Fought the good fight, but...

It's just not working. I lost weight for a while, but then it stopped. I feel like I was doing everything I should have, but my weight loss has completely stalled. I'm so miserable and so hungry all the time. I've been growing more depressed and disappointed with myself, and I have so much weight to lose. I stuck it out as long as I could, but maybe I should just face facts that weight loss is not in the cards for me. I just wanted to say though that some of you are wonderful and inspirational people. Congratulations on your success and good luck with the future.
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Replies

  • Liftng4Lis
    Liftng4Lis Posts: 15,151 Member
    It looks like you just started in August? This is not something that is going to happen over night, this is a lifestyle change, this is forever. It takes patience and determination.
  • SunofaBeach14
    SunofaBeach14 Posts: 4,899 Member
    Is this a passive aggressive cry for help or are you just saying good bye? I'm never good with these.
  • dramaqueen45
    dramaqueen45 Posts: 1,009 Member
    You will always lose quickly at first and then .... s...l....o....w.....l.....y..... it can be very frustrating. I had a week where I exercised, logged, etc and I lost .2 pounds!! :grumble:
    So change up what you're doing, try increasing protein and reducing carbs a bit, find an exercise you LOVE (better yet with someone you love to be with too). Over the long haul it will be worth it, not because you want to see lower numbers on the "scale" but because you will feel great because you're eating healthy, exercising and treating your body as something you truly value. And don't weigh yourself more than once a week (or even just once a month). I see people on here getting frustrated because they seem to gain and lose and then to find out that they're weighing daily! This is a lifestyle change- it will get better.
  • digistyle
    digistyle Posts: 40 Member
    Don't throw in the towel. We all stall, or even reverse, as we go through the process. Maybe try setting some small, short term goals and focus on them,
  • emdeesea
    emdeesea Posts: 1,823 Member
    You joined in August and you're quitting after only five weeks?

    I just looked at my progress report. You know how much weight I've lost since April? TEN POUNDS. That's two stinking, miserable pounds a month.

    But it's also what I have my calories set for - 0.5 pound loss a week. So yes, it's slow. But it's working.

    You have to keep doing it. You didn't gain that weight in a month and you're not going to lose it in a month either.
  • Sharon_C
    Sharon_C Posts: 2,132 Member
    I took a peek at your diary. You're only eating 1300 calories a day and your ticker says you have 100+ pounds to lose. What did you set your goal at? Losing 2 pounds a week? Maybe you should change your goal to 1lb a week. That will give you more calories to eat a day and you won't be so hungry.

    Also, you've lost 14 pounds in a month. That's an amazing weight loss so far. Don't expect it to always be that way. It will come off quickly at first then it will slow down. For me I lost weight in batches. I'd lose and lose and then suddenly not lose for weeks and then I'd lose for a few more weeks.

    The key is to not give up. If you stop now where will you be a year from now? But if you keep going where will you be a year from now?
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,230 Member
    I'm going to look into my crystal ball (ok, my own track record) and predict that if you just decide to quit trying now, you will be back here in a few months with even more to lose.

    For me the turning point was realising there is no quitting, because there is how it has to be. This isn't an option, it is a neccesity. I might lose slowly, but its a better alternative to staying overweight, sore, unhealthy and miserable.

    I love my family, but I look at the older women in my family who get exhausted by a trip to the supermarket, who struggle with stairs, who are on blood pressure, cholesterol and all sorts of other meds, whi have type 2 diabetes and I see what happens if I "quit".

    For every week I might not lose a pound, I think of the fat that may have been stripped off the inside of my arteries by the good choices I made that week. That little drop in blood pressure. That little gain in fitness. It isn't about a number on the scale, it's about my health, my life and the quality thereof.

    Really think about what quitting means. It isn't just stopping counting calories and eating what you want. It's giving up on your health. It's accepting that your body doesn't deserve to be healthier, fitter, last longer, live longer.

    I've quit so many times. Every time I've come back fatter than before. Because quitting doesn't mean just staying where you are now for good. It almost always means getting worse.

    Take a breather. Maintain. Step back and reassess. But don't give up on yourself, because I guarantee you won't always feel like this and next time you decide to do something positive for yourself, you'll just be starting from so much further back.
  • sarlie
    sarlie Posts: 1 Member
    Fought the good fight, for one month? Aw, honey, that's just loading the ammunition. Start over as many times as you have to. That is a saying on my list of advice to myself. I have the battle scars of weight gain and reduction. I have been on both sides. I prefer not being obese, so I will dig deep into the cavern of my dogged determination and will lose this weight AGAIN! NEVER give up on yourself.:flowerforyou:
  • ihad
    ihad Posts: 7,463 Member
    You have lost 14 pounds in less than two months? That's pretty good progress.

    This is not a quick or linear process. There are ups and downs, periods where the pounds fly off and times where they seem to be stubbornly holding on for dear life.

    You need to cultivate patience, work at a sustainable pace you can stick with, and keep trying. When you fall down, and everyone does, you get back up and keep going.

    This can be done, and you can do it. It's up to you to believe you're worth it.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/ihad/view/the-path-of-success-631437
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    Is this a passive aggressive cry for help or are you just saying good bye? I'm never good with these.

    calvin_wondering.gif
  • jnv7594
    jnv7594 Posts: 983 Member
    I have been doing this longer than a month, lol...I have been doing it for nearly four months. I only found MFP a month ago. Anyway, thanks for those of you that had encouraging words. Bye all, and good luck to you.
  • ---
  • ihad
    ihad Posts: 7,463 Member
    I have been doing this longer than a month, lol...I have been doing it for nearly four months. I only found MFP a month ago. Anyway, thanks for those of you that had encouraging words. Bye all, and good luck to you.

    That's still pretty good progress. It's moving in the right direction.

    Quitting on yourself isn't funny.

    It's your decision. Good luck.
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,230 Member
    I have been doing this longer than a month, lol...I have been doing it for nearly four months. I only found MFP a month ago. Anyway, thanks for those of you that had encouraging words. Bye all, and good luck to you.

    Four months? Oh honey - I've been fighting this battle for YEARS. Because what's the alternative? Noone can make you if you're not ready, but I hope you reconsider. Four months is a drop in the ocean, especially for those of us with a lot to lose.
  • emdeesea
    emdeesea Posts: 1,823 Member
    Honey, no one can make you stay, but just the fact that you've lost 14 pounds in four months is something. It's taken me five months and I've lost less than you have. But I'll be dammed if I'm giving up.

    I'm going to be one year older next year. And I can either be exactly where I'm at right now or I can be 20 pounds lighter, even with this slow-@ss progress. The time is going to pass regardless. So you can be where you are right now or you can be progressed, even if it's only a little.
  • Galatea_Stone
    Galatea_Stone Posts: 2,037 Member
    What has been your approach to weight loss? Are you incorporating exercise? How much and how often? Are you eating those calories back?

    That might help you. Yes, diet is 80 percent of the battle, but don't forget the importance of moving around. How active are you on a daily basis?

    If you exercise, eating back those exercise calories might be the difference in you staying and going. You're still here, and just by posting this thread, I don't think you want to quit.
  • digistyle
    digistyle Posts: 40 Member
    In case you look at this thread again, here are my weigh-ins since September 2013.

    graph_zps70ce3701.jpg
  • VaxSA
    VaxSA Posts: 90 Member
    Be my friend, I have PCOS and have to have the worlds SUCKIEST diet just to lose weight. I even have to be doctor supervised because the normal 1200cal per day, + exercise = weight gain for me.

    So I feel your pain!

    I just keep telling myself, just keep swimming! In one year, I will look back and be glad I didnt stop! How do I know this? Because one year ago I tried really hard, and failed, and quit. And now, I ****ing wish I'd stayed the course, even if it was moving at a snail's pace, because I never want to have to lose over 100lbs EVER AGAIN, do you?

    But 80? 80 is more doable than over 100. And you might snail pace it at 20 pounds a year, but hey - it's easier to manage next time. So just keep swimming, and dont hate yourself next year, and decide TODAY, that next year you will LOVE the choice you made on this fine day!

    Add me as a friend, so when I fail and eat some carbs, you can kick my *kitten* for me. Motivating others, helps motivate you. =D

    (and its okay to cry with frustration, too ... it's not easy to do this, and not cool for people to make you feel like it is! It's HARD, and you will fall, and you will GET BACK UP! Wohoooooo! Lets go lose some weight!)
  • brianpperkins
    brianpperkins Posts: 6,124 Member
    Quitters never fight the good fight. Either you fight or you quit ... it seems you're choosing the latter.
  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    After the advice I gave you in the other thread just a few hours ago you give up? Wow.
  • onefortyone
    onefortyone Posts: 531 Member
    I've been trying to lose weight in some form for years, and honestly the only thing that's held me back and kept me at my highest weight ever (30lbs higher than when I originally signed up to MFP) is because I kept quitting, or slacking, or losing accountability to myself.

    The next year will go by whether you stick with it or give up. So you will either be 20-50lbs lighter by September 2015, or you won't. 100% your choice.
  • hookilau
    hookilau Posts: 3,134 Member
    post-19287-Zooey-Deschanel-sad-New-Girl-J-VhQm.gif
  • JG762
    JG762 Posts: 571 Member
    Honey, no one can make you stay, but just the fact that you've lost 14 pounds in four months is something. It's taken me five months and I've lost less than you have. But I'll be dammed if I'm giving up.

    ^^^ Respect, you just earned mine.
  • smantha32
    smantha32 Posts: 6,990 Member
    I've only lost a couple pounds in a year.. so no sympathy for quitters, sorry.


    Edited because that was a strangely formatted sentence.
  • MelRC117
    MelRC117 Posts: 911 Member
    I've been trying to lose weight in some form for years, and honestly the only thing that's held me back and kept me at my highest weight ever (30lbs higher than when I originally signed up to MFP) is because I kept quitting, or slacking, or losing accountability to myself.

    The next year will go by whether you stick with it or give up. So you will either be 20-50lbs lighter by September 2015, or you won't. 100% your choice.

    AMEN. I have been struggling with my weight all my life. I lost a bunch of weight, had my son, and ever since then I have struggle to lose weight and stay committed. My son turned 2 earlier in summer.

    Don't blame "the cards". It's you. There's 2 things: 1. You overestimate what you burn or you 2. Underestimate what you eat. That's it. Well, MAYBE MAYBE a third...there's a medical reason at play you don't know about but you can't really know that until you really determine you are being as specific on your burns and weighing/measuring every single bite you put in your mouth.
  • laurie04427
    laurie04427 Posts: 421 Member
    I don't think you want to quit. You wouldn't have posted to the forum to say it, you just would have done it. Closed the account. You posted because it's frustrating.

    My advice if you want it is to eat at maintenance for a bit. Give yourself a break. Eat a treat or two. Have a beer. Log it all. Take a week vacation from eating skinless chicken and yogurt. Then come back to it refreshed and energized and ready to kick some butt.
  • MsDellyssa
    MsDellyssa Posts: 66 Member
    I'm hypothyroid. Losing weight is a very hard battle. My medication is my sledge hammer. I still have to wield it. Are there days where that brick wall looks bigger and stronger than I am? Of course, but that baby is coming down one brick at a time if I have to. I lost 20 lbs in 2 months.. Sure that looks amazing, but I had to learn how to do it. Food, exercise, patience. I have a very long way to go, but I don't dwell on the end result, just 20 lbs at a time.. no time limit, just me, my sledge hammer and those bricks.
  • WhatAnAss
    WhatAnAss Posts: 1,598 Member
    So it's been like a month and you are giving up already? Tisk tisk!
  • Monkey_Business
    Monkey_Business Posts: 1,800 Member
    You have lost 14 lbs in a month, and that is not quick enough for you?
    yes-rudy1.gif

    Remember, you did not gain all this weight in a month, it will take as long if not longer to lose it.
  • For the majority of people ketogenic diets (<20g carbs, adequate protein, fat to satiate) can help a lot with satiety while still eating at a caloric deficit. They are also known to boost energy. They have also been known to help with insulin resistance. Maybe look into those.

    Don't give up OP. Never give up. If something isn't working try something else.

    Why do we fall?

    So we can get back up.

    Why do we fail?

    So we can succeed.