Success beyond the scale: my journey to health & wellbeing
epigirrl
Posts: 54 Member
I am a brand new 50-year old (birthday last month), single mom of a 20-year old son, who is on the most important journey of her life! This morning I was reflecting on the past 9 months and decided it was time to share…
I have been on MFP, in earnest, since September 2013 when I started a journey of personal transformation. A series of events over the summer of 2013 helped me realize that I could not live the way I was living anymore, and I set out to make some major changes in my life. My broad goal was to feel fabulous when I turned 50...whatever that might mean. What I did not consciously realize, at the time, was there would be all sorts of consequences (intended and unintended) of these life changes.
What changes did I make? Started kettlebell classes 3 times per week, yoga class weekly, and participated in a local weight loss challenge group for 8 weeks (I won $125 for 3rd place in % of total body weight lost over the 8 weeks). Each class was/is a commitment scheduled into my calendar as a meeting with myself…I informed my family, friends, and colleagues that these “meetings with myself” were non-negotiable. I started weighing and logging everything I ate; changed what I was eating; eliminated diet soda. I also began practicing positive thinking and self-talk…grounded in acceptance and gratitude...which was really fostered by surrounding myself with some new people.
So...here I am 9 months later. I am now 50 years old and have achieved things beyond my wildest dreams.
The consequences: I shed 40 pounds and 50 total inches, lost my chronic back pain, migraines, unmanageable stress, and insomnia. In this same time, I gained strength, flexibility, balance, fitness, health & wellbeing. A few examples: from 0 to 40 regular pushups; from 20 seconds to 5 minutes continuous forearm plank; from 15 pound kettlebells to 12-14 kg (26-31 pound) bells; from inability to touch toes to hands flat on the floor; can now do Eagle Pose.
The unexpected: Unexpected benefits on this personal journey also include new friendships, a strong appreciation for the power of social support (both in person and virtual), growing self-awareness, renewed confidence, boundaries, and a sense of hope, optimism, & serenity that I have never before experienced. All of this has also contributed to me resigning a good job (after 2.5 years) with a great opportunity looming but no official job offer in hand. The offer is coming, and I likely will start my new potential dream opportunity on June 30, which aligns my personal and my professional. AND, I am now in an intimate relationship (still relatively new…only 4 months) after 18 years of remaining single by choice.
There is much uncertainty with so much change and newness, but I believe that everything will unfold as it is intended. With my new habits/lifestyle, new tools for taking care of myself, my sense of purpose and wellbeing, and support of new friends in the real world AND on MFP...I can handle anything this next phase of my journey reveals. I am still a work in progress, but I feel better than I have in decades...if ever.
Cheers to all of you on your journey’s to health & wellbeing.
I have been on MFP, in earnest, since September 2013 when I started a journey of personal transformation. A series of events over the summer of 2013 helped me realize that I could not live the way I was living anymore, and I set out to make some major changes in my life. My broad goal was to feel fabulous when I turned 50...whatever that might mean. What I did not consciously realize, at the time, was there would be all sorts of consequences (intended and unintended) of these life changes.
What changes did I make? Started kettlebell classes 3 times per week, yoga class weekly, and participated in a local weight loss challenge group for 8 weeks (I won $125 for 3rd place in % of total body weight lost over the 8 weeks). Each class was/is a commitment scheduled into my calendar as a meeting with myself…I informed my family, friends, and colleagues that these “meetings with myself” were non-negotiable. I started weighing and logging everything I ate; changed what I was eating; eliminated diet soda. I also began practicing positive thinking and self-talk…grounded in acceptance and gratitude...which was really fostered by surrounding myself with some new people.
So...here I am 9 months later. I am now 50 years old and have achieved things beyond my wildest dreams.
The consequences: I shed 40 pounds and 50 total inches, lost my chronic back pain, migraines, unmanageable stress, and insomnia. In this same time, I gained strength, flexibility, balance, fitness, health & wellbeing. A few examples: from 0 to 40 regular pushups; from 20 seconds to 5 minutes continuous forearm plank; from 15 pound kettlebells to 12-14 kg (26-31 pound) bells; from inability to touch toes to hands flat on the floor; can now do Eagle Pose.
The unexpected: Unexpected benefits on this personal journey also include new friendships, a strong appreciation for the power of social support (both in person and virtual), growing self-awareness, renewed confidence, boundaries, and a sense of hope, optimism, & serenity that I have never before experienced. All of this has also contributed to me resigning a good job (after 2.5 years) with a great opportunity looming but no official job offer in hand. The offer is coming, and I likely will start my new potential dream opportunity on June 30, which aligns my personal and my professional. AND, I am now in an intimate relationship (still relatively new…only 4 months) after 18 years of remaining single by choice.
There is much uncertainty with so much change and newness, but I believe that everything will unfold as it is intended. With my new habits/lifestyle, new tools for taking care of myself, my sense of purpose and wellbeing, and support of new friends in the real world AND on MFP...I can handle anything this next phase of my journey reveals. I am still a work in progress, but I feel better than I have in decades...if ever.
Cheers to all of you on your journey’s to health & wellbeing.
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Replies
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You look beautiful! Congratulations on all your resulting successes!0
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Wow! Thank you so much for posting this. You look amazing and this is great motivation for me since I'm 51 and just over half way through my journey. It doesn't get easier when you get older but it does get more rewarding!0
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You look beautiful! Congratulations on all your resulting successes!Wow! Thank you so much for posting this. You look amazing and this is great motivation for me since I'm 51 and just over half way through my journey. It doesn't get easier when you get older but it does get more rewarding!
Thanks HailDodger and NextPage. I feel beautiful and feel amazing too!0 -
I've been on my own "journey" since last October. While I have lost weight, nothing quite as positive and wonderful has happened to me....and I'd like it to! You speak of "new friends" - where did you find/meet them? The older I get the harder I find it is to reach out and when I do reach out, it seems like it is not well received. Positive thinking and self-talk - did you read self help books? Talk to a therapist? Take some kind of class for this? Do you have any tips or "how to" advice?
I'd love to experience at least a little bit of the kind of joy you seem to be experiencing but I am so happy for your "success beyond the scale!"0 -
You are my hero! You look terrific and I am so happy for you and just a little jealous! I am need to take a page from your book and just commit already! Congratulations on your success and wonderful life events.0
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Congratulations on all your successes !! You look a lot happier now than you did, and you don't look 50 at all.
I was 50 last year, and was 142 lbs, which was the lowest I had been for many many years, and even though my dad had just passed away the week before and I was very sad about that - I had a wonderful birthday with my friends and family and felt, slim, sexy and glad that I had decided the year before to start this journey from 215 lb.
I am still 142, but trying to carry on to reach my target of 135,
Congratulations again and good luck for the future.0 -
Wow!! You look amazing and soooo young. Here's to a bright future ahead :drinker:0
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Thanks so much for sharing your journey! I'm on a journey to do the same for my 45th birthday. In my case, the job change came first, and I feel like I am slowly getting my life back. You look so beautiful! Enjoy every moment!0
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I've been on my own "journey" since last October. While I have lost weight, nothing quite as positive and wonderful has happened to me....and I'd like it to! You speak of "new friends" - where did you find/meet them? The older I get the harder I find it is to reach out and when I do reach out, it seems like it is not well received. Positive thinking and self-talk - did you read self help books? Talk to a therapist? Take some kind of class for this? Do you have any tips or "how to" advice?
I'd love to experience at least a little bit of the kind of joy you seem to be experiencing but I am so happy for your "success beyond the scale!"
My biggest secret is that I found a path that worked for me. In other words, I looked for things that spoke to me...not what others told me I "needed" to do. I wanted to lose weight, but I also wanted to feel more inspired about life. So, I tried a variety of things [many through the local community education programs, which are cheap and easy to get to] and stuck with what felt right for me.
In terms of new friends, those have come from some of the new activities...the weight loss challenge, the kettlebell class, and some mindfulness and mind-body workshops that I have attended. In terms of the positive self-talk, a lot of this comes from books and lectures. But I then take quotes that resonate with me, print them in large font, and hang them up in places that I will see them frequently. I read them daily. I carve out time (even 5 minutes) to meditate/contemplate/remind myself why it is important. That way, when I run into difficulty during the day...I can draw on those thoughts and remind myself what I need to do.
To be clear...my life is not perfect. I still have difficult days. I run into challenges that make me feel like a failure. I had one day where I started the day so profoundly sad that I pulled into the parking lot at work (my former job) and sat there and cried for 15 minutes. But then I thought about how grateful I was that I feel that deeply and how important it is to sometimes feel really bad in order to feel really good. And I realized that while I was having a lot of success, this was a reality check that it is all still a work in progress. I had another day with a proposal deadline where my colleague had been called out of town on a family emergency. All of the work for this proposal, dealing with mother's declining health and cognitive state, the fact that I had not heard from my guy in 2 days, and waiting to hear about acceptance for a fellowship that was a key to my immediate future plans had my anxiety at a peak level that resulted in a panic attack (which I had not had in over 20 years). Long story short: It was a really challenging day...and it actually took me a good 10 days, several conversations with close friends, and many tears to get myself back on track. But through that all, I never quit logging my food, never stopped going to kettlebell or yoga classes, never stopped reading MY motivational quotes. Those were tools that I used daily that helped me keep going.
One person's work that I have found particularly inspiring lately is Kelly McGonigal. She has youtube interviews, a TED talk, and her book The Willpower Instinct. I had the great fortune to also hear her speak live and to attend a workshop she conducted on yoga for pain. Another book is Tom Rath's Eat, Move, Sleep.
Best wishes to you on finding what speaks to you. And good luck on your continued journey.0 -
Thanks for posting about your journey. This is a great reminder to look beyond the scale and focus on the other positive changes in our journeys.0
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you feel great and it shows! you look happy. wtg!!0
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Eagle pose!!!!! WOW!!! :flowerforyou:0
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Wow!!! What a powerful transformation you have made! Amazing and awesome and inspiring! Congrats, and I am very happy for you!!0
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You look fabulous! Thank you for sharing, it has confirmed for me why I'm doing this. It's not all about the number on the scale.0
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Great story. Amazing how much has changed for you in less than a year.0
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Thank you all for your kind words and support!!
I had been asked to share my story several times in "real-life", so it seemed worthwhile to share it here as well.0 -
Congrats on your story, that is amazing!0
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Great Story thanks for Sharing and congratulaitons0
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Motivation! Great job and you look amazing. I just started kettle bell Friday and have gone twice. Right on time for me and so encouraging from your story.0
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Thanks, all!Motivation! Great job and you look amazing. I just started kettle bell Friday and have gone twice. Right on time for me and so encouraging from your story.
Just curious how the kettlebells are going for you, rubbie78. Some of my friends tease me as I often refer to kettlebells as my higher power. Hard work...but so worth it from a physical fitness and stress reduction standpoint. Keep it up and good luck on your journey.0 -
You are awesome.
Thank you so much for sharing your story.
You look great!
I love all of the additional things that you've gained while getting healthier physically.
congrats to you and good luck on your continued growth!
You rock.0 -
You look amazing at 50!0
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Congrats and Thank You for the encouragement . . . Woo Hoo!!!!!!0
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I love everything about this post!0
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I'm 40 and although I have a way to go yet, I was so connected with your story. I've been working to reprogram a lot of negative self-talk and I have been lifting weights - barbell type weights . The other day I ran my first 5k straight. When I started in January, I was struggling with 5 pound dumbbells and was out of breath running up a flight of steps. Finding my strength has been so liberating and empowering - and like you I had to focus on welcoming health into my life on all levels. I feel an inner peace with this process now that I never did the first time I just "lost weight".
This time I am focused fully on what I am gaining and I am blowing myself away with what we are capable of when we get out of our own way! Putting that inner critic on ice was critical for me. Every time I would struggle I would start to remember being picked on by gym teachers growing up for being a weakling, or I'd replay the verbal abuse I took from my dad over the years - "stupid" "lazy" etc. and none of those things are true - but they sure can be a great excuse to give up. Not anymore - I am totally committed to becoming the strongest, most confident me I can be. In doing so, I know I am giving my children permission to do the same.
Congrats to you - you look absolutely amazing and you're story is so inspiring on so many levels! I relate to it very well and I wish you continued successes on your journey.0 -
I'm 40 and although I have a way to go yet, I was so connected with your story. I've been working to reprogram a lot of negative self-talk and I have been lifting weights - barbell type weights . The other day I ran my first 5k straight. When I started in January, I was struggling with 5 pound dumbbells and was out of breath running up a flight of steps. Finding my strength has been so liberating and empowering - and like you I had to focus on welcoming health into my life on all levels. I feel an inner peace with this process now that I never did the first time I just "lost weight".
This time I am focused fully on what I am gaining and I am blowing myself away with what we are capable of when we get out of our own way! Putting that inner critic on ice was critical for me. Every time I would struggle I would start to remember being picked on by gym teachers growing up for being a weakling, or I'd replay the verbal abuse I took from my dad over the years - "stupid" "lazy" etc. and none of those things are true - but they sure can be a great excuse to give up. Not anymore - I am totally committed to becoming the strongest, most confident me I can be. In doing so, I know I am giving my children permission to do the same.
Congrats to you - you look absolutely amazing and you're story is so inspiring on so many levels! I relate to it very well and I wish you continued successes on your journey.
I am so pleased for you, too, that you have your inner peace and your commitment to your self. It really does make a difference in this journey.
Best wishes to you in your ongoing journey!0 -
Wow , incredible !! Congratulations on your huge success!! :happy:0
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You look stunning. I would have never guessed 50.0
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thank you for your post! congrats on your successes and i could not agree more that success is so much more than the scale!0
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Amazing, such an inspiring story. I too am looking for better wellbeing as well as loosing weight and I am determined to get there.
Thanks for sharing xxx0
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