Wearing a FitBit puts an extra kind of pressure or accountability on the wearer; it something that you need to attend to every day. I walk the aisles and achieve the goal, but the next morning I am back to zero. There is no working ahead or stockpiling steps; it's 10,000 per day, not 70,000 per week.
In reality, FitBit becomes a discipline tracker. It tests my mettle to see if I can find the dedication to get those darn steps in regardless of my schedule, the weather or social plans. I find myself walking to offices more frequently vs. emailing. Cruising the sidewalk outside a restaurant while waiting for my friend to arrive. Doing my physical therapy stretches while moving about the house instead of standing still. And, of course, my dogs think that the FitBit is outstanding!
What can become a motivator and discipline incentive for you? Maybe it relates to something besides exercise: you want to meditate every day or reflect in a journal. Or maybe you commit to writing something: a blog, part of your dissertation, a novel. Or perhaps you want to read an article, paint or knit.
Mr. Rogers said: "I like to swim, but there are some days I just don't feel much like doing it -- but I do it anyway! I know it's good for me and I promised myself I'd do it every day, and I like to keep my promises."
What will promise will you make to yourself?
-- beth triplett
leadershipdots.blogspot.com
leadershipdots.blogspot.com
@leadershipdots
leadershipdots@gmail.com
leadershipdots@gmail.com
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