"Being a Better Person & Weight Loss"
Becca Tebon
17-Minute Reset Workout - Online Corporate Fitness & Wellbeing Programs??Wellness Speaker/Workshops??Creator: powHERbands Resistance Bands??I Help High-Achieving Professionals Feel Happier, Stronger & ?? Productivity
Hey my friend, is "Being a Better Person & Weight Loss" one of your to 2018 New Year’s Resolution too? Being a better person and weight loss share the top spot as the most popular New Year’s resolution for 2018. Among Americans who plan to make a resolution, 12% report they want to be a better person, and the same proportion (12%) say they want to lose weight. Exercising more, eating healthier, and getting a better job each garners 9% while 7% want to improve their overall health. Six percent of U.S. residents resolving to make a change want to kick the smoking habit, and another 6% plan to spend less and save more money. 30% mention another resolution altogether?.
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Last year, being a better person (16%) edged out weight loss (10%) and exercising more (10%) to take the number-one slot. Seven percent of Americans who made a resolution for 2017 promised to spend less money, improve their health, or vowed to eat healthier. 43%, at that time, resolved to make another change.
Of note, the proportion of resolution makers who plan to look for a better job has nearly doubled from 5% last year to 9% currently.
“With weight loss tying for the number-one resolution and exercise and healthy eating making the top five, health is top of mind,” says Dr. Lee M. Miringoff, Director of The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion. “And, if the past is any indication, many Americans have a good chance at keeping their promises for at least part of 2018.”
Age and gender differences exist. The most cited resolutions among those under the age of 45 are being a better person (13%) and getting a better job (12%). Among older resolution makers, weight loss (16%) edges out exercising more (13%), being a better person (12%), improving one’s health (11%), and healthier eating (10%).
While being a better person (17%) is the leading New Year’s resolution among men, weight loss (15%) is the top resolution among women.
Do Americans keep their New Year’s resolutions? Among those who say they made a resolution for 2017, 68% said they kept at least part of their promise. Similar proportions of men (69%) and women (66%) remained true to their word for at least part of 2017. More men (75%) compared with women (62%) said they kept their New Year’s resolution last year.
But, are Americans resolving to make a change going into 2018? While 56% of U.S. residents are not likely to do so, 44% are. These proportions are identical to those reported last year. Americans under 45 years of age (54%), including 63% of residents under the age of 30, are more likely than those 45 or older (36%) to say they will alter their lifestyle in the coming year.
Complete December 20, 2017 Marist Poll Release of the United States
Self Employed at Health Report
4 年I’ve already been established in the dieting and fitness area of specialization for in excess of a decade and in that period I’ve cultivated a stellar global recognition which I’m extremely proud of. The thing that I’m trying to articulate is that, they devoted the better part of a year revising and testing the 3 week diet plan before they at long last made it open to the public. in doing this, they made absolutely sure that every single thing was covered knowing that absolutely nothing was disregarded. https://goo.gl/8VvnBJ
Transforming Stress, Transforming Lives
6 年The subconscious mind is so important to engage in habit change. Few are those who find how to truly leverage this inner power, but those who do, their lives are changed forever! Thank you Becca for all the great work that you do helping to make a difference. Appreciate you!