1 Year, 45 Pounds! 32, PCOS, Mastectomy, Lifestyle Change
lauramblair
Posts: 74 Member
Today marks one year since my weight loss journey began. I gained the weight slowly over a 12 year period, from my low in college in 2002. The most dramatic increases happened in the last 6 years with a PCOS diagnosis, fertility treatment, two pregnancies, and just letting myself go. I thought weight loss was too hard; I gave a half-hearted try a couple times with little to no success.
In July of 2012 I was tested and found to be positive for the BRCA2 breast/ovarian cancer gene mutation. The specific strain I carry has an 82% incidence of breast cancer, as I have observed in the females of my family dating back 3 generations, so I knew I wanted to have a preventive mastectomy. I started visiting with surgeons and eventually settled on a July 9, 2013 surgery. I woke up from that surgery a changed person. I was going to change my life, change my body, and claim the body I’ve always wanted. I spent a week in the hospital and fought for every ounce of my recovery. I was diligent and walked every day, as it was all my doctor allowed me to do. By 4 weeks out I was walking 2 miles per day, and by 6 weeks, 3 miles daily. I was cleared to run again at 6 weeks and started back up, taking it slow. I also began regularly tracking my calories on Myfitnesspal at that time.
Summer turned into Fall and I joined a morning boot camp class. Abdominal and chest exercise was difficult because of the muscle trauma from the mastectomy, but I took them at my own pace and slowly built my strength. I kept running on the days I didn’t have boot camp, and 5 months after my surgery I ran a half marathon, shaving 16 minutes off my personal record. The pounds kept slowly melting off at a nice healthy pace around 1-1.5 pounds per week. In March 2014 I hit my initial goal of 40 pounds. I realized that my lifestyle truly had changed, and I didn’t feel like I was dieting anymore. It was my new normal. I decided to keep going, see where I could get. I changed my focus from all cardio all the time to heavy weight lifting to start building muscle and tone up what I have. 3-5 more pounds have come off, and I’m pretty happy where I am now at 135-6. The OCD side of me would like to hit an even 50 pounds, but I also know that while I am building muscle that might not happen. At this point the number is somewhat irrelevant because body changes are still happening. I had one last revision surgery 5 weeks ago, and am still in that holding pattern of light exercise only. 1 more week and I can go hardcore again. (I’m up a pound or two since surgery, but I know it’ll come right back off!)
I just can’t say how happy I am. I’ve never been this size before. The smallest I can ever remember being in high school is a size 6, and now I’m a 4. I’m smaller than when I got married. And I feel this is absolutely sustainable. I measured every portion and serving size to make sure I wasn’t estimating. But I rarely wanted to binge because I was still getting all my favorites. I ate 1200 calories per day and only ate back my exercise calories if I was desperate, always trying to leave some calories on the table. I gave myself a little more leeway on weekends to eat those exercise calories, but did my best to be very strict during the week. I don’t deprive myself of anything – that’s when I feel like rebelling. I still eat pizza, fast food, desserts, etc. I just BUDGET THEM IN to my calorie allowance, and eat smaller portions of them. I keep my calorie goal set on 1200 calories per day, so that way even when I had a “bad” day and exceeded 1200, there was still a nice calorie deficit there and I hadn’t really done any damage. I’m the type of person where if I’m “allowed” to eat 1400-1500 calories, you can bet I’m going to eat my way all the way up to that allowance. So it’s just sort of a mind game for me. Exceeding 1200 is a lot less damaging than exceeding 1500. And of course I had my bad days/weeks. The key is to hop right back on the train. A couple days of making poor food choices isn’t going to ruin your progress. Even if the scale appears that you have gained several pounds, don’t give up thinking you’ve ruined it anyway... give it a few days of discipline and you’ll be surprised how quickly they come right back off.
In the end, you just have to WANT it. I don’t know how else to describe it. You WILL feel hungry – your will power has to be stronger than your hunger. Lots of gum. The first ~20 pounds are the hardest. You’re working so hard, but your appearance isn’t all that different. After that point, you can really see the changes and it makes it a whole lot easier to stick with it. If I can do it, you can do it!
Starting weight: 179, Pants size: 14, Top size: XL
Current weight: 135, Pants size: 4, Top size: S
In July of 2012 I was tested and found to be positive for the BRCA2 breast/ovarian cancer gene mutation. The specific strain I carry has an 82% incidence of breast cancer, as I have observed in the females of my family dating back 3 generations, so I knew I wanted to have a preventive mastectomy. I started visiting with surgeons and eventually settled on a July 9, 2013 surgery. I woke up from that surgery a changed person. I was going to change my life, change my body, and claim the body I’ve always wanted. I spent a week in the hospital and fought for every ounce of my recovery. I was diligent and walked every day, as it was all my doctor allowed me to do. By 4 weeks out I was walking 2 miles per day, and by 6 weeks, 3 miles daily. I was cleared to run again at 6 weeks and started back up, taking it slow. I also began regularly tracking my calories on Myfitnesspal at that time.
Summer turned into Fall and I joined a morning boot camp class. Abdominal and chest exercise was difficult because of the muscle trauma from the mastectomy, but I took them at my own pace and slowly built my strength. I kept running on the days I didn’t have boot camp, and 5 months after my surgery I ran a half marathon, shaving 16 minutes off my personal record. The pounds kept slowly melting off at a nice healthy pace around 1-1.5 pounds per week. In March 2014 I hit my initial goal of 40 pounds. I realized that my lifestyle truly had changed, and I didn’t feel like I was dieting anymore. It was my new normal. I decided to keep going, see where I could get. I changed my focus from all cardio all the time to heavy weight lifting to start building muscle and tone up what I have. 3-5 more pounds have come off, and I’m pretty happy where I am now at 135-6. The OCD side of me would like to hit an even 50 pounds, but I also know that while I am building muscle that might not happen. At this point the number is somewhat irrelevant because body changes are still happening. I had one last revision surgery 5 weeks ago, and am still in that holding pattern of light exercise only. 1 more week and I can go hardcore again. (I’m up a pound or two since surgery, but I know it’ll come right back off!)
I just can’t say how happy I am. I’ve never been this size before. The smallest I can ever remember being in high school is a size 6, and now I’m a 4. I’m smaller than when I got married. And I feel this is absolutely sustainable. I measured every portion and serving size to make sure I wasn’t estimating. But I rarely wanted to binge because I was still getting all my favorites. I ate 1200 calories per day and only ate back my exercise calories if I was desperate, always trying to leave some calories on the table. I gave myself a little more leeway on weekends to eat those exercise calories, but did my best to be very strict during the week. I don’t deprive myself of anything – that’s when I feel like rebelling. I still eat pizza, fast food, desserts, etc. I just BUDGET THEM IN to my calorie allowance, and eat smaller portions of them. I keep my calorie goal set on 1200 calories per day, so that way even when I had a “bad” day and exceeded 1200, there was still a nice calorie deficit there and I hadn’t really done any damage. I’m the type of person where if I’m “allowed” to eat 1400-1500 calories, you can bet I’m going to eat my way all the way up to that allowance. So it’s just sort of a mind game for me. Exceeding 1200 is a lot less damaging than exceeding 1500. And of course I had my bad days/weeks. The key is to hop right back on the train. A couple days of making poor food choices isn’t going to ruin your progress. Even if the scale appears that you have gained several pounds, don’t give up thinking you’ve ruined it anyway... give it a few days of discipline and you’ll be surprised how quickly they come right back off.
In the end, you just have to WANT it. I don’t know how else to describe it. You WILL feel hungry – your will power has to be stronger than your hunger. Lots of gum. The first ~20 pounds are the hardest. You’re working so hard, but your appearance isn’t all that different. After that point, you can really see the changes and it makes it a whole lot easier to stick with it. If I can do it, you can do it!
Starting weight: 179, Pants size: 14, Top size: XL
Current weight: 135, Pants size: 4, Top size: S
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Replies
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You look AWESOME! Kudos to you! We also have breast cancer in our family but my aunt tested negative for the gene. I would have done the same thing as you! You are so brave, and simply awesome for taking control of your own life, and as you put it "claimed the body you've always wanted".0
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Wow! Great job on ALL of it! Taking a situation and allowing it to push you to further improve yourself instead of letting it bring you down is something to be commended for. You look great, and I am SO with you on the 1200 calorie thing. Whatever my allowance is, I usually go over so I strive for 1200! Congratulations!0
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Awesome. Great job0
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Congratulations! You look absolutely fabulous, and so happy!!!
Also, were you at an Athleta fashion show? (Saw their logo in the background of one of your pictures.) I am envious-- that is my favorite clothing brand!!!0 -
Congratulations! You look absolutely fabulous, and so happy!!!
Also, were you at an Athleta fashion show? (Saw their logo in the background of one of your pictures.) I am envious-- that is my favorite clothing brand!!!
Not a fashion show, but a grand opening! It was fun. I love Athleta too!0 -
Fantastic job! I, too, have breast cancer that runs in my family. My grandmother tested negative for the gene, but we know it must be genetic as my great grandmother, my grandmother, and my great-aunt have all had cancer. We have recently heard there is a new gene test out, so we are hopeful that this will give us some kind of definitive answer. Anyway, back on topic, my mother also just had a preventative double mastectomy done, and is now recovering from reconstruction surgery. I have seen multiple women, in both my own and my husband's family, undergo breast cancer and mastectomies, and kudos to you for being brave in the face of the disease and surpassing all expectations! Way to go! :flowerforyou:0
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Wow, you look fab.0
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Amazing, nice work and inspiring story.0
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very inspiring story. I been struggling for the past 6 years to get my weight all off. It's a roller coaster for me. I have like 15-20 more lbs I'd like to loose actualy if I would just loose 10lbs I think I would be okay with that back to where I was last spring/summer. Great job!!0
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Your story is inspiring and I want to thank you for taking the time to share it with all of us. Congratulations on taking ownership of your health!!0
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Great story..you're an amazing woman. Thanks for sharing!0
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Congratulations. You look great!
Just out of curiosity, where is your swimsuit from? It's adorable.0 -
Wonderful story and have to tell you I am so happy for you. By making the difficult choices that you did, you possibly helped other women dealing with the same problem reading this. You are beautiful and pray for your continued happiness and healthy life....0
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You look great! Congratulations!!0
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You were beautiful before and you are beautiful now. I see such a spirit in you. Congrats, you deserve a big kudos for all your hard work0
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Deleted - accidental duplicate.0
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Congratulations. You look great!
Just out of curiosity, where is your swimsuit from? It's adorable.
Sorry I didn't see this until now! It's from Target!0 -
Simply awesome and so strong! So proud of you!0
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wow! well done. you look amazing :-)0
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Congrats, what a fantastic story!0
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You look amazing!! I love your philosophy about eating pizza and sweets, I have been doing the same thing as long as it fits in my day and I don't feel deprived at all and I'm having success.
Good luck on your recovery, I hope it's speedy for you!
Thanks for sharing your story!! Sam0 -
So motivating and inspirational! Thanks for sharing and awesome job!!!! Enjoyed reading your story, how detailed you were and your pictures.0
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