How to Chart Your Weight
Charting your weight is a great way to provide motivation and a record of your weight while trying to lose weight, maintain weight, or even gain weight or muscle in the case of a person interested in body building. Losing weight can be challenging and sometimes discouraging when it seems like weight is not falling off quickly. However, with a chart showing the starting point of your weight as well as the progress over time, the downward slope caused by losing weight can be very motivational and encouraging.Things You'll Need
- Computer
- Printer
- Paper
- Pencil
- Colored markers
Instructions
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Select the chart you want to use or draw your own chart. It can be printed from an online resource or made by drawing a right angle on a piece of paper--the horizontal line for the x axis representing the dates and the vertical line for the y axis representing the weights.
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2
Select the frequency that you are going to use to chart your weight. Will it be daily? Weekly? Monthly? If you are making the chart yourself, make the horizontal line--the x axis--according to your decision. For instance, Jan. 1, Jan. 15, Feb. 1 and Feb. 15 for every other week.
If you are making the chart yourself, make the vertical line--the y axis--have the weight range, broken down by intervals of 5 or 10 lbs. per line down the chart. -
3
Write your weight starting point and goals on the chart. This is helpful for motivation. Goals can also be broken down into smaller ones, like weight loss goal in 2 months, 6 months and 1 year.
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Mark your starting point on the chart, find the date on the bottom, and then follow the line up to your starting weight. Mark using a little dot, circle, square, or other symbol that you want to use. Using a color that is different from the chart colors can make reading the chart easier.
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5
Weigh yourself at regular intervals, and mark your chart accordingly, whether it be daily, weekly, biweekly or monthly.
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Connect the dots when each new weight is added, at the end of the chart, or not at all (connecting the dots on the line graph is optional).
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Print or make more charts to use until the ideal weight or goal is achieved.
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