Have you noticed how we welcome — even demand — change in politics but rarely welcome change within ourselves? In fact, we have well-established systems in place to ensure a change of leadership in our governments after a period of time. What are you doing, I wonder, to change things up just as significantly and regularly in your own life?
If you can’t readily identify a part of yourself that you’ve grown up a bit within the last three months, then it’s time to admit that while you may be leading a busy life, it’s a complacent and stagnant one in the bigger picture. There’s a question that I pose when I speak to groups about Conscious Weight Loss™ and that is, are you expressing your full potential? Virtually everybody I’ve ever asked that question of responds with a No. We all sense there’s more for us to experience, more to be expressed.
Embracing change and growing yourself up is the only way you will ever come to know your full potential in this lifetime. If you’re not investing in these in some manner for yourself right now, start asking — start demanding — why you’re not. And if your body goes weak from your practiced rationalization of why you have to put everything else in front of this, have the decency and the dignity to stop lying to yourself. Then get busy educating yourself on change.
So far, we’ve mapped out how change happens in broad terms. To summarize my last four ezine issues, we looked at:
- Ego and its attempts to protect the status quo by avoiding change of any kind at all costs.
- The Continuum of change that involves many different aspects of your life, each with its own timeline.
- Resistance as a predictable and persistent part of change until new beliefs are solidified.
- Progress as an indicator of change and ways to encourage this through flexibility, adaptability and practice.
Next, we’re going to drill down and examine how brain function affects change. More specifically, we’ll be looking at the different ways your brain processes your experiences and how to apply these insights to support your weight loss efforts.
My feature article for this issue is the first in a series that examines how brain function affects change. Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system. At a cognitive level, it can provide much-needed perspectives and fill in some important gaps for us in how we think and act when it comes to weight loss. Today, we meet your conscious and unconscious selves!
With reverence,

Coach Kath
If you’ve considered individual coaching for yourself but found it to be cost-prohibitive at this time, I’ll be offering a more affordable way of experiencing this process in the near future. If you think you may be interested in participating in pod coaching (small groups of 5-10 people), please send me your no-obligation expression of interest and I’ll send you more details as they come available.
Send your expressions of interest to WCezine@consciousweightloss.com.