with specific changes that meet your needs.

- Affirming. You shouldn't have to change your personality to change your habits. The goal isn't to become a different person, it's to become a healthier version of who you already are.

Her Online Bookshelf is proud to welcome our guest blogger, Lynn Johnston. 


We’re giving away a copy of The Kaizen Plan for Healthy Eating by Lynn Johnston! Read this post and comment (answer the questions at the end of this post) for your chance to win the book! 

Does the Tortoise Always Beat the Hare?

I'm sure you've heard Aesop's fable, The Tortoise and the Hare, in which the swift but erratic Hare loses a race to the slow but steady Tortoise.  

When I was a kid, I found this particular story annoying.  I didn't want to plod through my life like a boring old Tortoise.  I wanted to be fast and bouncy like the Hare!  And I wanted the Hare to win.  

Fast should beat slow all the time, shouldn't it?

As an adult, I've come to appreciate the meaning of that fable.  The Tortoise and the Hare symbolize the two basic strategies that human beings use to achieve a goal or make a change:  innovation (the Hare) and incrementalism (the Tortoise).

Innovation is what we normally think of when we contemplate change.  It's drastic, sweeping change that attempts to replace what already exists with something completely new.  

Most diets are like this.  You throw out or hide all the food in your house that isn't allowed on the diet, you stock up on all the foods you're supposed to be eating, and you put yourself on the new regimen of unfamiliar meals, intending to change your eating habits overnight.  

Most plans for getting in shape are like this too.  You sign up with a gym or buy free weights or an exercise DVD, and you set your alarm an hour earlier so you can work out first thing.

Change through innovation is exciting, and that excitement can carry you through the initial phase of the change.  When you're innovating, everything is fresh and new.  It's also fast; a lot of change is crammed into a relatively short period of time.  You expect to see results quickly when you're innovating.

But innovation is based on the assumption that you're determined to change your habits overnight, that you've got the discipline to follow the new program to the letter, and the mental energy to be constantly vigilant against the old habits, which sneak back in whenever you're tired or distracted.

Innovation can also be disruptive, because the learning curve for innovation is steep.  You may have to drop everything else while you're learning how to adapt to the new process and monitoring yourself for lapses.  Innovation can be stressful.

Because of this, many attempts to change through innovation fail miserably, after a short but intense period of effort.  After two weeks of eating nothing but celery sticks and vegetable soup, the diet goes out the window.  Sore, strained muscles make a second visit to the gym torture, and the third visit never happens.  Your resolve weakens, and you fall back on old habits.


Innovation is successful when the person making the change is highly-motivated.  Unfortunately, this level of motivation can be hard to muster unless you've had some sort of wake-up call.  Your boss threatens to fire you if you're late again.  You have a heart attack and your doctor gives you three months to live unless you stop eating bacon and start eating broccoli.  Your husband refuses to kiss you again until you've quit smoking.  

When your motivation is more along the lines of "Gee, it would be nice to fit into my skinny jeans," chances are you're going to run out of willpower after about a week of dieting.  Because even though it would be nice to fit into those jeans at some unspecified time in the future, it seems even nicer to eat that cupcake with the vanilla buttercream frosting right now.

Does that mean we're all doomed to be chubby and out of shape and forever failing to achieve our goals?

Thankfully, no.  There's a second approach to change that doesn't require a life-or-death, all-or-nothing mentality.  It's called incrementalism.

Incrementalism is the strategy of taking small, consistent steps toward a particular goal.  Incrementalism assumes that you are not a juggernaut of willpower, and that habits formed over a decade or two are not likely to be changed overnight.  It allows you to break your goal down into easy, doable tasks that fit into your current schedule.  It recognizes that the bigger the change you're trying to make, the more likely it is that you'll backslide.

Let's say your goal is to eat healthier.  That sounds like one goal, doesn’t it? But it requires a lot of willpower because it’s really a lot of little changes that you have to stay on top of all the time. (That, incidentally, is why it’s so darned hard to go on a diet.)

The incremental approach lets you separate that big goal into all its little changes and lets you focus on one at a time.

Let's contrast the two approaches:

Innovation:  You could swear off sugar, throw away all the junk food in your house, go grocery shopping for healthy food, buy a cookbook of healthy recipes, and then try to learn how to cook (and enjoy eating) healthier food next Monday. But that’s going to make next week pretty stressful, because you're going to be tackling a new learning curve while, at the same, time, exhausting your willpower by resisting cravings. Plus, you'll have spent money you hadn’t budgeted for, so you’ll feel even worse if you're not successful in sticking to the new diet.

Incrementalism:  Deciding that you're going to buy several pouches of frozen veggie mixes and eat one each day is a simple, affordable change that doesn’t require you to adjust any other aspect of your life.

You could go a step further, and decide that steamed veggies will be the first course of dinner, so you fill up on nutritious food and have less room in your stomach left over for lasagna or dessert. This is a little bit bigger change, but it’s doable. You're not denying yourself lasagna or dessert, you're just arranging the meal in such a way that you're eating the "good stuff" first.

Doesn’t that seem easier?

Of course, you still have a dozen other small changes to make.  But you’ll make them after eating veggies first has become an automatic habit.  Maybe that takes a couple of weeks.  Maybe it takes longer.

Once it seems normal to start dinner with a helping of vegetables, then you can add another small step, like swapping your afternoon M&Ms for a healthier snack, or taking a multivitamin, or going for a walk after lunch.

True, the incremental approach to change does take longer.  But when change happens gradually, it's also more likely to stick, because smaller changes require less motivation and are less disruptive to your current routine.

So the Hare does occasionally beat the Tortoise—when the Hare is seriously motivated.  But the rest of the time, the Tortoise wins the race.  

What would you most like to change about your life?


What small change could you make right now that would get you started on the path to that larger change?

Who says eating healthy has to be boring? A few days ago, I got a book entitled, "The Kaizen Plan for Healthy Eating ", by Lynn Johnston. This book will remind you that there are ways on how you can EAT healthy without torturing your taste buds! On a greater note, this book also covers such an admirable success story of someone who took charge of her own life and made those baby steps into a noticeable positive change.

The author, Lynn Johnston, was diagnosed with fibromyalgia --- a  disorder characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain accompanied by fatigue, sleep, memory and mood issues (Mayo Clinic). She was told that there was no cure for fibromyalgia and she would need to take antidepressants and painkillers for the rest of her life. Instead of just sitting around, Lynn did an extensive research on treatments and holistic antidotes to help herself with her condition. Lynn took her condition as a motivation to improve her eating habits. After four years of slowly improving her diet, Lynn reached a point where she didn't have any symptoms of fibromyalgia at all.

QUICK VOCABULARY:
"Kaizen" is a Japanese word meaning "continuous improvement" and it is used in the business world to describe the approach of accomplishing things by making a series of small, simple changes that result in gradual improvement.  

The Kaizen Plan , like how the author described it, is a set of small doable steps taken one at a time. Each step addresses some aspect of the problem you want to solve or the goal you want to achieve. Kaizen Plan isn't like any other diet plans out there! I was amazed on how she structured her plan for healthy eating. Aside from sharing her health journey, I think it was also important that she talked about certain Psychological blocks that hinders people in achieving their goals. As a reader, that section of the book reminded me that we do have the ability to control these psychological blocks, and all we need is proper self-discipline and motivation.

The 26 steps of this program include mental techniques for building willpower and staying motivated, behavioral techniques that make eating healthy easier, and lots of ways to eat healthy without sacrificing flavor.

SNEAK PEAK:

This book also includes:

- Tricks for sneaking more fruits and vegetables into your diet

- How to train your taste buds to like healthy foods
- Suggestions for treating your "vegephobia"
- The simple technique that makes the food you’re already eating more nutritious


No radical changes, no throwing away half the food in your cupboards, no sugar withdrawal. You’ll create a flexible, personalized plan that gently eases you into better eating habits.

So, if you are one of those people who wants to embrace a healthy lifestyle and clean-up their diet quite a bit... I highly recommend reading this book to guide you in your healthy eating journey! Remember, it is better to take baby steps to achieve a goal, than taking a huge leap and not achieve anything at all!