Take Charge of Your Weight: Give Up versus Take Charge Talk
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,405 legacy views
Legacy rating: 4/5 from 2 archived votes
Take Charge of Your Weight: Give Up versus Take Charge Talkr
By Lt. Col. Bob Weinstein, USAR-Ret
Discouraging and disempowering talk and self-talk will drain you of the positive emotions you need to accomplish life’s many tasks, excel at work and nurture relationships. You will discover winning, take charge thoughts and talk that will change your way of thinking to successfully lead a healthy lifestyle and manage your weight.
What you say to others and yourself plays a key role in how successful you will be in bringing about positive change. Every word of praise or kindness to others, or to yourself, actually programs you in a very positive and beneficial way.
You know eating properly and exercising are both positive. Right? How do you talk about these topics? Are you making empowering statements or disempowering ones? Are your thoughts focused on the positive or are they burdened by negative undertones?
There are emotions behind everything we say. Emotional energy is a primary source of life energy. Discouraging and disempowering talk will drain you of the positive emotions you need to accomplish life’s many tasks, excel at work and nurture relationships.
Ninety percent of those who lose excess weight, gain it all back within twelve months. Why? Because of their self-talk, or maybe I should say self-deceit. Let’s examine the language we use about eating and exercise with Give-up vs. Take-charge talk.
GIVE-UP VERSUS TAKE-CHARGE TALK
Give-up: Should I have it?
Take-charge: Do I need it? Do I want it?
Give-up: I’ll be successful once I lose those twenty pounds.
Take-charge: I am successful. I am listing and putting in my calendar what I need to do and I am implementing my goals now.
Give-up: I want it all or nothing.
Take-charge: I will take a gradual and long-term approach, one step at a time. I will do what I can do and never give up, because the cause is worthy.
Give-up: I eat when I’m stressed.
Take-charge: I eat when I’m hungry.
Give-up: I can only feel good about myself if I lose that weight.
Take-charge: I accept and like myself as I am with or without excess weight.
Give-up: Exercise means “no pain, no gain.”
Take-charge: I like energetic daily living. It’s fun! It’s nature’s Viagra. It gives me more energy.
Give-up: The diet is in control. I have no choice.
Take-charge: I am in charge. I decide what and when to eat.
Give-up: Food is the enemy. I have to deprive myself and use willpower.
Take-charge: Food is my friend and is there for my enjoyment. I decide what I eat.
Give-up: I don’t have time to exercise.
Take-charge: Exercise gives me energy so I can use my time more productively. Exercise belongs in my calendar, whether it’s for 10, 20, 30 or 60 minutes. It all adds up.
YOUR ACTION PLAN:
Transform something that you say that sounds like “I give up” and convert it to “I take charge.” Commit to never using that give-up-responsibility-talk again and to sticking with your new take-charge-talk.
Please mention the author when citing or reprinting this article.
The author is Lt. Col. Bob Weinstein, USAR-Ret.
Article author
About the Author
Lt. Col. Bob Weinstein, USAR-Ret.
Fitness Boot Camp Instructor, Personal Trainer and Author
Lt. Col. Weinstein, nationally known as the Health Colonel, has been featured on the History Channel and specializes in a military-style workout for all fitness levels on Fort Lauderdale Beach in South Florida. He is the author of Boot Camp Fitness for All Shapes and Sizes, Weight Loss - Twenty Pounds in Ten Weeks - Move It to Lose It, Discover Your Inner Strength (co-author), Change Made Easy and Quotes to Live By.
More info on his books at http://astore.amazon.com/healthcolonel-20
His website: http://www.BeachBootCamp.net
Further reading
Further Reading
Video
The Science of Motivation: What Actually Drives Us
A research-backed overview of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation and how to use both.
March 29, 2026
Video
Learn to Be a Winner — Even When Life Goes Sideways
Les Brown delivers an electrifying talk on building unshakeable motivation in the face of setbacks.
March 29, 2026
Article
Death into New Life
Death into New Life: When my mom, and best friend (Rachel) passed away in 2005, I was left dead with her. In the depth of pain, I never felt or saw anything good in her passing. I took comfort she was happier in heaven, than suffering the slow death of cancer eating away at her, but in the all about me show - I was l
Related piece
Article
Get Inspired with 10 Powerful Norman Vincent Peale Quotes
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale was a Christian pastor and one of the most influential thinkers and communicators of our time. People all around the world credit Dr. Peale and his teachings with bringing happiness and success to their lives. For years Dr. Peale shared his principles at the Marble Collegiate Church in New York
Related piece