Angry and ashamed at your fat/pre-weight loss self?
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Hi there -- Seems to me that you might welcome that ghost of the old you as a reminder that you NEVER want to go back there!
When I was in my mid 30s, I lost 40 pounds on NutriSystem and kept it off until I moved to Texas, about 21 years ago. The local styles of eating here are not especially healthy, so over the years I gained all of that weight back and a little more. I'm now 68 years old and having a TERRIBLE time taking the weight off again....after swearing to myself all those years ago that I would never let myself get that heavy again.
Don't look back and be angry that you were there. Look back and resolve never to GO BACK there.0 -
Well, my situation is a bit different than most of the people here. I was super skinny then got fat. So my skinny self haunts me! :frown:
P.s. Congrats on the weight loss!! You look great.0 -
...Love yourself at all stages,.....
This^^…. and This ^^ again!
So many people here have said it in different ways…. I encourage you to try to moderate/eliminate the negative self-talk spiral that can get you down. You’ve accomplished so much – it may take a while for your mind to grow into the new you - or even believe you made it this far. Give yourself (and your skin) some time to adjust and BE PROUD! At the risk of sounding motherly (I AM old enough) I remember thinking of myself as “fat” when I was 23 (although I wasn’t) and I spent the next 30 years constantly “struggling” with my weight and kicking myself for it. Now, at 55, and clearly, truly overweight, I’ve decided to just “get over myself”, do the right things, enjoy food and my shape – and quit the “struggle”. As a result, I’ve lost 35 lbs and feel like I’m on a very sustainable path to reach my goal and keep it off. Please don’t be me…. CELEBRATE your successes and YOURSELF, NOW! Good Luck!0 -
I'm trying not to concentrate on how I look. I'm trying to concentrate on the emotional stuff instead.
I'm asking myself questions such as:
What was emotionally going on that made me stop caring for myself?
Why did I think that I was less important?
What do I need to change to change this thinking?
What is my payoff for allowing myself to be overweight/out of shape?
I'm trying to concentrate on the WHY, so that I don't end up going back to where I was, as opposed to, " I look like absolute **** in my photos."0 -
Wow, thank you all so much for the replies. There have been a lot of good points and perspectives pointed out to me and I definitely will try to apply those to myself. I've very much disliked my body since I was around 8 or 9 years old, by which time I was overweight, and in most of those last 15 years I have treated it less than kindly, both physically and mentally. I think it may just take a LOT of work and undoing, because I've focused sooooo much on the negative for most of my life. I do acknowledge the positive, but always go back to what still needs to be fixed (in my opinion), and that just sends me into criticizing how I used to be AS WELL AS how I am now. I need to get used to self-love and appreciation for what I've done so far, and forgiveness for what I've done in the past when I was uninformed about how to control my weight. I don't give myself enough credit for what I've achieved. But everyone's replies have helped me think a bit differently.0
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Angry or ashamed, no. Sad that I wasted YEARS not doing things because of my weight, yes.
I feel much the same way, but definitely have some anger about the wasted years on top of the sadness. I am working on letting go of that because while I'm not sure it's holding me back anymore, I know it's not helping.
I have struggled for decades with my weight, so to Numinousnymph, I'd say do whatever you can to forgive yourself. If that means writing "I forgive my past overweight self" 100 times per day, so be it. If that means therapy, great. If that means reading a book on shame, wonderful. If that means prayer, go for it. Whatever is going to work for you. Just work to let it go so it doesn't drag behind you as you move forward.
PS - Not sure how long it's been since you reached your current (and/or goal weight), but if it's a recent change, give your body a little time to adjust before surgery. You might be surprised at how much your skin will change -- it is still pretty darn elastic at 23. And if you have any plans to try to add muscle to your frame (and I'm not saying you need to or should, just IF), that will also affect your skin.0 -
Not angry or ashamed but it's more like I am disappointed in my former self. I wasted a lot of time making unhealthy food and exercise choices while feeling bad about myself. From my mid 20s until now. Now I'm 38--middle aged!--and it's a hell of a hole to dig out of. Don't get me wrong, I'm having fun and I'm happy with my results so far. I just wish I hadn't waited so long.
Again, yes!0 -
Parroting what other people have already said, but regretting something or wishing you could change the past does nothing but waste even more of your precious time!
Love yourself for the progress you've made and the progress you'll continue to make. Be proud of yourself. Losing weight/getting fit involves an amount of self-discipline that some people will never have. The focus and discipline you gain from this process will carry on to other areas of your life, be it your career, your relationships, or any other personal endeavors.
Don't feel ashamed, use what you've learned to focus on bettering yourself. Our time on this earth is limited; focus on making the most out of the years you have left :flowerforyou:0 -
I went through some pretty severe abuse as a child and I know (now) that I used food to self-medicate in order to take away pain. It was the only way that I thought I could feel good about myself, so of course.... that led to me feeling bad about myself because of social ostracization. I pretty much thought, "Well, I can't win anyway, everyone hates me" and so I never did anything about it.
It didn't help that the abuse was cyclical - my mother was a child of abuse, my grandmother was, etc. So we all did the same exact thing - we attempted to self-medicate with food and ended up the way we did.
I can't be ashamed of my former self, because it's who I was for nearly all of my life. I'm sad that it got to the point it did, yes. I'm angry that it took me this long to realize my issues and to attempt to fix them. But ashamed? No I did what I thought I had to do to survive, and if anyone else feels ashamed of me, that's on them.0 -
Mostly angry at myself because I was too weak to make a change (although to be fair for a long time I was convinced that my metabolism really sucked thanks to a dietitian I saw when I was 19 who totally discouraged me), and now I'll have the scars forever, literally (well, in the form of loose skin and stretch marks). But there's a lot of things I've done in the past that I would change if I could, and it's a bit pointless to live in the past... best we can do is try to do better now.0
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He tells me to not talk bad about his Amy when I see an old pic of myself come up on the slideshow on our computer.
What a wonderful thing for him to say!
Me, I am sad I gained the weight. I regret it, but I know it's something I've had a tendency toward since childhood. I was a sugar junkie who would get into just about any form of it I could if the cabinets weren't straight up locked. So of course when I finally got to choose my own foods I got fat. Then I wanted to be skinny, so I got skinny. Then I got fat again. Then skinny. And so on and so forth to the present day. How can I hate myself for something that started when I was a little kid? I didn't ask to crave junkfood. I just do. Now that I'm learning more about food and nutrition and now that I have resources like MFP and the entire blasted internet, I'm having a much easier time not cycling back to fat again. So good for me. And the past is dead. Leave it in the past.0 -
I don't hate my old self or feel ashamed. It was just who I was. I just knew I needed to make a change. In a lot of ways, I'm grateful to the old me because the medical issues and pain helped me to change. Without that, I wouldn't be exercising and treating myself right.0
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I still love my fat self. I feel like 'she' was an awesome person, just clueless about calories in/calories out and proper food choices. In fact I feel sorry for 'her' because I remember how hard she worked at dieting and exercising while doing it all wrong.
I'm not ashamed at all. I love who I was then and who I am now.
Beautiful. Self-compassion is a great practice.0 -
I'm not into shaming or berating myself. I'm body positive 100% of the way. It wasn't until I started being good and kind and fair to myself that it was even possible to start losing the weight, and I really believe that's the magic formula. There's never a reason to hate yourself. We live in a world that makes it easy sometimes, but I've worked really hard to learn to like myself, and I will never, ever give that up. Not if I magically get down to a size four, not if I gain back a hundred pounds. Not ever.0
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It is so much better to have a 'fat' picture and someone looking at it and saying, 'That was you? Wow!' instead of looking at a picture of when you weren't 'fat' and saying, 'Is that your sister?' followed by embarrassed silence when you say, No. That's me. :sad:0
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