Anybody LOST a lot of weight then GAINED it all back?
edwardkim85
Posts: 438 Member
Got curious by reading about 'success' stories. Are there people who 'lost' 10's, or 100's of pounds then gained a lot of it back or more?
And if so, why?
Is this a pattern?
And if so, why?
Is this a pattern?
0
Replies
-
I lost 130 lbs 4 and a half years ago and I gained all but 25 lbs of it back. I simply started easing back in to my old eating habits and not controlling my cravings. It makes me angry, sad and ashamed but I know I'm gonna lose it all again. I'm tried several times in the past couple of years to eat properly again and lose weight but I keep losing my will power. Not going to happen any more, though. I'd rather not have to wear fat kid clothes.
http://caloriecount.about.com/profile/bryank19770 -
Got curious by reading about 'success' stories. Are there people who 'lost' 10's, or 100's of pounds then gained a lot of it back or more?
And if so, why?
Is this a pattern?
I've yo-yo dieted since I was 13 yrs old and am now 47 because I didn't realise 1200 calories or less..often a lot less was a really bad idea. I ended up with what I'd class as mild bullimia from the low cal diets as a teenager. I couldn't sustain it for a very long time ( a year or so was probably the longest) but not forever. I mainly did Weight Watchers or counted calories by pen and paper back then lol. I'd hate to think of how much I've lost and gained over the years. I haven't lost everything I want to but I have very little to go and am lacking enthusiam a bit since I'm at a normal BMI. At least I've gained hardly anything back though even with Christmas and all my holidays.0 -
So it looks like the hardest part was when you reached your goal weight, you became relaxed and thus, slowly started returning to your old eating habits/life style?(month after month, slowly).
I guess we all can't take our final 'weight loss' goal as a big hurray but as a stepping stone to eating healthy and staying healthy for the rest of our lives.
I wonder what % of people that lost more than 100 lbs ends up gaining back the weight at least once... Are there stats like this out there?0 -
About 3 years ago I lost 35 pounds and was down to 170. I stopped tracking my food completely and didn't work out, and gained it all back +5 additional pounds over the course of a year and a half. Now I'm halfway back down to 170 and I plan on staying there permanently. Never gonna stop tracking food again, it's just not an option for me.0
-
dude-what?:sad:0
-
I lost 40lbs about 4 years ago and gained it all back. I went on a crazy diet. Ate very little and dropped 15 lbs the first month. I was also exercising 2.5 hours per day. It simply wasn't sustainable. I'm learning good habits this time around and hope to keep it off permanently this time.0
-
dude-what?:sad:
I want to see what mistakes people make so that others(including myself) can read it and not make it again.
We rarely talk about weight that people gained back on MFP(only success stories etc).
I think it's important to note that so far, most failures happened through crash diets(unsustainable), returning to old habits, and stopping to keep track of calories.0 -
I lost about 39lbs tracking my food here in 2011. I moved to Montana for a summer job. Then I stopped counting calories, weight stayed about the same. Then I stopped working out, weight slowly started to creep up. Then I got a desk job. Gained everything back except for 3lbs.0
-
I also stopped weighing myself. Bad idea, even if you are not trying to lose weight you should weigh yourself once a month.0
-
After logging daily for over an entire year, I lost 35+ lbs and was pretty much at what I think my ideal weight is.
The doc gave me a clean bill of health and said, "you don't need to do all that work and track calories. Just eat well and exercise like you were."
So, I stopped logging, thinking, "Hmm...maybe he is right. I shouldn't be so obsessive about this logging thing. Do I want to do this forever? Part of me did...but part of me thought I was insane...." So, I gave it up because....I was doing well keeping the weight off and staying fit.
BUT....
A few months into the non-logging, I pseudo exercised and still ate well. Pounds stayed off.
Then the exercise stopped because work got busy...and no one was tracking it/me.
Then the holidays came and I caved on the clean eating.
Now, I've gained back over 10 lbs of the weight I lost. Might not be a lot to some, but it's a lot to me. My pants don't fit. I don't feel as great.
Bad.
So, what I've learned. Just like exercising and healthy eating is a lifestyle change (not a diet), so is logging - at least for me.
Good days, bad days....I logged it all. I may mess up on vacation or a birthday party, but it was logged. It makes me accountable for the oops and get back on track the next day.
I'm just not responsible enough to "be honest" if I'm not logging it. HAHA.0 -
That's exactly what happened to me.... Lost 35, stopped tracking and just eased back into my old habits. Not this time. Going to stay a tracker )0
-
Why does work have to ruin things? I also lost and regained about 40+ lbs because I was working full time and going to school full time.0
-
I've lost 50+ pounds 6 or 8 times. Basically I restrict too hard and eat at a deficit and then I would get into a binge pattern. I was bulimic but I quit purging but never overcame the binge part for 30 years until this year. Most recently, instead of dieting at all I basically decided I was just going to start acting and eating like the healthy end result I would want to be and I would morph into that. And I have been, very slowly. It has taken me 2 years to lose what I used to lose in 5 months and I am very happy about that. I don't feel restricted and I don't need to binge because I am not in a stressful place in life. My problem was not failing to track; it was tracking too much and stressing out about it.
During this period, I have taken a break from any reduction and have maintained for 8 months with no tracking but just making healthier food choices, eating when I'm hungry, and watching my portions.0 -
Okay I'll be honest. On some level I gained the weight on purpose. I am a bartender and I don't like all the sexual comments. I hide behind fat. Then I get sad about fat and I want to be cute and healthy so I lose weight for attention. It's kind of a sick hobby for me that I am trying to get over.0
-
That would be about 85% of all dieters out there who used a "diet program" to do it. They gain back because the program was just that, a program and not a lifestyle that they could live with happily.
A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Okay I'll be honest. On some level I gained the weight on purpose. I am a bartender and I don't like all the sexual comments. I hide behind fat. Then I get sad about fat and I want to be cute and healthy so I lose weight for attention. It's kind of a sick hobby for me that I am trying to get over.
I'm sorry to hear that. People don't realize the damage caused with rude or sexist or unsolicited comments.0 -
I lost 80lbs about 5 years ago. I kept most of it off until last year. I've gained it all back this past year... and then some... because I stopped exercising and watching what I ate. I got really depressed and dealing with some health issues including horrible pain in my stomach due to scar tissue from surgery. I finally have all that under control so I'm hoping that I'll be able to get it off and keep it off this time.0
-
Okay I'll be honest. On some level I gained the weight on purpose. I am a bartender and I don't like all the sexual comments. I hide behind fat. Then I get sad about fat and I want to be cute and healthy so I lose weight for attention. It's kind of a sick hobby for me that I am trying to get over.
I'm sorry to hear that. People don't realize the damage caused with rude or sexist or unsolicited comments.0 -
My problem always seems to come down to shame. I stop writing down food because it's too much food. I stop going to the gym because I feel bad about eating too much food and I don't want to tell my trainer. I feel uncomfortable in my clothes so I don't go out as much because then people will know I've been bad. It seems all very immature but it really is what I have felt before. It isn't valid but it's real.
I HAVE TO track what I eat or I WILL slip up. Rarely is it what I eat, but how much of it I eat. I love to workout so I go, even when I'm uncomfortable. And I tell my trainer everything now, where I might not have before. And I start over, A LOT! The most common problem I have is when I start living my diet and exercise program as just a diet and a program. I have to wrap my mind around the changes I am making becoming FOREVER lifestyle changes instead of a temporary means to a goal. I hate even HAVING a goal weight because I feel like I'm setting myself up for failure.
That's me, my story!0 -
Thank you for your kind words. Fat can be a good veil when you just want to be evaluated for your personality and your mind. But if you've been both fat and not fat a lot, you realize how differently people treat you based on your size. I've had people say things like "You're cutting me off? Did you eat everything in this bar, you fat pig?" or "I'm just about drunk enough to sleep with you" when you serve someone a beer when you're fat but mostly you hear nothing.You're just invisible and that can be comforting, too. When you're smaller, you hear everything, all the time, like you are naked.0
-
I lost about 200 pounds and I maintained it for about 4 months. And them some relationship problems really caught me off guard. And then I started binging uncontrollably to deal with all the emotional pain. It was seriously out of control. I was hospitalized for a month for it. It didn't deal with my particular disorder. Although it temporarily stopped the binging. But it resumed within an hour of being home. I gained 65 pounds within a 4 1/2 month time frame. I felt an immense amount of shame about it. I felt like a failure because I regained weight, and it happened so quickly. But thankfully I had some friends who would remind me, that regaining isn't the end. And that I am still lovable and gained SOME weight, and not all of it back. It happens, and I am DEFINITELY learning about myself from it. The main thing it has taught me so far is to be gentle with myself. And in the midst of the chaos love myself enough, to not neglect my body. I also learned that just because my life feel out of control, that doesn't mean I have to abuse myself unconsciously with unnecessary foods, it's just waste. And I am not waste. I am worth. And so are all of you. Hang in there. Best of luck0
-
I lost around 90 lbs between Feb 2007 and Jun 2008. It was a LOT of work to lose that weight (screwed up metabolism) - was working with a Dietitian and Exercise Physiologist to get there.
However, it was too much work to keep up ... and I just got to the point where I couldn't be bothered any more.
This time I'm trying to keep what I need to do to lose weight manageable (good news is now my metabolism isn't quite as screwed) so that it's more of a lifestyle that I can maintain rather than a daily struggle.0 -
I lost 65 lbs and was back in a7/8 which i havent been in , in 10 yrs and i slowly started going back to my old ways0
-
I lost about 30kg a few years ago, over about a 2 year period.
The crusher for me was returning to full time work with a 2 1/2 hr daily commute. I put on about 10kg, then fell pregnant with twins.
The babies turned 1 last month, and I am now as heavy as I was before I started losing weight the first time.
Time management is my biggest problem, with my days only being sort-of predictable. I am focusing on my diet again, as exercise is not always an option.0 -
Asolutely. It's not because I became lax about dieting at all. It's because I have really strong self destructive tendencies that I haven't learned how to fix yet. I do it on purpose to make myself feel better, but then the opposite happens. Someday I'll get a handle on it. Till then, I'll do the best I can.0
-
I did... Lost about 60 lbs and then had that plus another 15.5 lbs pile on. How?
Blew out a knee at 120 lbs and fit in 2007. Started to gain a little going from Very Active (running 20-30 miles a week) to "in a leg brace with a knee the size of a watermelon" and following surgery and a MRSA infection (hello steroids) the weight just slammed on me. I remember being thankful that I was NOT 200 lbs, although the scale did hit 199.
Recovery for me was really hard. It took about a year before I was walking without an aid since they had to transition from Zero weight bearing on crutches, to partial (very limited walking with crutches), to more weight bearing, then to 1 crutch and then to a cane. So I didn't lose a lot of the weight for a while. It maintained in the 190s.
Fast forward to Summer 2010... I've been running again (with Dr approval) and just did my 1st 5k back since my injury. Felt great, was 140lbs and hitting that "last 10 lbs" plateau... and then I got a pulmonary embolism in the end of July. Following that came panic attacks and I ended up agoraphobic and on anti-depressants by Jan 2011. I regained and did some yo-yo weight cycles. I was off all meds and even with trying to lose weight I wasn't. My Dr said sometimes it can take 6+ months of no meds before you start seeing a difference so I just let it go.
Oct 30,2013 was my "that's it" moment. I knew I was up in weight. Hadn't put batteries in my scale purposely. And something possessed me while dropping off stuff and watering plants for my aunt to weigh in. 209.5 hit me in the face. Decided I wasn't going to keep living like that and started tracking calories and getting things back under control. I'd never been overweight until injuries set in so I'm really not willing to settle for being the person I am now when I Know who I really am inside. So that's my story.
Biggest thing in this is I can forgive myself for the regain and know that a good bit of my problem was outside my control. I stress eat, always have, but I used to have the activity level to combat the extra calories. I had a "on the go" on your feet job.... then started a desk one. That changes a lot. It happens little by little so making those little changes is how I'm going to get my life back.0 -
I think gaining weight and hanging onto it because I wanted to avoid male attention was/is the issue I have. It's a really long story but nasty things happened to me when I was younger. I found being 'bigger' stopped men wanting to come near me. I have spent the last two years gaining tonnes of confidence and now I am ready to shed the weight for a final time. I worked out last night I need to lose 50lb to get to my goal. I'm really excited that I can achieve this in 2014. I've given myself till the summer. I guess the real reason some of us have trouble with maintaining a healthy weight is a little deeper.0
-
I lost 120pds and gained it all back with a miscarriage and then a pregnancy I was afraid to move with. I started eating too many carbs and not exercising. I find it harder this time because I know how easy it came back.0
-
I lost 120 lbs over ten years ago on WW and with a lot of exercise. I maintained this for 8-9 years but did so by restricting myself. I ate enough calories but was so strict I wouldn't allow myself to eat my own birthday cake or have a meal out occasionally. Finally, I got tired of that and started "loosening the reigns" so to speak. This also coincided with me having to ease up on running due to knee issues(probably due to overuse with not enough rest or cross training).
I regained an estimated 30 lbs so not as bad as it could have been. I still kept up with a lot of healthy habits I had learned. I found mfp on January 2nd, 2013 and started relosing. I also started running again this past June. Right now, I have about 5lbs of "fluff" from the holidays to relose and I also plan on going a little lower than I have been maintaining at.0 -
Four years ago, give or take, I weighed 157. Six months ago I weighed 197. And that was just the last time I lost and gained. I've been doing it since I was in my teens. Today I weighed 157 and am going on to my goal weight of 150 and won't be putting it back on. I can't afford bilateral knee replacements and I don't want to have to afford them. I truly believe that by using MFP and changing my lifestyle, not just going on a diet until the weight is gone, I've found the key to keeping it off. :drinker:0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K 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
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K 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
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions