Once in a while, people require a little extra motivation or a refresh of why they started in the first place...
Why did you start? Think of the original reason, how much progress you've made. Then envision how the little steps you're taking will get you to where you want to be.
Tell people. Let people around you know, and not a facebook post or tweet. An actual human interaction, to someone's face. Let them know you really want this and why. You are going to maintain focus and accountability better by letting friends and family know. Bonus: get one of them to join you as a workout partner for even better accountability and motivation!
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Hire an educated certified trainer. Make sure to do a little research, check credentials, education, ask for an example workout, past clients/success stories as reference and even seeing them and their progress could show a little about themselves. Although someone's body won't be a perfect demonstration of their knowledge.
Be competitive. Join a fitness blog or get an app and have friends join if possible. Something as simple as joining a rec league or a gym that has a board of individual accomplishments/personal records. Compete in an event to strive for a gold medal, or at the very least your personal best! Psychology research by Dr. Plante proves people that workout alone(control group) said they enjoyed exercise the most and relaxed; but exercising with partners that are deemed high fit, will push themselves harder to keep up. All high fit group participants deem their exercise more uncomfortable, female participants even more so. However, adaptations are made when muscles are stressed. So you can get into exercise and become comfortable by yourself, then get a great workout partner to help push and receive even better results.
Get up and do the warm-up. There's bound to be a day you're just not feeling it. It happens to everyone. My advice, just get dressed and do the (dynamic)warm-up, just get the blood pumping and see how you feel. Usually the first step is the hardest, make it past that and see what happens. Once you get going it's easy to keep it going and once you're that far you might as well finish!
Track your progress. Firstly, train with goals, purpose and a regiment. The Principle of Planning and Systems basically says don't wander aimlessly or go in unprepared, don't just show up and do what you feel like that day or just randomly throwing exercises, reps and intensity together. Specifically plan and follow accordingly. From personal experience doing both, you will stick to it better and show much better progress when you can see what you are going to do, have done and will do each day. You can track by printing out sheets to fill in, using apps or old fashioned writing it all out. By tracking progress you can see what food affects you differently, what exercises your body responded to best and will keep you on track towards your goal.
Post notes. Stick them up where you will see them everyday; bathroom mirror, car dash, fridge, doors around the house and work if possible. Not just one or two, but at least five. You can also write new ones, replace old ones as time goes on. Put dates on at least one; just writing something you want is a dream, putting a date or deadline makes it a goal. If there are dates that means it will expire, meaning you can adjust it, change it or take it a step further.
Buy clothes. Buying workout gear may be a great way to at least spark some excitement to exercise. Shopping for clothes because you are closer to your ideal weight is the best shopping. Buying workout gear/equipment is the most useful purchase.
Appreciate progress. Look back to where you started and see how far you've come. Look at what strength you've gained, how much you've sped up and how your body has adapted. Don't be so satisfied that you give up and end up where you started, but appreciate what your body has accomplished.