250.0 pounds. - 0.0 pounds today, - 83.0 pounds overall, - 2.0 pounds toward my goal of losing 10 pounds in January.
I changed my plan a little yesterday, and this morning the scale didn’t go down.
And that’s okay.
Not every day is going to come with a reward in the form of a lower number. That doesn’t mean the day was wasted. It doesn’t mean I did something wrong. It simply means I’m learning how to build a plan I can actually live with.
One of the biggest mistakes people make on a health journey is being too restrictive. Cutting too much. Saying no to everything they enjoy. Trying to be perfect all the time. That approach might work for a short burst, but it almost always leads to burnout or bingeing.
I’ve been there before.
When a plan feels suffocating, it doesn’t last. Eventually willpower runs out, hunger gets louder, and frustration takes over. The result isn’t long-term success. It’s starting over again and again.
That’s why I’m reminding myself of this important question:
Can I still eat like this six months from now?
If the answer is no, then the plan is too restrictive.
This journey isn’t about following a temporary diet. It’s about creating a lifestyle I can sustain. One that allows flexibility, enjoyment, and real life to exist alongside progress.
Sometimes that means adjusting the plan. Sometimes it means experimenting. Sometimes it means accepting a neutral day on the scale and staying the course anyway.
Transformation doesn’t come from punishing yourself into submission. It comes from building habits you don’t want to escape from.
So today, I’m not discouraged. I’m encouraged. Because learning how to balance discipline with sustainability is what will keep me moving forward long after the scale stops being the main focus.
Think lifestyle, not diet.
That’s how progress becomes permanent.
What’s one small change you could make today that you’d still be comfortable sticking with six months from now?

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