7 Life Changing Strategies My Clients Taught Me
I have now been a practising nutritionist and herbalist for four years. As you'd expect I've learnt a lot over that time and have grown and developed as a practitioner.
While I still have the same fundamental philosophy about health, my approach to patients and their health has changed considerably…
Most naturopaths start out with a gung-ho approach to health, only for this to be watered down as they come into contact with the realities of people's lives. However, I was the opposite and started with an overly timid approach to health. While some practitioners could be accused of demanding too radical a change from their clients, I didn't ask enough.
I've always been aware that patients have busy lives. Changing your diet, lifestyle and health, in the context of today's world, can be a big ask. In the western world our diets are getting worse and worse, and while our lives just seem to get busier, we're moving less.
Being overly conscious of people's schedules, I'd ask clients to make small, incremental changes. Stuff that would be easy for them to manage in the context of their lives. Sounds reasonable? However, what I'd find is clients would get frustrated. While I was worried about over-loading them, clients didn't feel like they were getting anywhere and sometimes gave up.
I'm still conscious of the limitations to change that are imposed by people's lives, but I'm now a much more pushy practitioner. I've found you can guide people through quite big changes to their health, as long as you give them simple and practical solutions for doing so.
I've learnt from clients, which has led me to alter my strategies for change and these are the lessons I've learnt:
- Set out blocks of time to focus on your health — it's hard to constantly be thinking about your diet and exercise regimes, so make a commitment to a block of time. This is your time to work on improving your health. I've found six weeks a good timeframe, as it's not too daunting, but you can still achieve measurable change.
- Set some goals for what you want to achieve in 6 weeks — have a think about how you feel now and how you want to feel in six weeks. Be clear about what you want to achieve and be realistic. If you're not doing any exercise, then in four weeks you're not going to be running marathons, however you might be able to walk to the shops without getting out of breath — an excellent achievement.
- Concentrate on one aspect of your health for the first two weeks — it's hard to do everything at once, so pick one particular aspect of your health you want to improve and work on that. I frequently set clients one small nutritional goal in the first two weeks, but place my focus on getting people moving and starting to build a regular exercise habit. It's the quickest way to start feeling better.
- Don't give up — nobodies diet is perfect. We all have good days and bad days. You're going to get some things right, but at times you're also going to stuff up. if things don't go to plan, you haven't blown it and don't give up. Just take a few moments to re-focus and get back on track.
- Keep your changes small and practical — instead of setting a goal of "eating healthily", work out two or three things you could do which would improve your diet. It might be eating breakfast every day, aiming for three different vegetables in the evening, having a healthy snack in the afternoon, or limiting yourself to soft drinks on the weekend. Define your changes and make them do-able.
- Plan, plan, plan — I can't emphasise the importance of this. Many a good intention has been let down by a lack of planning. Schedule your exercise in your diary. Make a shopping list and buy your groceries on the weekend, to ensure you have the good food you need easily available.
- Improving your health is one of the most important things you can do in your life. Don't put it off until the future when you have more money, more time or work gets easier. Act now and you'll have more energy, vitality and also the satisfaction of knowing you've improved your health.
About the Author
Kathryn Elliott, is a nutritionist, herbalist and health educator from Sydney, Australia. Kathryn's enthusiasm for wellbeing through good, tasty and simple nutrition, inspires and guides her clients to great health.
Kathryn is also an award-winning writer and contributes regular articles and recipe columns to a number of national publications. She is also the blogger behind the Limes & Lycopene site, which aims to de-mystify current nutrition topics, cutting through the rubbish and misinformation to provide simple, practical solutions to the question of how to be healthy.





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