Improving fitness is a performance-based concept. Fitness is 
generally related to improved health and wellness, both physically and 
mentally. Most people associate fitness to lower weight. This is not 
always the case.
 Let us begin by reviewing a definition of fitness:
 "Total
 Fitness is the ability to combine disease avoidance, efficiency in 
everyday life, ability to do desired activities, (e.g. sports, dancing, 
playing with children), healthy mental attitude, and good social 
behaviors, in order to achieve an optimal quality of life.
[1]
  This
 definition of fitness calls for enhancing both the physical and mental 
qualities of life. For a review of how psychological activity relates to
 fitness, see "Do Not Underestimate the Psychological Affects of 
Fitness". The best way to determine fitness is to establish measurements
 that relate to the above definition. Measurements are the best way to 
determine performance.
Why are measurements so important? 
Measurements are the premise for feedback. Feedback links directly to 
improving performance. In a research project conducted by Miriam Erez it
 was found that feedback, "Facilitates the display of individual 
differences in self-set goals on the basis of knowledge of individual 
past performance. Then when self-goals are set, it provides knowledge 
for future performance to be consistent with the self-set goals.
[2] " 
Feedback begins with a study of your current reality, e.g. current body 
fat percent, body circumference. The next step is to create a vision 
that establishes a desired future state. Once this is done you need to 
define the measurements for the future state using the same measurement 
criteria you used to determine your current reality. After completing 
this step, it is easy to compare the two measurements and realize the 
performance gap. It is important to realize that knowing this 
information (knowledge) does not ensure a change in performance. How you
 use the information (monitoring & action) dictates change that 
leads to performance that is more effective.
Many people hire personal 
trainers because of their ability to establish measurements and monitor 
the progress of their clients. Unfortunately, this can lead to 
dependence on the trainer. This is bad for two reasons. First, the 
dependency is costly. Second, it transfers the client's performance 
accountability to the trainer. When the client decides to cease using 
the personal trainer, there has not been enough learning on the client's
 part, to transfer the skill sets of monitoring and action planning for 
continued fitness performance. Consequently, the client often abandons 
their monitoring resulting in non-performance. This often leads to 
abandoning fitness development and a regression back to the previous 
state.
Performance improvement accountability rests with the 
individual. When hiring a personal trainer it is important to make sure 
the trainer's focus is to educate the client on the monitoring process 
and provide them with the skills and tools to monitor their own 
performance. There are several internet and PDA tools available via the 
internet. These tools provide goal setting, body measurements, food 
monitoring, calorie tracking, activity tracking, and behavioral tools, 
e.g. mood monitoring and journals. Monitoring tools establish feedback, 
e.g. calories burned vs. calories consumed, activity calorie 
expenditure, and comparison of mood-to-calories. Individuals who 
establish fitness goals and use such tools have a better chance of 
achieving the self-fitness goals than those who do not.
Monitoring
 and feedback also establish effective performance behavior patterns. 
Once the link between feedback and successful results are established, 
people make the connection between what they did, and the improved 
performance results, i.e. when a person sees a correlation between 
reduced body inches and intense resistance training; they are more 
likely to continue the resistance training on their own. Over time, a 
person who monitors his protein, carbohydrates, and fats soon recognize 
the foods that provide the right balance of these nutrients. 
They then 
instinctively begin to select the right foods and portions that keep 
their nutrition program on track. Monitoring is self-regulated and 
feedback is done on an exception basis, i.e. a person realizes they have
 eaten too much for the holiday and records the data for that holiday, 
sees how much they have detoured from their nutritional program, and 
what they need to do to correct the situation.
Feedback through 
monitoring becomes less cumbersome and frustrating as you move to a 
maintenance program vs. a progressive fitness program. The people who 
sustain fitness and continuously improve fitness always have well 
established feedback-monitoring systems in place. These tools have 
become second nature to them, because of the repetition. You never want 
to eliminate monitoring and feedback. As you reach your goals and 
establish a maintenance program, you will use these tools less, but 
never abandon them. 
You need to find the right monitoring and feedback 
tools that work for you. Everyone has different needs and different 
circumstances. The important point is to find monitoring and feedback 
tools that you will use. Once the tools become second nature you will 
become more proficient at designing and implementing a strategy for 
fitness.



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