it all happened so quickly that our other 19 month old daughter at the time was actually there in the corner of the room, drawing Peppa Pig (well trying to)
Completely oblivious to the whole situation…
Until she turns around, sees the new baby
It was literally that quick (huge contrast to the first)…
But safe to say, a few sleepless nights have happened since…
And NO one can prepare you for it…
When you come home with a little bundle of joy..
The moment you have been waiting for…
You never quite understood just how much it changes your life..
“it’s just like having a dog, right? It will be fine”
^^ similar but not quite…dogs (especially Labradors don’t learn so quick haha)
BUT..
No matter how hard it is sometimes though…
How tired you are…
How good it feels for your head to hit the pillow and your eyes to drift off…
(Even with my inability to wake up as fast as Mrs Fruci to the crying…)
That disrupted sleep is hard…
But we keep going..
Because we know this doesn’t last forever…
Fast forward now and I can’t beleive both will be in school in September 😮
But isn’t it fascinating?
Just how much we are willing to do…
And push through…
As we know this is a special time..
That won’t last forever..
Yet…in other areas, I can’t tell you how many times I have thought about quitting things…
Giving up.
Why?
Well it feels good to quit.
You get a buzz and a dopamine hit from it.
Simply because there are lots of positives to quitting.
You might get that 30 minutes back that you used to have to use to exercise.
You have no one chasing you up.. 👀
It feels good initially.
You know, like when I would call in sick from a presentation (used to hate public speaking)…
But guess what?
As time goes on..
Things get worse.
We think that if we cover our eyes
Things will go away.
But the problem is just compounding in the background, getting worse.
Which brings us to starting all over again…
As is explained by the emotional cycle of change might sound familiar to you:
Stage 1: Uninformed optimism → you know, when you start something new. You are motivated. Excited.
Stage 2: Informed pessimism –> you start to think ‘this is hard’…”I am not sure I can do this”…<<< bit like a few weeks in to parenthood…
Stage 3: Pit of despair –> you feel low….and look for the next shiny object to give you that UNINFORMED OPTIMISM again
And we are back to Stage 1 and we repeat AGAIN…
That is the yoyo dieting cycle..
UNLESS>>
We make it through to
Stage 4: Informed Optimism –> you accept where you are now. You have that self-awareness. Focus on progress not perfection and although it may seem slower, is actually FASTER because you don’t give up and end up back at Stage 1…
Stage 5: Success and fulfilment new habits are forming. You get a real reward and feeling of achievement …
I will be going over this in a bit more detail inside our Summer Kickstart programme which is now open 🙂
Specifically for women 40+ who pretty much know what to do but need the accountability to do
So they can get fit, tone up and develop a better relationship with food…
If you’d like more info
Reply with “Kickstart” and I’ll get you the details.
I’ll leave you with this…
Change is hard..
But at the same time it is the best thing in the world…
as Albert Einstein apparently said:
“There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.”
It makes you think:
Are we here just to ‘get through it’ or are we here to make a difference and enjoy it?
Sure, it might be hard at the start, but isn’t it hard anyway?
So you might as well choose the “hard” that gets you feeling amazing
Matt