When did you start gaining weight?

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Replies

  • rosehips60
    rosehips60 Posts: 1,030 Member
    I imagine it was shortly after birth and just kept going
  • I started aging weight in my forties
  • mzbek24
    mzbek24 Posts: 436 Member
    I was a really active and skinny kid, but then after about 12 or 13 when I started high school, not so much. Progressively got bigger until I started having some health problems at 22, including periods stopping and starting, hair in weird places, randomly severe acne which I'd never had much of before, moodiness, trouble breathing, weird lump on my leg I was concerned about (which embarrassingly was revealed in an ultrasound to just be a lump of fat lol) and that all lead to the doctors appointment that revealed I had PCOS and insanely high cholesterol, and that scared me into doing something. And not giving up until I reach that goal weight the specialist told me to get down to.
  • RosanaRosanaDana
    RosanaRosanaDana Posts: 93 Member
    The reality is that I was molested as a child and I started to gain weight hoping to make myself unattractive to the predator.
  • I've always been chubby, except for the 10 years I managed to maintain a weight of 122 pounds. My biggest gain came when depression hit. I went from 122 to 154 in just a few months. My weight has steadily increased over the years. I'm at my heaviest weight ever and I hate it. I just don't feel good most of the time.
  • CindyMarcuzAdams
    CindyMarcuzAdams Posts: 4,007 Member
    I was born a big baby and have been big ever since. When I look back to public and high school I was overweight but not obese. But that didnt help the bullying. I was bullied all thru school. I have no happy memories of school what so ever. I was even teased by two employers.
    I got married at 200 lbs to a man who loved ME. I had 2 babies back to back not losing weight in between. I was then at 270. Went to WW and lost 50llbs and got pregnant with number 3. Oops... back up 35lbs.
    Two years later son number 1 gets hit by a car and was in hospital for 2 months. What do you do at a hospital when bored...eat. I gained more. I got my son home and hubby was diagnosed with cancer. In and out of hospital with him I ate myself to sanity...it didnt help...I got all the way to 333.bs. to make a long story short, son recovered nicely, hubby did not. Here I am today 3 wonderful healthy active adult kids. A new hubby who loves ME , all 221 lbs of me. The incredible shrinking woman thanks to mfp.
  • Kath1391
    Kath1391 Posts: 138
    When I was unemployed for 6 months,I was bored & was constantly eating.Gained about two stone and it went down hill after that.
  • I was about 11 years old. I gained a lot of weight after quitting cross country (depression hit) and starting a shame spiral of eating and hiding my body. I wanted to be invisible.
  • stephanne13
    stephanne13 Posts: 212 Member
    In my teens when I moved to Stuttgart, Germany. German food is ridiculously delicious!!
  • KarenB927
    KarenB927 Posts: 94 Member
    My most recent weight gain started the end of 2011 into 2012. I had to have my thyroid killed off with Radioactive Iodine because I had thyroid nodules. The nodules were causing out-of-control hyperthyroidism. Within 2 months of the treatment, I was severely hypothyroid and gained 25 lbs. I started on Synthroid, and by the time I had 3 "normal" blood tests, I still felt like hell. My symptoms were severe, extreme fatigue to the point that when I had to go upstairs, I usually had to actually crawl up the last 5 on my hands and knees because my legs just wouldn't take one more step, I had joint pain and muscle cramps constantly, if it was hot, I felt like I was in a 500 degree oven; if it was cold, I felt like I was in a sub-zero freezer, my night vision was deteriorating, and on top of it my hair started to fall out. When I had my doctor visit, which was about 5 months after reaching normal levels, and about a year after my treatment, I asked my doctor why I felt so bad when the Synthroid was supposed to alleviate the symptoms of hypothyroidism. She suggested that I might have developed Celiac Disease. I thought she was nuts, but when I looked up the symptoms, I was surprised to see that I was suffering from about 99% of them. I also discovered that a lot of people who have thyroid disease develop some type of gluten problems. I cut out gluten and never looked backed. I lost all the weight I gained and them some because I finally had the energy to work out again, feel better than I have in my whole life, and turned around my whole outlook on exercise, which up until that point was a chore and something I detested. I actually enjoy seeing the changes my body has made and keep adding more new things. I'm into muscle building now.

    I have had other health issues, like a minor stroke at 52, which was when the thyroid problems came to light, (thankfully no residual side effects from the stroke), so I decided that since I'm getting older (I'll be 56 in September), I'm going to be the best health-wise that I can be. I want to be around a long time, and after spending about year feeling like absolute hell, I want to feel the best I can. I can honestly say I am in the best shape I have ever been in my life, even better than my teens and 20's.
  • KareninCanada
    KareninCanada Posts: 962 Member
    Ever since I was a kid... 8 or 9, I would say. I've been a "normal" weight twice since then - once when I was in college and had to walk everywhere, and then when I was breastfeeding a gluttonous baby and walking every day while my hubby was deployed (wanted to have a "wow" moment when he got home). Otherwise, I always drift back to a really unhealthy weight that I will call a "set point"... I don't think it is unbeatable, but I do know how much work it takes to overcome it, and without that amount of work on a continuous basis, I always get back to the exact same place.
  • gretlarson
    gretlarson Posts: 52 Member
    I have had a weight problem most of my life. When I was younger it wasn't as noticeable because I was tall. In 3rd grade I was wearing hand me down clothes from my aunt. In 5th grade, I was as tall as my mom and by 6th grade I had pretty much stopped growing vertically. I was just always big so I never fit in or could wear all of the cute clothes.
  • Yanagibashi
    Yanagibashi Posts: 58 Member
    I was about 17. Was having a rough time with my parents and had quit high school sports to focus on athletics. Went through a BAD round of depression and the weight started accumulating. Like 10-15 pounds a year to an all time high of 232 (at 5'3").
  • caitconquersweight
    caitconquersweight Posts: 316 Member
    When I was about three years old.

    I've been overweight my entire life. I've always had a large frame. The only time I was any sort of small was when I was literally small, as in a toddler. I've never known what being thin was like. Since I have broad shoulders, big hands, wide hips, and big feet, I don't think I'll ever know what thin is like.

    I gained a lot of weight after high school and after I had my daughter. I stopped caring about what I ate and I got married. We ate out a lot. I ate a lot of convenience foods because I had a young child. I didn't exercise. The weight just piled on after that.
  • I was super skinny my entire childhood, so much so that I was bullied mercilessly by the other kids (and my own family!). I started gaining weight my second year of university, but I was average sized. It wasn't until a couple years ago when I went on mental illness meds that my weight really ballooned. I think my eating habits from when I was a skinny kid also contributed to the weight gain.
  • Azurite27
    Azurite27 Posts: 554 Member
    I've always been overweight since childhood. It just got worse and worse as time went on due to back problems that kept me from exercising. No one ever taught me how to eat right or what exercise I could do with my problems. I lost some weight when I moved out on my own but gained it all back when I moved back in with my mom. I am now the lowest weight I have ever been and plan to stay this way since I'm learning to eat right and exercise despite internal and external influences.
  • Ldbg289
    Ldbg289 Posts: 236 Member
    I was small as a kid, it wasn't until high school I noticed the pounds creeping on but at that point I accepted it. About 2 years ago I woke up and realized that since then I'd put on 50+ pounds, I had to do something.
  • Hunnergomeow
    Hunnergomeow Posts: 231 Member
    When I was 19 I injured my knee at work - I tore the meniscus - and I didn't take care of myself properly, kept exercising & running on it, and wound up unable to walk for almost 1 month. I haven't even been able to run in 3 years. After I injured myself I couldn't run, had a hard time at the gym, got depressed and kind of gave up for a bit. Now I'm trying to get back in shape, trying not to focus on the weight itself, but on getting fitter & stronger.
  • when I descovered my love for Peanut Butter...:)
  • WW_Jude_V2
    WW_Jude_V2 Posts: 209 Member
    After I was diagnosed with depression and post traumatic stress and put on anti-depressants in 1999 I put on about 15-20 pounds.

    Add a new partner in 2005 who loved his women "fluffy" and I suddenly discovered I had gained about 50 more pounds in just three years.

    Dumped the partner, joined Weight Watchers at work in 2008 and have never looked back. Hit my goal weight in 2009. Yay me! :heart:
  • LoveLoveandRage
    LoveLoveandRage Posts: 55 Member
    In 2010, I was in the hospital for Asthma & Bronchitis - pretty severe. They had me on steroids for a week, and I had to taper off of them when I got out for another 1-2 weeks. I was always starving and I ate everything I could to try to make the hunger go away. After that, I slowly started gaining steadily. After many, many stressful events involving a horrible breakup and the death of 3 close family members, I kept gaining, but I had no health insurance. Finally I had my thyroid tested and found out I was hypothyroid, and after being treated for that but still not losing any weight, I was tested and started being treated for PCOS. It's been a long journey and I'm trying to stay positive and change my eating habits. My current living situation is also very stressful but I am working on ways to cope.

    Thank you everyone for your replies as well and thank you for this post. It was very interesting to read everyone else's story.
  • cookmtn
    cookmtn Posts: 156 Member
    As a few others have said, I had a warped sense of how heavy I was as a teenager. I was tall early and never really skinny. But, at 5'7" and 130 lbs, I was definitely not overweight. Ironically, I jumped up to 155 lbs in the military. Still not technically fat but I sure thought I was. Being stationed in Germany with great beer and bratwurst was good and bad :smile: I never got officially overweight until I hit my forties.
  • lyrics09
    lyrics09 Posts: 217 Member
    I was always 'chubby' and overweight growing up- I guess just bad eating habits from the start. I never ate balanced/well planned meals it was mostly snacking on and off all day paired with a LOT of soda. Sundays was the only day where we had any family meal since both parents worked late growing up. I did lose a lot of weight at puberty but went back to being chubbier by end of high school. When I went to college it just kinda took off even more with eating out all the time and convenience of things like pizza/subs.. Then when I had to take an abrupt break from school since my father was in the hospital for over a year to help my mom paired with being in a ****ty relationship; I kinda got depressed and before I knew it 4 yrs went by and I was a 100lbs+ heavier.
  • OUCHilly1
    OUCHilly1 Posts: 44 Member
    I've been up and down sense I was 10 years old but I really packed it on after my thyroid failed and I became less active... that was in 2001. I went from 120 lbs to 160 lbs it seemed like almost over night. I have gained another 90 lbs sense then two or three lbs at a time.
  • Phanntom
    Phanntom Posts: 28 Member
    What an interesting and thought provoking question. It's something I've been pondering now for several days. I was lucky as a kid...I was so active and athletic I couldn't put on an ounce, literally. In my late 20's I'd taken up sailing and noticed at the end of summer I'd put on a couple of pounds....of course as soon as winter hit....it was gone. From 20 to 30 I gained about 5 pounds. It wasn't anything to worry about so I didn't. In fact, the extra couple pounds actually made me look better.

    From 30 to 40 I was running my own company so wasn't getting as much exercise, more desk-bound and with the increase in income came a love affair with fine dining. While there's nothing inherently wrong with fine dining....there is when it's 4 or 5 nights a week and you're not running marathons on the weekends. By 40 I'd probably added another 10 pounds. Still not an appearance burden though....in fact, was probably about right for my 5-11 broad shouldered frame.

    From 40 to 50 it was pretty much the same. I did get on a couple of different exercise kicks that lasted about a week a piece. BUT, at 55 I had a heart attack. It was minor, no damage done to speak of which I used as an excuse to not make changes in my lifestyle. I walked out of the hospital, got in my car and immediately lit up a cigarette. Everything remained pretty much the same.

    A year and a half ago...I had another heart attack. This time though it was different....my heart arrested (stopped), I died. I was lucky....I got to visit the other side for about a minute and a half before being brought back. This time when I walked out of the hospital, I didn't light up another cigarette, and never will again.

    During the last year and a half since...beyond quitting smoking I didn't make many other changes until a couple of months ago. It took some soul searching and baby steps, but I learned a lot. I know I have heart disease....the doctors confirmed that but that isn't/wasn't my real problem....my disease ISN'T heart-disease....IT'S MYSELF. I'M the disease. MY lifestyle and attitudes, not just about food, but I've always been an adrenalin junkie....with pretty much a fear of nothing. It was that lack of fear that let me think I was immortal and gave me license to abuse myself....it was the walk on the other side taught me, I'm not.

    Someplace in there, there was an epiphany of sorts. Unconsciously I began taking my medications, when I was supposed too, then without really too much though began adding in walking, and now I'm actually watching my eating. All of it is going to be a process. I'm not going to go from dining out 4 or 5 nights a week to vegan smoothies....that simply ain't going to happen. But I will keep experimenting with food in an effort to winnow it down to those that are both better for me and I can like.

    With my disease being myself, it should make it easier to find a cure so to speak....
    Good luck to us all on our journey's to health.
  • TminusFitnessN321
    TminusFitnessN321 Posts: 58 Member
    Mine was when I started my desk job at 21. I was on my feet before then all day and was actually under weight for a while.
  • kimiel51
    kimiel51 Posts: 299 Member
    I am 47, had gall bladder removal surgery August of 2012. I used to weigh about 155 lbs before the surgery. Since then I have taken Cholacol (Bile Extract) every day but only 1 capsule. (The directions read to take 1 capsule before every meal). I do not eat a lot- small meals or snacks during the day, with occasional fast food in there. I work at call center 40 + hours a week till midnight - so I do sit a lot, but I also have an Arabian mare, whom I go to and work out frequently either in the round pen, or riding her. I do gardening, house work, stay busy and exercise moderately on my WII fitness board. I currently weigh 188 lbs and have to wear size xlarge, and 12 in shorts- this is frightening to me because I used to be able to wear a size 7! I plan on increasing the Capsules to the 1 at every meal as directed, and exercising a bit more frequently every week, and I might start taking an enzyme and probiotic (like my mare does) to see if this benefits me in losing any weight. Note: I do not drink enough water - I am a very big coffee lover and have at least 2 cups in the morning, and one in the evening to stay awake on my long night shifts and drive home. I probably only drink 1 bottle of water a day- I just don't like water very much. I do not drink soda at all, and liquor is a big no-no when you have had your gall bladder removed but I do occasionally drink white wine. I have no idea if this has anything to do with weight gain. I feel fine except for the weight, which I don't like it at all!

    This is very interesting, because I also had my gallbladder removed, and that's about when my weight started to gradually go up. I was thin my whole life before that. hmmmm....Why is alcohol a no-no after your gall bladder is removed?
  • love2b3fit
    love2b3fit Posts: 31
    I started gaining weight after I tore my ACL completely through, and my meniscus in two places. Your ACL keeps your knee together and since i didn't have one, when I would suddenly stop or do anything, my knee cap would shift forward, causing great pain. I had to have surgery and wasn't fully back to sports/exercise for about 7-8 months. And over that time I just kept eating what I wanted and not realizing that I was gaining weight until the fall came and my jeans didn't fit! Before the surgery I was varying between 140-150, now im 170!
  • I started gaining when I started teaching full time, plus working side jobs to supplement my income. I never had the time or energy to work out, and stress eating was a persistent problem! I'm trying to get better at prioritizing my health!!
  • naturesfempower
    naturesfempower Posts: 107 Member
    In my early 30's I got married and my husband introduced me to bacon cheeseburgers, french fries, cherry coke, and milk chocolate everything. I gained 50 lbs the first year. Last year I quit smoking and put on another 30 lbs. Almost back down to pre-quitting smoking weight now.