So very broken.

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Replies

  • SMarie10
    SMarie10 Posts: 956 Member
    Think you should read this post - I believe in personal responsibility and doing it for the right reasons. Not trying to be harsh, but really it is up to you.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/278516-friends-can-only-take-you-so-far
  • celestedavis
    celestedavis Posts: 37 Member
    Broken things get fixed! Broken is the best place to be because we realize we can't do it alone. Do you watch episodes of biggest loser or extreme makeover weight loss edition? They are encouraging because you see the real struggle (esp extreme makeover weight loss).

    The one step at a time sounds trite, but it is how any trip is handled. If you were driving you would count short distances, such as 50 miles to the next Ruby Tuesdays, lol. So look at this journey and set a reasonable destination, maybe stop focusing on pounds and change your goal to movement. Maybe if you walk 10 minutes set a new goal for 12 or if you bike for 15 minutes, bump it up to 18 or increase your hills or difficulty. If you focus on increasing your movement your pounds will be affected!

    Maybe another milestone goal would be drinking more water, it takes 3 molecules of water to flush away 1 molecule of fat.

    So rather than focusing on the pounds, choose a different measure, one that you actually can control (since we can't control pounds ie: today I am removing 3 pounds) but make it a measure that will benefit your pounds goal as a side benefit.

    Lastly, I asked God for wisdom on removing my last 40 pounds (I've lost 76 and kept it off for 6 years). He showed me I needed to eliminate gluten and up my exercise so I was burning 4 digits a day, that has made a huge difference! I lost 3 inches and 2.5 pounds in the first week after being stuck at the same place for 6 years!
  • beckyinma
    beckyinma Posts: 1,433 Member
    One pair of pants at a time girl! Find a pair of pants in your closet, the next size down, and make them your goal. Stick with it, one lb at a time, you CAN do it!

    I'm so glad you came HERE TO VENT instead of opening the fridge when you felt frustrated! I too get very flustered when I consider how much I still have to go. I think of the next 1/3 of my battle, and getting over that half-way point and wonder if i'll be able to get past my wedding weight...then I'll still have 25lb that I want to go! But I keep logging, keep venting here when I'm frustrated, instead of hitting the fridge, because typing away 10 calories to make someone feel better makes me feel 10 times better than 700 calories worth of chips and dip would...every time, guaranteed!

    On my profile I have a saying, that I have to read every single darn day: "If the journey you're on is easy, then you're not working hard enough" This is not an easy thing to do, but you have to put one foot in front of the other, and force it, or you're just going to go back to your old destructive habits...

    Remember, small goals, 1lb at a time...
  • SabrinaJL
    SabrinaJL Posts: 1,579 Member
    How am I ever going to lose over 200 lbs? How will I ever be healthy?

    By not giving up. Just by working out regularly and making better food choices, you ARE being healthy even if it's taking a while for the lbs to come off. Hang in there, buddy.
  • mrstudz
    mrstudz Posts: 30 Member
    Its truly is a never ending cycle until you break it.

    The only way you ever gonna be happy is if you get off your *kitten*, get off the computer typing on these forums and get on the treadmill.

    Its gonna take you at least 3 years..might as well start now!!!!
  • TamiLinc
    TamiLinc Posts: 70 Member
    I feel this sometimes too. :( however i looked at your pictures and you new pic looks really good. i can tell you have lost a lot of weight in your face!! You can do this.. and this is why we all are here.. to help each other
  • minnie86
    minnie86 Posts: 187
    I am sorry you are feeling this way. I've felt this way too. I know you are expecting to hear "one step at a time." Maybe I'm giving you the same advise, but remember that no matter what is your weight, you are a beautiful person and you have to stay healthy. First, I would advise you to consult your physician to make sure there are no others problems that might inhibit your weight loss.

    What helpes me is to break up my goal. Instead of saying, I need to lose 50 pounds, I break it up. I'll set my goal to lose 8-10 this month. I break it up further, and say, this week I'll lose 2 pounds. I only focus on that mini-goal. If I don't do this, I'll get so overwhelmed by the time and work it will take me to lose those 50, that I will get frustrated.

    Look for things that motivate you. I love reading sucess stories every day. It keeps me motivated to eat well during the day.

    This week is a fresh new start, you can do this! You are already in the right place. best of luck!
  • DBabbit
    DBabbit Posts: 173 Member
    Sometimes this battle seems so overwhelming. How am I ever going to lose over 200 lbs? How will I ever be healthy? I know that if I was responding to this post, I would say, "One lb, one goal at a time." But, I'm honestly at a point where all I can do is cry. I no longer feel productive. Just sad. :( Not even sure how the next lb is coming off.
    Just needed to vent.

    {{{HUGS}}}

    I weighed in at 200 lbs before I decided I needed to get serious about losing weight. Never mind the fact that I'm in a wheelchair, and exercise for me can be one of two things: (1) excruciatingly painful, or (2) excruciatingly slow. However, I've managed to lose 10lbs, and I have 55lbs. to go. You can do this!

    Yes, it is hard! I'll agree with you there. Now add a "so, what" to the end of that statement. Yes, it is hard, so what! You've decided to become healthier, and that's wonderful! Give yourself a pat on the back, cry if you need to, and then pick yourself up and put on your walking shoes!

    You should be so proud of yourself for choosing to take better care of yourself! Don't look at the final goal. I know I started getting discouraged just thinking about how I was going to ever reach mine. Start by making small changes and choose to make better choices every day. Most of the time, I'm in so much pain that my only option is bed rest. I exercise on the days I can, and I have to push myself because yes, it is hard! But, we only fail if we give up, and I don't want to see you give up. You can do this. WE can do this!

    Instant gratification has become the norm for us, and it isn't going to happen in a day or two, but so what! Keep moving, keep making healthy choices, and before long, you'll be able to say, "I met my goal, so there!" There are so many amazing, supportive people here. You are not alone. xx :flowerforyou:
  • bmw4deb
    bmw4deb Posts: 1,324 Member
    You are not alone, there are many people here for you.
    I was just thinking the other day how christmas is only a little over 5 months away
    it comes so quick!! just think how much further down the weight scale you will be by then
    you can do this we can help, keep going girl!
  • squishyjenn
    squishyjenn Posts: 245 Member
    I started this journey needing to lose 126 pounds. I now need to lose only 89. If you give up you are just going to get fatter and fatter and die a young death. It took you a couple of years to pack on the pounds (as did I) so it will take you a couple of years to lose the pounds (as will I) I don't mean to sound mean, but you got your way into the mess so you just have to get out of it. There is no magic pill to make it all go away unfortunately, so you just have to say enough is enough and not let your weight or your self confidence bring you down further into a dark hole. There is no happiness there. <3!
  • justimogen
    justimogen Posts: 76
    I started out with 145 to lose and 6 months later I only have 85 left. I can only tell you what worked for me. I NEVER, EVER went there in my mind about the big picture.
    ^^^^^^^^^^^ I think this is VERY important.

    Also, as others have also said, you are not alone.

    I am looking at a long road to a 200 pound loss, but I am trying to think of it in terms of 20s. Even my ticker shows 20 pounds at a time. I find this helps.

    Just remember the alternative. You can give up now and look back with regret or you can keep going and make steady progress. When you look back on this day a year from now, do you want to realize what could have been if you hadn't stopped or would you rather look back on a year of hard work and a payoff of pounds lost and health gained?

    I wish you the very best and hope that you are able to overcome the negative feelings and press on...
  • homeport51
    homeport51 Posts: 198 Member
    When I started this program for the umpteenth time, my biggest obstacle was realizing I had to give up my "best friend". They are called comfort foods for a reason. I went through a period of being really angry that I couldn't eat whatever I wanted and be thin. I had to come to resignation and acceptance to move forward and make the changes I needed to make to become healthy.
    I am considerably older than you, but the mind set is the same, I think. If I had done it and stuck with it when I was your age, I wouldn't be dealing with other health problems now. You are a smart lady to take it on earlier rather than later.
    If you want to cry, go ahead. Think about why you are crying though... try to get to the bottom of it and then face it head on. I have to wonder too if there aren't some hormones at work here. My daughter gets PMS and cries at the drop of a hat once a month. Could that be a factor? You can figure it out, I'm sure and address it. Whatever it is, it won't get better by eating bad food or overeating good food. When you get through this (and I mean WHEN not IF), you will be stronger and better for the next time something comes up that would send you running to the refrigerator before.
    Hang in there. Friend me if you would like.
  • Hammock
    Hammock Posts: 37
    There are days when I don't do it right. I know it, but I don't care. Not many, but they're there. The trick is to get back on track by finding the part of yourself that knows this weight loss is possible, and recommit to doing it ...again. For me it is a lot like quitting smoking.For 20 years I smoked at least a pack a day. I tried and tried to quit, but kept going back to smoking. One day I read somewhere that by deep breathing when you feel the urge to smoke, you can make that moment pass on by in a few focused minutes. Doctors say that smokers really don't breath deeply, filling their lungs with delicious air, except when they are dragging on a cigarette. I examined the way I smoked and found that to be very true for me. So whenever I felt the urge to smoke, I sat down or just stayed wherever I was, and started slow, deep breathing following each breath in and out, in and out. While I breathed I repeated a mantra over and over to myself: " I am a smoker who chooses not to smoke." After a bit, the moment passed. Another thing I did was when I felt the urge to smoke, if it was possible to do so, I went out for a brisk walk which would get my heart pumping and my breathing became deep! While walking I repeated that same mantra. This technique worked for me, and I stopped smoking for good 35 years ago. I am still tempted to smoke, and when i feel that pull, I deep breath and say to myself with great pride: "I am a smoker who chooses not to smoke." I keep defining myself as a smoker, for I am, but I choose not to continue that behaviour.

    I think the same technique can work for weight loss, too. When you feel tempted to eat something woud shouldn't, distract yourself from that obsession as fast as possible, because the longer you think about what you want to eat, the more it becomes an obsessive thought until you are compelled to follow that urge. Instead, as soon as you feel that old familiar feeling of wanting the experience of eating those french fries or whatever, immediately start the breathing, following the breath in and out (say the words "in" and "out" in your mind as you breath); after you have the breathing going deeper, start the mantra, also under for breath or in your mind as you breath: "I am an overeater who chooses not to overeat." Plain and simple. hear yourself saying this mantra, and after a few minutes the urge will pass enough that you can ignore it and go on with whatever you are doing. The thing that is so effective here is that you are doing for yourself! You are taking responsibilioty for yourself, and are finding a way to acknowledge that you are an overeater who CHOOSES another way to behave! I think that is so very empowering. Later in the day you will think back on that success and be very proud of yourself! The idea of choice is the crucial component. Even if you choose an unhealthy way sometines (we all fail) you can use this focused breathing and choosing mantra as a way back up to the mountaintop again.

    I have to start doing that for myself again today. Sometimes I find that I have to work hard with myself, but at other times days go by and I am fine. Go figure! Best of luck with this. If it works for you, God bless!
  • RhonndaJ
    RhonndaJ Posts: 1,615 Member
    When I started this it was with a goal of losing 230 lbs. I didn't come in to this feeling all gung ho and optimistic. It was more with a sense of resignation, just one more attempt that I figured I was going to fail, regardless of putting 'one last time' in my profile. I was thinking 'one more time'.

    I'm now more than 55 days in and I'm still at it and I do actually feel as if this will be my 'one last time'.

    For me it's been necessary to do things slowly. I get overwhelmed very easily by change so I'm doing it a little bit at a time and I'm not worrying about the days where I don't do so well. I use them as lessons to see where I slipped up and why, so I can use it to do better in the future.

    I haven't given up any foods. But as time has passed I find myself not wanting things I used to in the past. I find that I can't handle the quantities I did in the past. I crave water more than anything else to drink. Change happens, but it happens slowly.

    For me, even if I don't lose on a particular week, every day I continue to work on this lifestyle change is a success. I'm human, I'm not perfect, but I'm determined.

    I'm one of those that reading other people's successes sometimes depresses me. So on those days I don't read them. I think about my own successes so far. They may be little at the moment, but they're still successes. It helps me to read other people's diaries, there I can see where maybe there are things I could try, or I can see that they have days that aren't so great either and they're still at it. I read the questions and support and I know that I'm not alone in this struggle.

    Something that helps me is tracking. I'm such a geek at times. Spreadsheets. Percentages of weight to lose, percentages of start body weight lost.

    Other things are affirmations. Sometimes I post them here, sometimes I just have them in my head.

    I've broken the loss down to 15lb increments, with a reward after each one. In this I'm taking after my sister and niece, both of who are on here as well, and doing well.

    The big picture is overwhelming and scary. Not just the number to lose, but the amount of time it's going to take. I try not to think about them too much. I just think about a closer goal. Maybe I won't make it, but I plan on being closer to it than I am right now.
  • bootssowhite
    bootssowhite Posts: 93 Member
    One pair of pants at a time girl! Find a pair of pants in your closet, the next size down, and make them your goal. Stick with it, one lb at a time, you CAN do it!
    This is great advice. I have a pair of pants a size down from what I currently wear waiting in the closet. I probably need to lose another ten pounds to fit into them, but focusing on that ten pound loss is infinitely easier than focusing on the 110 pound loss I want to make.

    Set lots of mini-goals. Success breads more success, or at least it does for me, and the more mini-goals I meet, the more motivated I am for the long haul.

    Good luck!

    Cait
  • rileysowner
    rileysowner Posts: 8,321 Member
    I don't know that I have anything better to say than what has already been said. You can do it. Keep your eye on the goal, and remember why you are doing this. I would suggest mini-goals as well. 200 is a lot to look at, but break it down a bit with goals that are both weight and health related. Instead of looking at the whole 200 look at the first 25 or 50. Are their physical things you would like to do, fitness goals you would like to achieve. They can motivate you on the way.

    Another thing that can help is looking at why you ate the way you did. Sometimes it is what your family lifestyle was. That is what you grew up with. Other times it is looking for something in food that you cannot find in it from emotional support to hiding from the hurts and pains of life. From your profile (at least what I can see of it) you believe in Jesus. Realize that if you a looking to food for things food cannot provide, you should work to seeing and experiencing how Jesus provides those things and can by his grace through faith set you free from that.
  • DoozerDMB
    DoozerDMB Posts: 129 Member
    (((Hugs))) First stop looking at 200lbs! Set small goals...start with 10lbs and treat yourself to something (non-food related) for reaching that. Then set the next goal...maybe 25...again reward yourself.
    You CAN do this, but you have to stop looking at the overall picture. Also remember that you can be healthy and still be overweight.
    Love Ya!
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