When a client is focusing on weight management, I find it beneficial to look at overall diet quality, rather than keeping the focus on the scale. The scale and BMI are unreliable indicators of health. I love to use a bucket analogy to help my clients visualize their needs: each day, a person has one "bucket" of energy to fill. Whether the client is managing their intake through diet, exercise, or medications - or a combination of the three - they can maximize their health by filling their bucket with high-quality energy. This means focusing on adequate protein and carbohydrates to preserve lean body mass and provide energy, along with healthy fats for nutrient absorption. We also discuss how not every day will be perfect, and that a person's overall diet is really a picture of weeks, months, and years, not individual meals or separate days. By shifting the focus to nourishment rather than restriction, clients are able to build sustainable habits that support long-term well-being.
A particular approach to work that deeply ingrained within me was steering a client away from fixating on the scales, to instead establishing a healthy relationship with food. This reminded me of a certain individual dragged on to years of dieting and continuous weigh-ins. We started bringing her attention to bodily feelings associated with certain foods, including energy, digestion, and even mood. Instead of being concerned with calories, we could look at ensuring that meals were satisfying, balanced, and pleasurable. It was really fascinating to both of us that over time, her body composition changed naturally, even though the scale didn't really move at first. This kept her in better spirits, she had more energy, felt stronger, and those became her driving forces. More sustainable changes were made when she let go of the scale dictating her progress.
One thing we remind the clients at our med spas is that weight loss is, in fact, a stair-step process rather than a straight plummet. A lot of times, our clients get discouraged when their weight has not moved in a week or two, or that they've actually gone up a half pound or a full pound over the course of a week. For women, this is very common because our hormones (and weight) fluctuate naturally as a result of our menstrual cycles. For men, they typically stall out when they've approached a weight they've been at for a period of time in the past... and the body looks at that weight as "normal," until the plateau can be broken. When we inform our clients that their plateau is not uncommon, and that staying the course is the best action during their moment of discouragement, they seem to feel better about their weight loss journey and continue on. The dreaded plateaus each of our clients face is typically broken within 2-4 weeks, and the weight loss resumes just as we anticipated!
One of the most effective strategies we teach personal trainers for helping clients with weight management is shifting the focus away from the scale and towards sustainable habits. Rather than obsessing over numbers, we encourage trainers to guide clients in building a healthier relationship with food, movement, and their own bodies. For instance, we tend to emphasise the importance of nutritional awareness - not just in the sense of rigid calorie counting, but by helping clients tune into their hunger cues, energy levels, and portion sizes. We also encourage setting performance-based goals, like improving strength, endurance, or flexibility, rather than chasing a particular weight. Mindful eating plays a big role as well, teaching clients to slow down, recognise emotional triggers, and develop a more intuitive approach to food. Perhaps most importantly, we celebrate progress in ways that have nothing to do with a number on the scale. When clients notice their clothes fitting better, their energy levels rising, their sleep improving, or their workouts feeling easier, those victories hold far more power than a fluctuating reading on the scales. This holistic, results-driven coaching approach is at the core of our PT training programmes, ensuring trainers help their clients create lasting, meaningful change.
In my practice, I’ve found great success by incorporating mindfulness into the eating habits of my clients. This approach encourages them to be fully present while eating, focusing on the taste, texture, and aroma of their food, which often leads to better portion control and a more satisfying eating experience without the need to constantly check the scale. For example, one client, who used to eat meals while distracted by television, began eating in a quieter setting and found that she was satisfied with smaller portions and was able to enjoy her meals more thoroughly. Furthermore, I stress the importance of setting achievable lifestyle goals that are not tied directly to weight. Instead of telling clients to lose a set amount of pounds, I encourage them to aim for non-weight related goals such as improving sleep quality or increasing vegetable intake. This shift in focus helps alleviate the pressure of numbers and often leads to more sustainable, healthy behaviors. By celebrating these small victories, my clients feel more empowered and motivated to continue their journey towards a healthier life.
Achieving rapid and sustainable weight loss without excessively focusing on the scales is created by engaging in long-term dietary changes. By simply substituting sugars and refined carbohydrates with healthier high protein and healthy fat alternatives, you can shift your body's metabolism away from sugar dependence. This transition encourages the breakdown of fat stores, leading to the production of ketones - an efficient and clean energy source. Utilizing ketones can enhance energy levels, facilitate weight loss without the need for starvation, and reduce the stress associated with daily weigh-ins.
Clients in the health and wellness sector often face weight loss plateaus when their bodies adapt to a caloric deficit and exercise routine. To overcome this, nutrition coaches implemented a systematic approach that included personalized nutrition plans, ongoing motivation, and community engagement. By conducting one-on-one assessments of dietary habits, coaches could tailor their strategies to reinvigorate clients' weight loss journeys.