Feck the scales.
emmab0902
Posts: 2,338 Member
No I haven't just hopped on them and had a traumatic experience!
Have been thinking and have decided that I am not interested in what those damn things say. (Or their evil cousin the tape measure.)
I have been on MFP for probably a month or so now, and in that time have made some changes. Although my food diary still shows I am not netting 1200 calories, I am eating a lot more and way cleaner than probably ever before, and have majorly cut my sugar intake.
I have also been doing regular exercise - most days I will either do interval training on the elliptical, a 6-7km walk, or a 3-4km swim.
As of last weigh in (2 weeks ago) there was no numerical change.
But I feel so much better. I have managed to halve my beta blockers, am sleeping way better, and have heaps more energy. I have come to the conclusion that these changes have to be having a positive effect, and even if the scales etc aren't budging, I have got to be improving my health.
More and more I realise it's my health that matters. Yes I would like to lose weight and be leaner, but at the end of the day I want to live to a ripe old age to see my children, grandchildren etc. I would rather live to a high number than have my weight get down to a low one.
Even if my weight stays stuck forever, I am committed to these changes I have made, and there is no going back.
Have been thinking and have decided that I am not interested in what those damn things say. (Or their evil cousin the tape measure.)
I have been on MFP for probably a month or so now, and in that time have made some changes. Although my food diary still shows I am not netting 1200 calories, I am eating a lot more and way cleaner than probably ever before, and have majorly cut my sugar intake.
I have also been doing regular exercise - most days I will either do interval training on the elliptical, a 6-7km walk, or a 3-4km swim.
As of last weigh in (2 weeks ago) there was no numerical change.
But I feel so much better. I have managed to halve my beta blockers, am sleeping way better, and have heaps more energy. I have come to the conclusion that these changes have to be having a positive effect, and even if the scales etc aren't budging, I have got to be improving my health.
More and more I realise it's my health that matters. Yes I would like to lose weight and be leaner, but at the end of the day I want to live to a ripe old age to see my children, grandchildren etc. I would rather live to a high number than have my weight get down to a low one.
Even if my weight stays stuck forever, I am committed to these changes I have made, and there is no going back.
0
Replies
-
that is what we call, a non-scale victory (NSV). while you may not have dropped weight, you are feeling better and have a lot more reasons to stand tall.0
-
That's the spirit, it's all about the way you feel.
Regards0 -
That's the Spirit!!! Feck the scales indeed! I'm guilty of jumping on them too often, but I'm still early on in my journey and every little win is a big thrill for me ) As time goes on I'll be timing my weigh-ins further apart, until I've got it out of my system.
Congrats on your NSV, you're doing great!0 -
good for you ;] as you go forward I think we realize more and more the scale doesn't matter !0
-
Im the same this week, i feel amazing, can see and feel where ive lost weight but the scales are being gay!0
-
No I haven't just hopped on them and had a traumatic experience!
Have been thinking and have decided that I am not interested in what those damn things say. (Or their evil cousin the tape measure.)
I have been on MFP for probably a month or so now, and in that time have made some changes. Although my food diary still shows I am not netting 1200 calories, I am eating a lot more and way cleaner than probably ever before, and have majorly cut my sugar intake.
I have also been doing regular exercise - most days I will either do interval training on the elliptical, a 6-7km walk, or a 3-4km swim.
As of last weigh in (2 weeks ago) there was no numerical change.
But I feel so much better. I have managed to halve my beta blockers, am sleeping way better, and have heaps more energy. I have come to the conclusion that these changes have to be having a positive effect, and even if the scales etc aren't budging, I have got to be improving my health.
More and more I realise it's my health that matters. Yes I would like to lose weight and be leaner, but at the end of the day I want to live to a ripe old age to see my children, grandchildren etc. I would rather live to a high number than have my weight get down to a low one.
Even if my weight stays stuck forever, I am committed to these changes I have made, and there is no going back.
Excellent! A woman after my own heart! I do not weigh either. My clothes get too big and they get replaced, I don't need a stupid tape measure to tell me that. Keep up the good work girl!0 -
I also don't weigh very often at all. I am making positive changes to my diet, exercising more often, and feel fantastic for it all...which is what I wanted to achieve. I would love to get rid of 15lbs, but tobe honest, my BMI is at normal range now, so for me, losing weight is really just a bonus at this point.
You have the right idea, I say!!0 -
I am starting to come around to that way of thinking to be honest.
The number on the scale was hugely important over the last few few months, but now I am almost at my goal and have only lost 1lb in the last few weeks (had a holiday in between though).
However my clothes seem to look better and better as the weeks go by even with minimal change on the scale, probably down to all the exercise. Obviously I will still weigh myself to keep myself on track, but clothes and how I feel is what I am going on from now on!0 -
Good for you for realizing the scale isn't the only indication of change! Great job0
-
Having scale trouble as well. Everytime I jump on they say something else and that is with a brand new scale that is supposed to be accurate. And I have decided as you have just to eat as healthy as I can and not pay much attention to much else. Even the calorie count seems flawed. When I go under the 1200 I actually lose weight and when I go over with the wrong type of foods for me (carbs) I stay the same or even gain. I am more and more convinced it is an individual thing.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 421 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.9K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.5K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions