Frustrated babbling...
perpetual98
Posts: 90
So I really don’t have a point to this post, other than just to vent a little bit, possibly tell a story, fish for motivation and perhaps gain a friend or two.
WARNING: This may be long. Grab a non-fat frape, a comfortable chair, or perhaps a better idea, ignore this thread altogether.
**EDIT** This turns out to be REALLY long. You probably don’t want to read it.
My name is Eric and I live in Wisconsin with my wife and dog and we have a third daughter on the way in late December. Yay! I love my girls more than anything, and they’re a big reason why I’m trying to lose weight. Again.... For good? I hope. I’ve found myself being tired and lazy when my 8 and 4 year old just want to go, go, go and I want to go, go, go, but just can’t keep up. Will I ever keep up with my kids? No. Do I want to not feel like the slowest part of a glacier? Pretty much.
Here’s me. Just a few weeks ago I cracked the big 4-0 birthday. I have been telling myself the past year that: “I wanted to be in the best shape since high school by the time I’m 40!”
That didn’t happen.
Rewind. High school. Late 80’s. I’m a whip thin kid of around 5’11” who can barely hold up his nylon track jersey. I’m build like a coat-hanger and jealous of the muscles Mr. Salty has. I’ve always had muscular legs, and that is where most of my weight is. Senior year during track season I lost some weight and was down to 137 pounds with hardly any body fat. Fast forward a year to after my freshman year of college (Go Badgers!) and I think I was around 190 pounds, some of it being the “Freshman 15” but most of it being the fact that I filled out. I actually had shoulders and some upper body muscle instead of when I was in high school and it looked like I spent too much time in a food dehydrator.
I was really active back then and one of my jobs around that time was working at a health spa and I worked out quite a bit. I had the classic 6-pack, pecs, and the firm apple posterior that drove the ladies nuts. Well, at least that’s how it went in my head.
Enter real-world. A few years go by and I’m out in the “Oh boy, I need to buy Dockers now” world. This world involves (I’m in my mid-to-late-20’s now) a lot of office chair sitting, shovel-food into your face lunches, followed by a lot of after-work revelry at a local tavern. I’ve decided that it’s a really good idea to become about a pack-a-day smoker too. Good thinking.
One hungover January 1st morning I got on the scale and I was up to 230 pounds. I didn’t really feel or look fat, but I hated that number. Like I mentioned, I’ve always had big legs, so that makes my number higher and people are always surprised when I tell them my weight. So after that eye-rubbing morning I decided to lose weight because I really didn’t want to be 230. Being indestructible and not even 30 yet, I went about losing weight by pretty much not eating. There might have been sparse exercise in there, but nothing major.
This begins my decade long yo-yo weight program.
I think I went from 230 to about 170 in a not terribly healthy way. I was out on the town, trying to impress the ladies (not terribly often it turns out. ) and living life. I eclipse 30 years old and life begins to resemble what life is supposed to once you get out of your “oh my God I was an idiot in my 20’s” years.
My first daughter was born in 2003. I had probably gained some of the weight back prior to that since I had grown up a bit and was acting more like an adult, but looking at the pictures from when she was born I wasn’t terribly disgusting.
Not really paying that much attention to my weight running around after she was born, I’m guessing that I put on a few pounds here and there. The second baby is where all hell broke loose. I’m not terribly sure why, but with The Deuce, I really packed on the sympathy weight. My wife seemed to be always hungry and at some point I had turned into that old guy who says stuff like, “Well, we can’t throw that away” and I found myself finishing her plate, and my other daughter’s plate and probably packed on more pounds than my wife.
And they say that chivalry is dead...
So here’s a life lesson I learned that I thought I’d pass on. Never have a baby and close on a new house within 2 weeks of each other. You’re welcome.
So about a year after we had the baby, my wife has me get the treadmill out of it’s duty as laundry storage and she starts counting calories and working out. I join her, as moral support, and because I need it. I think at my heaviest point now I’m around 265 pounds. Ouch. Pert near double my high school weight. I also get to thank my relatives for the high-blood-pressure that runs in our family and I end up on medication for that. I’ve also had a CPAP for a while now do to sleep apnea, but I really think my wife can’t stand my snoring any more.
Anyway, for me at least, when I put my mind to losing weight, it tends to come off pretty quickly in spurts, with your typical periods where it plateaus. Once we start calorie calorie counting, switching to diet soda and exercising, my weight starts falling off in a hurry. In about 6 months or so (wasn’t really paying attention) I’m down to 195 pounds. I have to buy lots of new clothes, and the most shocking thing to me? I need to underwear and I need MEDIUMS! Yay!
So in fall of 2009 I’m sitting at work and I just don’t feel right. Jaw hurts, pain in my left arm, you know, the typical stuff you’ve heard all your life about heart attacks. They’re not bad, but the whole experience is just weird enough to catch my attention. I chat up an EMT at work and he isn’t terribly concerned, but suggests that I call my doctor. I get a hold of my wife who works at a clinic with our doctor and she talks to him and he tells me to either go to the ER or call 9-1-1. Well, I pretty much take his advice with a grain of salt. I have work to finish up and at that point, I actually feel better. I finish up my work, tell my boss I’m taking the afternoon off and I head up to the hospital. It was my first experience with an ER where you actually walk in and they whisk you away like on the TV shows. Turns out that you just have to mention to the lady at the desk that you’re having heart attack symptoms. They hook me up to most of the devices in the hospital and people are fawning over me like I’m a new baby. My wife comes to the ER and we end up just sitting there for a while as they run tests. I feel completely fine at this point and I tell my wife to go back to work and she does. They decide they’re going to do a chemical stress test on me and shoot some sort of nuclear goo into me so they can monitor my ticker as they rev up the RPMs of my heart with drugs. Right about that time I have what they tell me was my second heart attack of the day. This one sucked. I’m REALLY glad that I was in the hospital for this one, not at home, or in my car driving, or hiking in the woods. Well, I don’t hike in the woods, so let’s take that one off the table.
The ER doctor pretty much says, “Get your wife back here, we’re skipping the stress test and you’re going to the Cath Lab.” I can’t get a hold of my wife, I’m freaking out and I’m in serious pain. I’m hopped up on Nitro, hear comments about how beet-red I am, and they end up giving me morphine for the pain. As they’re getting me ready for the cardiologist my wife shows up and she’s freaking out like me. I have to sign two forms, one for angio, and the other for in case they have to unzip my chest. Now I’m really freaking out.
I’m hustled down the hall after a kiss from my wife and I proceed to lose track of time as I watch LCD screens and listen to the cardiologist struggle to get 4 stents into my heart. I have 2 arteries in my heart that are what he says 98% closed, and 2 that are about 95% closed and those are the 4 that he works on. I also have some that are around 70% closed that he wants to monitor. A few days in the ICU and I seem to be a lot better, and I’m now on what I call my “Old Man Medication” which consists of a blood thinner type drug, blood-pressure meds, cholesterol meds, a beta-blocker and my baby aspirin.
A year or two goes by and subsequent follow ups with the cardiologist (including a stress test or two, which suck. Bad) and things are looking good as far as my ticker is concerned.
During that time though I’ve quit exercising, ate what I wanted, and after a 2-month or so hiatus, started up smoking again. (Naughty, naughty) I slowly gained weight back and it really bothered me, but apparently not enough to do anything about it.
I think I can easily say that I didn’t have a day recently, and perhaps not a waking hour, that I didn’t think about my weight. Slowly over time, I was steeling my resolve to start losing weight. I think the big kick in the pants was watching all those skinny people in the Olympics this year that really threw me over the edge. I had a trip with my buddies from high school planned for the middle of August, and I was determined to have a lifestyle change after that. A few days before I went up north I tipped the scale at 254 and I was smoking 3 or 4 packs per week.
Fast forward 2 weeks to now. My trip came and went (and much fun was had) and my diet/exercise started. I haven’t smoked in almost 2 weeks, I’ve been calorie counting and exercising almost every night. I found the Runkeeper app last summer when I was trying to get in shape but wrecked my ankle and couldn’t do anything for 6 months. I fired up Runkeeper and made an account here at MFP. I’ve been really watching my calories for two weeks, and I’ve walked over 35 miles the past two weeks, usually for about an hour and around 3.5-4 miles. I’m trying to throw some jogging in when I can, but I figured that I’d probably be best to lose some weight first so I didn’t blow out a knee or something. I’m trying to push it, but stay within my comfort zone and not injure myself.
After my trip when I started I was 249 pounds. After the first week I was down to 246. After the second week I was up to 247. *cry*
I really know that I need to stick with it for a while, but today I really hit bottom and wanted to quit. In the past I’ve been able to shed 10 pounds easy right away in the beginning because I figured it was just my extra “easy” pounds that were the easiest to lose.
My wife, bless her, says that I’m probably gaining muscle. I really doubt that I’m gaining any sort of muscle that would offset any loss of fat, but I have had that good kind of “sore” that you get after exercise, so I’m doing something, but I’m guessing it’s marginal.
So I think I’m battling several factors.
1. Age. I’m more of a Summer Chicken now and not a Spring Chicken
2. Not smoking. Perhaps all my work is just staving off the pounds people normally get when they quit smoking.
3. My meds. I know when I’ve had my stress tests, I have to quit taking my beta-blocker so that I can elevate my heart rate. It’s probably not helping things. If I keep having issues, I will speak with my cardiologist.
I assume it’s a combination of a lot of things, but it’s really frustrating and I wanted to babble.
If you’ve actually read this, I’d like to offer you an apology.
Have a great holiday weekend!
WARNING: This may be long. Grab a non-fat frape, a comfortable chair, or perhaps a better idea, ignore this thread altogether.
**EDIT** This turns out to be REALLY long. You probably don’t want to read it.
My name is Eric and I live in Wisconsin with my wife and dog and we have a third daughter on the way in late December. Yay! I love my girls more than anything, and they’re a big reason why I’m trying to lose weight. Again.... For good? I hope. I’ve found myself being tired and lazy when my 8 and 4 year old just want to go, go, go and I want to go, go, go, but just can’t keep up. Will I ever keep up with my kids? No. Do I want to not feel like the slowest part of a glacier? Pretty much.
Here’s me. Just a few weeks ago I cracked the big 4-0 birthday. I have been telling myself the past year that: “I wanted to be in the best shape since high school by the time I’m 40!”
That didn’t happen.
Rewind. High school. Late 80’s. I’m a whip thin kid of around 5’11” who can barely hold up his nylon track jersey. I’m build like a coat-hanger and jealous of the muscles Mr. Salty has. I’ve always had muscular legs, and that is where most of my weight is. Senior year during track season I lost some weight and was down to 137 pounds with hardly any body fat. Fast forward a year to after my freshman year of college (Go Badgers!) and I think I was around 190 pounds, some of it being the “Freshman 15” but most of it being the fact that I filled out. I actually had shoulders and some upper body muscle instead of when I was in high school and it looked like I spent too much time in a food dehydrator.
I was really active back then and one of my jobs around that time was working at a health spa and I worked out quite a bit. I had the classic 6-pack, pecs, and the firm apple posterior that drove the ladies nuts. Well, at least that’s how it went in my head.
Enter real-world. A few years go by and I’m out in the “Oh boy, I need to buy Dockers now” world. This world involves (I’m in my mid-to-late-20’s now) a lot of office chair sitting, shovel-food into your face lunches, followed by a lot of after-work revelry at a local tavern. I’ve decided that it’s a really good idea to become about a pack-a-day smoker too. Good thinking.
One hungover January 1st morning I got on the scale and I was up to 230 pounds. I didn’t really feel or look fat, but I hated that number. Like I mentioned, I’ve always had big legs, so that makes my number higher and people are always surprised when I tell them my weight. So after that eye-rubbing morning I decided to lose weight because I really didn’t want to be 230. Being indestructible and not even 30 yet, I went about losing weight by pretty much not eating. There might have been sparse exercise in there, but nothing major.
This begins my decade long yo-yo weight program.
I think I went from 230 to about 170 in a not terribly healthy way. I was out on the town, trying to impress the ladies (not terribly often it turns out. ) and living life. I eclipse 30 years old and life begins to resemble what life is supposed to once you get out of your “oh my God I was an idiot in my 20’s” years.
My first daughter was born in 2003. I had probably gained some of the weight back prior to that since I had grown up a bit and was acting more like an adult, but looking at the pictures from when she was born I wasn’t terribly disgusting.
Not really paying that much attention to my weight running around after she was born, I’m guessing that I put on a few pounds here and there. The second baby is where all hell broke loose. I’m not terribly sure why, but with The Deuce, I really packed on the sympathy weight. My wife seemed to be always hungry and at some point I had turned into that old guy who says stuff like, “Well, we can’t throw that away” and I found myself finishing her plate, and my other daughter’s plate and probably packed on more pounds than my wife.
And they say that chivalry is dead...
So here’s a life lesson I learned that I thought I’d pass on. Never have a baby and close on a new house within 2 weeks of each other. You’re welcome.
So about a year after we had the baby, my wife has me get the treadmill out of it’s duty as laundry storage and she starts counting calories and working out. I join her, as moral support, and because I need it. I think at my heaviest point now I’m around 265 pounds. Ouch. Pert near double my high school weight. I also get to thank my relatives for the high-blood-pressure that runs in our family and I end up on medication for that. I’ve also had a CPAP for a while now do to sleep apnea, but I really think my wife can’t stand my snoring any more.
Anyway, for me at least, when I put my mind to losing weight, it tends to come off pretty quickly in spurts, with your typical periods where it plateaus. Once we start calorie calorie counting, switching to diet soda and exercising, my weight starts falling off in a hurry. In about 6 months or so (wasn’t really paying attention) I’m down to 195 pounds. I have to buy lots of new clothes, and the most shocking thing to me? I need to underwear and I need MEDIUMS! Yay!
So in fall of 2009 I’m sitting at work and I just don’t feel right. Jaw hurts, pain in my left arm, you know, the typical stuff you’ve heard all your life about heart attacks. They’re not bad, but the whole experience is just weird enough to catch my attention. I chat up an EMT at work and he isn’t terribly concerned, but suggests that I call my doctor. I get a hold of my wife who works at a clinic with our doctor and she talks to him and he tells me to either go to the ER or call 9-1-1. Well, I pretty much take his advice with a grain of salt. I have work to finish up and at that point, I actually feel better. I finish up my work, tell my boss I’m taking the afternoon off and I head up to the hospital. It was my first experience with an ER where you actually walk in and they whisk you away like on the TV shows. Turns out that you just have to mention to the lady at the desk that you’re having heart attack symptoms. They hook me up to most of the devices in the hospital and people are fawning over me like I’m a new baby. My wife comes to the ER and we end up just sitting there for a while as they run tests. I feel completely fine at this point and I tell my wife to go back to work and she does. They decide they’re going to do a chemical stress test on me and shoot some sort of nuclear goo into me so they can monitor my ticker as they rev up the RPMs of my heart with drugs. Right about that time I have what they tell me was my second heart attack of the day. This one sucked. I’m REALLY glad that I was in the hospital for this one, not at home, or in my car driving, or hiking in the woods. Well, I don’t hike in the woods, so let’s take that one off the table.
The ER doctor pretty much says, “Get your wife back here, we’re skipping the stress test and you’re going to the Cath Lab.” I can’t get a hold of my wife, I’m freaking out and I’m in serious pain. I’m hopped up on Nitro, hear comments about how beet-red I am, and they end up giving me morphine for the pain. As they’re getting me ready for the cardiologist my wife shows up and she’s freaking out like me. I have to sign two forms, one for angio, and the other for in case they have to unzip my chest. Now I’m really freaking out.
I’m hustled down the hall after a kiss from my wife and I proceed to lose track of time as I watch LCD screens and listen to the cardiologist struggle to get 4 stents into my heart. I have 2 arteries in my heart that are what he says 98% closed, and 2 that are about 95% closed and those are the 4 that he works on. I also have some that are around 70% closed that he wants to monitor. A few days in the ICU and I seem to be a lot better, and I’m now on what I call my “Old Man Medication” which consists of a blood thinner type drug, blood-pressure meds, cholesterol meds, a beta-blocker and my baby aspirin.
A year or two goes by and subsequent follow ups with the cardiologist (including a stress test or two, which suck. Bad) and things are looking good as far as my ticker is concerned.
During that time though I’ve quit exercising, ate what I wanted, and after a 2-month or so hiatus, started up smoking again. (Naughty, naughty) I slowly gained weight back and it really bothered me, but apparently not enough to do anything about it.
I think I can easily say that I didn’t have a day recently, and perhaps not a waking hour, that I didn’t think about my weight. Slowly over time, I was steeling my resolve to start losing weight. I think the big kick in the pants was watching all those skinny people in the Olympics this year that really threw me over the edge. I had a trip with my buddies from high school planned for the middle of August, and I was determined to have a lifestyle change after that. A few days before I went up north I tipped the scale at 254 and I was smoking 3 or 4 packs per week.
Fast forward 2 weeks to now. My trip came and went (and much fun was had) and my diet/exercise started. I haven’t smoked in almost 2 weeks, I’ve been calorie counting and exercising almost every night. I found the Runkeeper app last summer when I was trying to get in shape but wrecked my ankle and couldn’t do anything for 6 months. I fired up Runkeeper and made an account here at MFP. I’ve been really watching my calories for two weeks, and I’ve walked over 35 miles the past two weeks, usually for about an hour and around 3.5-4 miles. I’m trying to throw some jogging in when I can, but I figured that I’d probably be best to lose some weight first so I didn’t blow out a knee or something. I’m trying to push it, but stay within my comfort zone and not injure myself.
After my trip when I started I was 249 pounds. After the first week I was down to 246. After the second week I was up to 247. *cry*
I really know that I need to stick with it for a while, but today I really hit bottom and wanted to quit. In the past I’ve been able to shed 10 pounds easy right away in the beginning because I figured it was just my extra “easy” pounds that were the easiest to lose.
My wife, bless her, says that I’m probably gaining muscle. I really doubt that I’m gaining any sort of muscle that would offset any loss of fat, but I have had that good kind of “sore” that you get after exercise, so I’m doing something, but I’m guessing it’s marginal.
So I think I’m battling several factors.
1. Age. I’m more of a Summer Chicken now and not a Spring Chicken
2. Not smoking. Perhaps all my work is just staving off the pounds people normally get when they quit smoking.
3. My meds. I know when I’ve had my stress tests, I have to quit taking my beta-blocker so that I can elevate my heart rate. It’s probably not helping things. If I keep having issues, I will speak with my cardiologist.
I assume it’s a combination of a lot of things, but it’s really frustrating and I wanted to babble.
If you’ve actually read this, I’d like to offer you an apology.
Have a great holiday weekend!
0
Replies
-
Stick with it. Your body is holding on to the fat until it realizes it's still being fed. Next weeks weigh-in will be awesome. Make sure you drink plenty of water & eat all your calories. :flowerforyou:0
-
I can completely relate to your frustrated babbling! lol
Today is day 2 of no cigarettes and I have been on a weight plateau for what seems like a freaking year! (although it has really been about 4 months). I also started jogging abnd walking to assist in the weight loss and it appears to have had the opposite effect, or best case scenario, no effect at all (well, except forcing me to quit smoking since I felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest every day I jogged).
I am trying to stay focused and motivated but today is a rough day for me. Hang in there!0 -
I read the entire thing (no apology needed). Can't really relate too much, but I'm trying to reach my HS weight too (it's only 8yrs ago). It's hard. I've only been at this for about a month and a half, but still really hard. I'm sick and tired of seeing that same number.
Can't really say anything else than hang in there. Haven't been at this for very long so I really don't have any wisdom to share. I just hope you don't give up.0 -
Thanks for the comments! I think what I'm going to do is give it a month and see where things stand and not get on the scale before the month is up. Perhaps that will easy the frustration for the time being, or at least delay it a few weeks. I typically have been a Monday morning weigh in person, so if I plan it right I will wait until maybe September 24th to weigh in again. That will be a few days over a calendar month since I started.
Someone sent me a link the other day that said something along these lines...
It takes 4 weeks before you notice
It takes 8 weeks before your friends notice
It takes 12 weeks before everyone notices.
Here's to hoping I can keep it up for 12 weeks!0 -
I enjoyed reading your post. You are a good writer, by the way!
Keep going and keep the healthy mindset. You want to stick around to see your kids grow up and be there for them. And hang out here a lot for all the moral support you can get. You can add me too if you would like? I'm in a similar pickle barrel but different twist and having to make some seriously drastic changes to keep myself vaguely healthy now.0 -
Just keep it up! If you can resist stepping on the scale for a month that might well be a great idea. Also ask the doctor if any of the new meds has weight gain/water retention/anything as a side effect. You have to give your body time to adjust to the new you and your new ways. GOOD LUCK!0
-
I enjoyed reading your post. You are a good writer, by the way!
Thank you very much for the kind words! I've always enjoyed writing, I just never really do it. When I do bust out the motivation, I can generally entertain people and make them laugh.0 -
I read the whole thing too, and I agree, you are a great writer. I wish I had words of wisdom for you, but I am still figuring things out myself. The monthly weigh-in idea seems good, take off some pressure and let you focus on the day-to-day changes in habits.0
-
You did a fantastic job telling your story. I have been having a tough day today myself but reading your post has reminded me that I can stick with this and I can do it. We all can do it. Stick with it and it will all fall into place. Good luck!0
-
I love your story, scares me a bit but it's real and raw.
Please save your life!
Watch, Forkes over Knives and The Beuatiful Truth, both are avaialbale on Netflix's documentary.
I'm 49 in September! My Fiancee is 50 Next March. I believe these movies may have saved our lives.
God Bless!0 -
I looked up those movies that you mentioned. Probably interesting to watch. I might throw them into my Netflix queue. Thanks!0
-
Don't really have any advice but sending you a virtual, non-flirty ((((((((((((hug)))))))))))). Keep it going for your wife and daughters...they need you.0
-
i need friends anyone want to be my friend im nw on here0
-
Had a nice walk tonight. Perfect weather. Hope I can keep it up and am rewarded. Tried throwing some jogging in but the legs said, "easy there chubby."
Baby steps I guess...0 -
Your story is amazing and you should be proud of yourself for the life changes you are making not only to yourself but for your family as well. You are a strong person and can do this!!0
-
I agree with others on your writing...I enjoyed reading it as well.
I've never had a heart attack, but I did fail a stress test spectacularly a few years ago. The doc said that either I had blockages or that an infection thad settled there (I was just getting over pneumonia). I had to have the cath done to rule out blockages. I didnt have any, but I was *kitten* scared. Though not enough to make me lose weight, it did help me kick the cig habit. Now I'm working on the weight.
Best of luck to you!!0 -
And best of luck back to you rudimae!! *hugs*0
-
I will add to those thay say you are a great writer. I have not had those experiences yet, but my entire family has heart issues. I started taking baby asprin in college. Sometimes (usually after shopping when my size was going up and up), I am afraid I am heading for the same issues, surgeries, etc that the rest of my family has had, so I decided to do something about it, so here I am.0
-
Your post is the best I've read here, honest, raw, funny, moving. Unfortunately I have no wise words of wisdom but I sincerely hope you stick with your plan0
-
i read it and would like to ask you to scan my profile, and message me. Ive had two strokes because at a young age, i ate what i wanted, didnt exercise and had blood clots go to the brain.. and at age 24!!! It isnt age, its lifestyle, and i believe we, together can kick this fat in the *kitten*... (opposed to me hearing fat-*kitten*!) lol..0
-
Don't give up EVER!!! Even if you only lose a pound a month. You have to take care of yourself for your three little girls. Period. I am a cardiac nurse and have witnessed first hand time and time again what happens to people who go back to smoking and grubbing after heart attacks. Those stents could occlude again. You could have another heart attack. You could require open heart surgery. YOU COULD DIE. You could even develop congestive heart failure from your heart being so weak from multiple attacks. NEVER GIVE UP! You are way too young and have plenty of life ahead of you.0
-
I know it's hard to keep going sometimes, and we all know the end result is reflective of the effort we put in. But that effort is freaking hard as hell sometimes! What's helped me is the logging, if I stop logging, I get wayyyy to relaxed about what I'm eating! There are also some really great groups here that could aid you in your weigh ins and keep you motivated. I'd set attainable goals, like you said give it a good month before you let yourself get bummed, you're more likely to keep the weight off, when it's done gradually and healthily. Here are a few phrases that I keep in my back pocket when I'm getting a little low, "It's hard to get in shape, it's hard to stay fat....choose your hard" , "Nothing tastes as good as sexy feels"!! Keep on keeping on!0
-
if it helps to know .... my best friend had a triple bypass 2 years ago ..... she couldnt exercise (she was also in a car accident and damaged her back prior to the bypass - the heart issues are mostly stress related from pain etc) and put on quite a bit of weight ... She has since been trying to lose that weight and she is having a hard time .... most of that is the meds ........ they mess you up bad when it comes to losing weight - that being said she has lost quite a bit but it is a very slow process sooooo please dont give up ... it will come off but slower than others on here but it will come off !!!!0
-
I read every word and yes, I'd like that apology now... lol! (just kidding!)
I think you are moving in the right direction. It seems to me that people can get really bogged down in the minutiae of weight loss. So the scale stays in place for a while, or even goes up a few pounds, so you binged and ate an entire pepperoni pizza, so you haven't been exercising for a week. These are just minor bumps in the road. The road itself is long and winding, and there are going to be a lot of times when you wonder why you are bothering and when you will get there. When those moments happen, go sit and play with those girls of yours for a few minutes. Then you can remember that there are several very good reasons right there to keep going and reach your health goals. Not only are you going to give them a healthy dad that will be alive to watch them reach all those important milestones, but you are setting a fabulous example of what perseverance and hard work can accomplish. You do it for yourself, of course, but the reality is that when you do it, it affects everyone around you too.
Keep your chin up and your humor intact. They will keep the wind in your sails while you are on your journey.
Great post, btw. You do write well. But I still want my apology! :laugh:0 -
Wow, thanks for all the encouraging words guys! Perhaps I should vent more often. I suppose that would entail a lot more writing.
So off-topic, I was laying in bed last night trying to fall asleep and this thread popped into my head. I had just done one of my longest walks and I was pretty sore. It was also my 6th night in a row. Typically my Friday nights consisted more of drinking beer, eating yummy stuff and watching a movie or two. Last night I had some popcorn while watching Man on a Ledge with my wife and then walked after she went to bed. Anyway, I was thinking that almost the only people who would read my really long thread and comment on it would be women, since most guys wouldn't take the time once they saw the mini-novel opening post. Must be a gender thing.0 -
You are a great story teller:). Best of luck to you!0
-
Loved your narrative. Keep us posted!0
-
I found your story amazingly well written, being someone who likes to write herself from time to time.
I cannot relate to it, being an on/off ED sufferer (other than perhaps to overeating at times myself), but can suggest just sticking at it, bearing in mind that you need to make this a lifestyle change, rather than a diet, and so keep in some of the foods you enjoy. I hope you get to where you want to be, truly.0 -
I felt touched and inspired by your story. Thank you for sharing it and your journey with us all.0
-
Cool, I had my eye on this app for my phone called Zombies Run that looked like fun. It was $8 I think though so I didn't give it too much thought but this weekend it was on sale for $2.99 so I picked it up. They're supposedly integrating Runkeeper support into it which will be awesome. I'm not sure I will use it right now but at least I got it on sale.
From what I can tell, it's basically a game to help motivate you to run. You go out on "missions" where you have to run x amount of time and pick up medical supplies, etc. There's supposed to be zombies that chase you too and you have to speed up your running or walking or else they will catch you. I haven't played with it yet, but it sounds like it might be neat.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions