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Anybody else losing fat...TO LOOK GOOD?

13

Replies

  • Posts: 3,639 Member
    I've been obese since I was a teenager. I never cared to do anything about it until one right before my 28th birthday. I did something I had always wanted to do and bought a motorcycle. Learning how to ride was complicated by the fact that I was actually heavier and more massive than the bikes they make you ride in the beginner instructional courses, and although I passed, I did it just barely and I didn't feel that I was all that safe of a rider as a result. Getting to a normal weight was a must for me if I wanted to become a rider for life. That is and was my sole reason.

    The initial reply to the OP struck a chord with me because they said EVERYONE is doing it for looks. That is simply not the case.
  • Posts: 511 Member
    You make a good point, although your "function"/ "form" comment sounds a bit contradictory; after all, function has a lot to do with the form. Anyway, yes, it is possible that many people just "like the way they look", but something tells me that each one of these people, at least once in their live thought "I wish I were close (if not as) to her size..." What is that called - oh, wait, "being in a denial stage". I am not overweight at all, yet I still want to manage my weight as much as possible. Why? Aside of health reasons and economic reasons (eliminating the need of constantly replacing cloths that don't fit anymore), the psychological comfort of being somewhat in control of how I function as it relates to my size, beats all other reasons; and the older you get, the more limitations you start experiencing, and don't tell me that even though someone "feels good" at 200LB does not wonder about their mobility factors as they age, hence think about their size. You might not have the goal or desire to lose weight, but I bet that thoughts in your head are often more honest than any public statement regarding your "self comfort at your size" - by "YOU" I mean anyone, not specifically you :)

    Ohhh, losing weight has to happen for me -it's part of mobility! And I'm not saying I don't care about how I look or that it sucks to be a smaller size. It's just so secondary to the functionality. I've always been athletic, so I've got an excellent understanding of my motivators. No denial needed.

    As an example, my knees are not okay with jogging when I'm above 200 lbs. So I'm excited about getting back under! I'll drop another pants size along the way - which is nice...but not nearly the motivator that being able to do pacework again is.

    Someone else might be primarily motivated by just getting into the smaller pants size or looking great in a bikini - good for them. That's just not my primary motivator. Won't get me out the door for my workout. It's a fringe benefit.

    There's no reason to insist that everyone has the same motivators. Or that someone who isn't motivated by the same things you are is in denial. Be happy about knowing what motivates you, and use it to achieve your goals.
  • Posts: 511 Member
    Sorry, I obviously misread the tone in your original post then. I got the feeling you were claiming that nobody loses weight without being focussed on improving how they look, and if they claim they aren't then it is a lie. I felt a bit affronted because my primary reason was NOT for appearance. To be honest I don't care if someone thinks I'm vain, shallow, narcissistic or belittles what I've achieved, because I did this for me and not for anyone else.

    This exactly.
  • Posts: 1,888 Member
    Excellent conversation starter!

    I was fat my entire life, even as an infant. My doctor told my mother I was too fat at six months old. She was told to put me on a diet, which she did. It didn't work. I grew up the fat kid who was made fun of because, back in the 60's and 70's, obese kids were the minority. The kids at school gave me a hard time, and my dad was even worse. My mother tried to steer me in the right direction of "good" food while my skinny family ate all the "bad" food because they were thin.

    The more people bugged me about my weight, the worse I felt about myself, as if there were something wrong with me. As a kid, and even partially through adulthood, I allowed myself to have really low self esteem due to my weight.

    Yup, the fat kid. My story is a little different. I wasn't a fat baby, I was actually born almost 2 months early. The doctors were expecting me to be underdeveloped, but to the doctors shock I came out small, but perfectly formed. I was a normal weighted child for the first 4 or 5 years of my life. Then I got fat right before elementary school. I grew up in the 80s and 90s, and I was one of only 2 fat boys in my entire elementary school. Yet, miraculously, I was not bullied for my weight. I can count on one hand how many derogatory comments I recall anybody saying about my weight, even though I was genuinely VERY fat. I didn't catch any flack at home either; my mom and dad, who'd been slim in their younger years, were both fat by the time I came along. My younger sister was overweight, and my youngest brother, who stayed slim the longest, eventually joined us. There was no fat shaming of the kids at home.

    Yet still I was miserable. I became cognizant of my fatness in the 5th grade and it shattered me. I didn't look like the other boys, but even at that age I felt like I was suppose to. I didn't feel right in my own skin even that young. I started my first diet in middle school. Every day I woke up miserable about my appearance. It felt like I was literally living in somebody else's body. I didn't have a miserable childhood because of it; I was intelligent, talented, moderately popular, had friends. But inside I was living a private sort of torment because I simply could not believe that I looked like that, it was just so incredibly jarring. Even violating. That did numbers on my self esteem and self image that has taken me a very, very long time to correct as an adult. And the years I spent fat in my adult years haven't helped either.

    So yes, sometimes kids deteriorate in their self esteem because of external pressures and insults from peers, parents, and even other adults. But I'm a witness to the fact that you can grow up fat, yet still avoid almost all the pitfalls that come with bullying, teasing, and belittling comments, and still not escape unscathed.
  • Posts: 1,888 Member

    Sorry, I obviously misread the tone in your original post then. I got the feeling you were claiming that nobody loses weight without being focussed on improving how they look, and if they claim they aren't then it is a lie. I felt a bit affronted because my primary reason was NOT for appearance. To be honest I don't care if someone thinks I'm vain, shallow, narcissistic or belittles what I've achieved, because I did this for me and not for anyone else.

    I'm not sure how you derived that from the original post (vs some of the posts that followed), but no, that isn't my intention and it's absolutely not the point of this thread. This thread is about people who are villainized for having primarily aesthetic goals.

    The only way I can imagine you got that impression is skipping the entire post and focusing on this one statement:

    " And what's worse is that I think this is clearly a lie. Would most of us really be busting our buts to widdle down our frames if our new bodies didn't visually change?"

    And even in this I never said "everyone", I said I believe "most" have looks play some part in their weight loss. And note I didn't even say that was the primary motivator.
  • Posts: 1,454 Member

    And you really think that's true of everyone?

    My sole reason for changing my ways from 335 lbs was to become better at motorcycling. I really don't care about the whole "looking better" aspect.

    Why, honestly, do you think this is true of EVERYONE? Is it really so difficult comprehend the idea that someone can be so wrapped up in the "function" aspect of things that they don't care for the "form" aspect?

    Yep - I do think it's true of everyone, whether they admit it (even to themselves) or not. Maybe not the primary reason, but it's a piece of it. It's a very personal thing, and everyone has their own reasons for losing weight. And I think there's always a piece of it that is about looking better.
  • Posts: 3,639 Member

    Yep - I do think it's true of everyone, whether they admit it (even to themselves) or not. Maybe not the primary reason, but it's a piece of it. It's a very personal thing, and everyone has their own reasons for losing weight. And I think there's always a piece of it that is about looking better.

    And you really can't wrap your head around the idea that someone may not care about looks at all? Sorry but that is very narrow-minded of you.
  • Posts: 535 Member
    Abso-freakin-lutely!

    Yes, the health thing matters. Yes, I like that I perform better at everything I do when my weight is lower. But when I'm 185-190 instead of 210-215? Excuse the vanity, boys and girls, but this looks goooood. ;)
  • Posts: 355 Member

    And you really can't wrap your head around the idea that someone may not care about looks at all? Sorry but that is very narrow-minded of you.

    Agreed! I have no problem with people losing weight for looks. I do have a problem with all the absolutes being thrown around. Once someone says "everyone" or "all men/women, I stop listening. I did not lose weight for looks. I was brought up to not focus on outward appearance and it stuck. I lost weight because I was 18 and dying! I had a list of health problems that were similar to those my middle aged aunts were suffering from. I work out and eat right now to keep/build strength for my job. My job is very important to me (probably because I co-own it). Believe it or not, some people DO NOT care about looks. I am one of those people. Just as those worried about looks don't want to be called shallow or vain, I don't appreciate being called a lier...
  • Posts: 221 Member
    Uh like, everybody.

    Looking better may or may not be their primary goal but it is definitely somewhere on the list.

    Whoever said it was a bad thing? A stuck up hypocrite, that's who.
  • Posts: 355 Member
    Uh like, everybody.

    Looking better may or may not be their primary goal but it is definitely somewhere on the list.

    Whoever said it was a bad thing? A stuck up hypocrite, that's who.

    No it is NOT definitely somewhere on the list...not for everyone anyway.
  • Posts: 1,324 Member
    For me it's about getting to a fighting weight where I won't have an opponent 4" taller than me. The aesthetic difference between 150 and 140lb at 5'9.5" is not nearly enough motivation for me to work so hard (not that I don't want to look leaner, just don't want it enough to do anything about it)

    You need to be careful with these "everyone" statements. There are women at my gym who lose weight long term to drop weight classes without having to cut so much each time and actually like the way they look when they are heavier. I know it's a rare exception, but "everybody" implies no exceptions.

    That being said, nothing wrong with wanting to be thinner to look better. Just don't assume everyone's the same.
  • Posts: 253 Member
    I have approx 7.5 lb left to lose.

    For me, the lack of stress when getting dressed in the morning, buying clothes, and getting ready to go out is priceless. How that makes you feel can not be a bad thing, and part of that is looks based. If you don't have rolls of fat spilling out, and are not trying to shoehorn yourself into something that doesn't make you look like a hippo you do feel a lot more confident. There is nothing wrong with that.

    Earlier on a guy mentioned looking good naked, nothing wrong with that either. I am still a bit squidgy around the middle but no lights off needed now. Confidence is key and I have that now I have a healthy BMI.
  • Posts: 518 Member
    I am doing this to look better. I am not overweight by any means but I want to drop a few pounds to look better, to feel better about myself, and to feel confident when I go shopping for cute summer clothes.

    There are so many people who say, "please don't tell me you're just doing this to be thinner." That really bothers me.
  • Posts: 3,096 Member
    I think age and maybe where someone is in their life plays a role for how much emphasis they place on "looks".

    For me at age 61 it is more about health and quality of life than looks. That doesn't mean however that I don't appreciate my body also looking better.

    I faced at the beginning of this that I won't ever have a body that one would call "hot"...that there would be excess skin...that not all the damage that I did to my body for years would just disappear with the weight. I accept that.

    If I was younger...yeah...it might be more about the "hot".

    I will look healthier...that is what I am going for...and feeling healthy.
  • Posts: 1 Member
    This is pretty much my ONLY reason for losing weight. Plus I used fitness and healthy eating to replace my smoking habit, and it has worked wonders on my health. Ive already lost a pants size since the first and I am only excited to lose even more. I'm ready for that Beach Body!
  • Posts: 309 Member
    Not really, more towards the health benefits i.e. reduced risk of diseases and to help maintain a positive mood. I definitely do look a lot better while losing it though. I don't think it would of worked for me as a sole reason though because I loved junk food too much and I didn't know how to do it correctly...
  • Posts: 102 Member
    A lot of people have a very good point: you can take people diagnosed with diabetes and heart problems and joint pain and all this stuff, and some of them will decide that eating better for their health is worth it and some will decide to just live off the meds for the rest of their, probably shorter, life.

    But dangle a diet out there that will make people look good and you'll see everyone scramble for it!!!! Humans are doomed to want to forever look good for themselves and everyone else, we judge each other based on physical characteristics before even hearing the words come out of their mouths.

    So somewhere inside, people wanting to "feel good in their own skin" is a core reason for why we all want to lose weight, and I feel like we shouldn't scold each other for it. It's not shallow at all, I feel.
  • Posts: 355 Member
    A lot of people have a very good point: you can take people diagnosed with diabetes and heart problems and joint pain and all this stuff, and some of them will decide that eating better for their health is worth it and some will decide to just live off the meds for the rest of their, probably shorter, life.

    But dangle a diet out there that will make people look good and you'll see everyone scramble for it!!!! Humans are doomed to want to forever look good for themselves and everyone else, we judge each other based on physical characteristics before even hearing the words come out of their mouths.

    So somewhere inside, people wanting to "feel good in their own skin" is a core reason for why we all want to lose weight, and I feel like we shouldn't scold each other for it. It's not shallow at all, I feel.

    SMH... stop with the absolutes. It is not a core reason for everyone. Are people really this narrow minded?
  • Posts: 1,197 Member

    SMH... stop with the absolutes. It is not a core reason for everyone. Are people really this narrow minded?

    Welcome to the internet.
  • Posts: 124 Member
    Can't I do it for both? To be healthy AND hot???
  • Posts: 790 Member
    Well, I sure as hell am not losing weight to look worse. Heck yeah I want to look good! Nothing wrong with that.
  • Posts: 162 Member
    I did it for reasons in this order.
    1) I was constantly in pain in my knees and ankles and I play sports and it got to be too much for me to handle. So it was either stop playing sports (NEVER GOING TO HAPPEN) or lose weight. The pain turned into 2 knee surgerys and potential arthritis in the future if i didn't lose weight and still a big issue from the weight I was carrying. Still in recovery from my 2nd knee surgery which they ended up drilling into my femur to bleed out bone marrow to create a new cartiledge pocket.
    2) Heart Disease runs rampant in my family. I didn't want to drop dead in my 30's.
    3) To look good - yes that was one of the reasons but certainly didn't matter to me more than living longer and not hurting.
    4) To be healthier in genera, reduce cancer risk and maybe having kids in the future.

    So here I am now 113 pounds down and 40 more to get to my goal.
    Everyone is different for their reasons and vanity shouldn't be punished because inadvertantly they are helping their health :)
  • Posts: 1,123 Member
    My reasons for losing weight are as follows:
    1) to look good
    2) to help me get pregnant and have a healthy pregnancy
    3) to ease joint pain. I inherited arthritic knees which is only made worse by the fact that I have 30 excess lbs to carry around.

    I agree... people don't want to sound shallow so they say "no... looking good is just a by-product. I do this for my health" when I'd say atleast 50% of the time the main reason is actually to look good. When did it become a crime?
  • Posts: 45 Member
    honestly, 90% to look good; 10% to be healthier:)
  • Posts: 1,787 Member
    Yep. I'm not even super concerned about "skinny fat" at this point; I figure I'll get to "skinny" first and then decide how important OMGmuscles are to me.
  • Posts: 993 Member
    Honestly, my main motivtion for it is to look better. Of course for myself, but also for others (maybe so I can meet someone). It's a huge part of it, for sure.
  • I am just over the line and labeled as Obese. Never thought I would be obese. Ever since I quit smoking 2 years ago I have gained 24 pounds. Really up setting because I used to think I was fat then and now I'm 8 pant sized bigger. I am going to loose this weight for a healthy lifestyle and to feel comfortable in my own skin. I am tired of hiding my belly, or covering my behind with sweaters and I'm tired of being out of shape. My joints hurt, my feet hurt and I'm only 31. I want to run marathons and be an inspiration to my children that life can be so much fuller if you take care of yourself. So yes I am definitely loosing weight to look better and to be healthier inside and out!
  • Posts: 102 Member
    SMH... stop with the absolutes. It is not a core reason for everyone. Are people really this narrow minded?

    At least back yourself up and add to the conversation so that I know why you feel that way...
    Now your comment just makes me feel like crap.
  • Posts: 292 Member
    I won't lie. My BMI is in the upper range of normal, my blood tests are OK and I don't look bad, I just wanna look awesome. :laugh:
    love this!!! I happen to agree with you..I am working hard to look awesome,and if guys want to check me out I dont care BECAUSE I have worked hard to get to that point..lol..I did show my husband some of the guys on MFP the other day,the before and afters..and told him if he looked like some of them he would be getting a lot less sleep!!! funny,he has been working out daily since then..lol
    edited to add,,I do enjoy being healthier also,I have better lungs then some of the black belts in my TKD class..I think that is pretty cool!! and my horse seems happier,he has suddenly turned into some kind of wannabe race horse..lol
This discussion has been closed.