Lifestyle not a diet
jihumfeld
Posts: 10 Member
I started this weight loss journey a year ago March 5. I started with the Weight Watchers online system. After about 2 months a friend told me about myfitnesspal.com. What a gift from heaven! I would like to share some of the things I have learned during my 41 pound weight loss journey.
Yesterday someone at church remarked about my loss and asked if I was done. Nope, I've got another 35 lbs to go, and God willing, I will make it. She remarked that I have worked very hard to make this happen. Nope, I really didn't. Instead of finding a "diet" I found a new lifestyle. Yes, I have to count my calories, and yes, I have to exercise, but that is a very small price to pay for the weight I've lost. Have I had to give up some of the foods I love? No, not really. I just have to have them in small quantities.
As a matter of fact, I call my diet The See's Candy Diet. For those of you who don't live in a part of the country that sells See's Candy, replace the name with one that works for you. In particular, I'm very fond of their candy called the Bordeaux. So I buy a pound or two at a time. If I have saved enough calories at the end of the day, I reward myself with one. They are 85 calories each. I take that one piece of candy and cut it into four parts. Then I savor each piece slowly. Of course, I've always read that one shouldn't reward oneself with food, but this works for me. I seem to be a minimum deprivation personality type. So this keeps me on the straight and narrow.
My other favorite treat is mini drumsticks. They are 130 calories each and I can have one. I used to love to eat one of the regular sized ones at the ball park and when I was done, I just wanted to have another. So even though when I'm finished with the small one and I think, boy, another would taste so good, I don't eat anymore. I guess that is something that I've learned. I can eat the smaller amount and still want more, but I don't have to have it. That way I can have what I want and still not blow my diet.
I was in a waiting room at a doctor's office the other week and was reading an article by a woman who had decided that diets don't work. She said she had been on every diet imaginable and none of them worked for her. So she did some research and learned that even when a diet produces weight loss, most dieters can't keep the weight off. So that is when she decided to just not diet anymore and to learn to love herself as a fatty. While I agree that learning to accept ourselves and to love ourselves is important, she still got it all wrong. I can love myself even though I know that I have character defects that I wish I didn't have. That doesn't mean that I should stop working to rid myself of those defects. I feel bad for her that she can't figure out a way to make healthy eating a part of her lifestyle.
What I have learned most, is that this is a journey for a lifetime. It may take me two years to lose all the weight I would like to lose, but what would my life have been like if I wasn't following this diet? Do I get impatient about it taking so long? You bet, but at least I may not have as much baggy skin when I'm done. By doing it slowly my body has a chance to "shrink" back into its former size.
So my advice to all my Mad Hatter Friends, is to take it slow and enjoy the journey of a lifetime.
Yesterday someone at church remarked about my loss and asked if I was done. Nope, I've got another 35 lbs to go, and God willing, I will make it. She remarked that I have worked very hard to make this happen. Nope, I really didn't. Instead of finding a "diet" I found a new lifestyle. Yes, I have to count my calories, and yes, I have to exercise, but that is a very small price to pay for the weight I've lost. Have I had to give up some of the foods I love? No, not really. I just have to have them in small quantities.
As a matter of fact, I call my diet The See's Candy Diet. For those of you who don't live in a part of the country that sells See's Candy, replace the name with one that works for you. In particular, I'm very fond of their candy called the Bordeaux. So I buy a pound or two at a time. If I have saved enough calories at the end of the day, I reward myself with one. They are 85 calories each. I take that one piece of candy and cut it into four parts. Then I savor each piece slowly. Of course, I've always read that one shouldn't reward oneself with food, but this works for me. I seem to be a minimum deprivation personality type. So this keeps me on the straight and narrow.
My other favorite treat is mini drumsticks. They are 130 calories each and I can have one. I used to love to eat one of the regular sized ones at the ball park and when I was done, I just wanted to have another. So even though when I'm finished with the small one and I think, boy, another would taste so good, I don't eat anymore. I guess that is something that I've learned. I can eat the smaller amount and still want more, but I don't have to have it. That way I can have what I want and still not blow my diet.
I was in a waiting room at a doctor's office the other week and was reading an article by a woman who had decided that diets don't work. She said she had been on every diet imaginable and none of them worked for her. So she did some research and learned that even when a diet produces weight loss, most dieters can't keep the weight off. So that is when she decided to just not diet anymore and to learn to love herself as a fatty. While I agree that learning to accept ourselves and to love ourselves is important, she still got it all wrong. I can love myself even though I know that I have character defects that I wish I didn't have. That doesn't mean that I should stop working to rid myself of those defects. I feel bad for her that she can't figure out a way to make healthy eating a part of her lifestyle.
What I have learned most, is that this is a journey for a lifetime. It may take me two years to lose all the weight I would like to lose, but what would my life have been like if I wasn't following this diet? Do I get impatient about it taking so long? You bet, but at least I may not have as much baggy skin when I'm done. By doing it slowly my body has a chance to "shrink" back into its former size.
So my advice to all my Mad Hatter Friends, is to take it slow and enjoy the journey of a lifetime.
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Replies
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I finally found it J!
You have worked so hard to get where you are and I am so proud for you!! IPOU!! I have a sweet tooth a mile wide, along with a potato chip fetish, so I know where you are coming from. I believe we all need to have rewards. Such a good method that is working for you!! I am stoked that you made it to the Hatter page. I hope you look up one post and holler!!! at us on the March posting page. We would love to hear from you.
Gail0 -
I finally found it J!
You have worked so hard to get where you are and I am so proud for you!! IPOU!! I have a sweet tooth a mile wide, along with a potato chip fetish, so I know where you are coming from. I believe we all need to have rewards. Such a good method that is working for you!! I am stoked that you made it to the Hatter page. I hope you look up one post and holler!!! at us on the March posting page. We would love to hear from you.
Gail
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J - I totally agree with Gail - I'm down from 220 to about 175-180 depending on how life and winter and exercise go.... and please join us on the main hatter page from March.... in like a lion with a damn snowstorm headed to the Jersey area... ugh!0 -
Finding what works is for you, I think may be one of the most important steps on this journey.
Until this new lifestyle I also had been on every diet a person could imagine. I had lost 100+ lbs twice. I am sure I lost more muscle than fat now that I know what healthy eating is about. Unlike the past I know this time I will make my goal !!! I have been set free and know that I will not be regaining the weight this time.
As a nation that has an ever climbing obesity rate nutritional and physical exercise classes should be a much larger requirement in education. I see my student going to pe every other day and the lunches are so unhealthy. Last week they served chicken nuggets, mac and cheese, sweet potato fries, rolls, and fruit. Not one veggie and the fruit was rotten so also no fruit. That means they had a small amount of protein and over amount of carbs. They are setting these children up for years of the same battle we are fighting.
No diet can do what healthy eating and exercise can do for you !!!0 -
Thanks for the encouragement. You have been there for me all the way. I can't tell you how much that means to me.0
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Hiya J!
Sent a reply to your message and a friend request...
here is the link to our current month.... just click on it and it will take you to our March topic ) see ya there!!
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1219845-march-comes-in-like-a-lion?page=2#posts-19178774
:flowerforyou:0 -
I couldn't agree more! I've done the same thing...all the diets...atkins, weight watchers, TOPS, you name it and I've probably tried it at one time or another in the past thirty years. It wasn't until I started thinking of this as a lifestyle that it clicked with me. I'm exercising more now than I ever have before and I'm even enjoying it. I don't feel deprived because I eat what I want but in moderation. If I want pizza then I have pizza but I make sure and exercise a bit extra to make up for it. It's a long journey but I'm willing to take it slow because I know that this time I will actually make it. I love the support I get from my friends on MFP. It keeps me going on days when I'm just not "with it." Luckily those days seem to be fewer and farther between nowadays. Keep up the great work! It's a marathon, not a sprint!0
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Sorry I'm so bad at this. Hopefully I'll catch on with time and practice.
Oh my, you have lost over 140 lbs!!!!! I bow down to your prowess. Keep up the fantastic work
J0