I need help getting through

Lkkiser3
Lkkiser3 Posts: 52 Member
edited November 9 in Motivation and Support
I need to lose at least 100 pounds, and I don't know where to start! I feel completely lost! I've even had friends offer to help but I just get angry and defensive. I'm becoming so depressed because all I can think about is how hard it is to lose weight! I know that I need to start eating better but for some reason I always give in to the temptations. Why is this is hard? Why do you keep getting so angry when someone offers help? I know they are coming from a good place so why does it bother me?

Replies

  • crazydancing22
    crazydancing22 Posts: 1 Member
    I can understand where you're coming from. My weight is a very sensitive topic for me when brought up with friends or family. However I could take advice from a stranger all day long. I don't know why, it's just one of those things for me.
    I can give you advice from stranger if you want :wink:
  • 999tigger
    999tigger Posts: 5,235 Member
    edited December 2014
    Possibly for a variety of reasons. Its a bit obvious and id be amazed if you dont know but you wont like them. Self confidence and lack of self esteem are probably in there plus more obvious ones. ( shame, fear, hopelessnes, denial, failure, hurt, embarassment).

    You need to deal with these, understand and then prevent them from holding you back if you wish to lose the weight. You have to decide whether you are prepared to commit and do what it takes or you just want to dabble. Commiting means no hiding, learning and then consistently following the patterns of behaviour that will allow you to keep a consistent calorific deficit, which in turn leads to weight loss. Take it seriously and you will get results.

    Perhaps MFP is better for you as complete strangers dont care much whether you get angry or not, you either do or you do not.

    You also know that the vast majority understand and have either been in or are in the same boat.
  • kwirky112
    kwirky112 Posts: 46 Member
    It could be that you are just not quite ready. Mentally you know that you need to do this and the longer you put it off the harder it will be, but if you are not ready (for whatever reason it is) you will struggle.
    I went with the fake-it-till-you-feel-it approach and although it is a struggle I have lost more than I have gained and for me that is a plus.
    I keep doing what I have to every day (walking EVERY DAY and eating as well as I can manage) and I feel better for it. I have found that over the past month or so it is easier to choose better without even realising it.

    One thing that has particularly helped me is being part of a walking challenge (we were doing a Stepathlon through work) where we had to log our daily steps. Over the course of 100 days I went from an average step count of maybe 8000-9000 to 13000. I was determined not to be last!
  • SueInAz
    SueInAz Posts: 6,592 Member
    edited December 2014
    Try looking at it as a "lifestyle change" rather than "losing weight". I can't imagine that the day after you reach whatever your goal is that you're going to go back to eating and living like you were, right? So why view it as something with a beginning and an end? The easiest and best way to start is just by making small, incremental changes in the things you do and the things you eat. You don't need to completely revamp your diet and start logging marathon sessions on the elliptical at the gym to begin. Babysteps!

    If you're already logging your food here, you've made a great start already. Take a look at what you're eating and see if there are some things you can easily change which would make a difference. I can't see your diary so I'll just throw some hypotheticals out there... Trade a sugary drink for an unsweetened one or a glass of water. Ditch the afternoon candy bar for an apple. Order the side salad and balsamic dressing instead of french fries.

    Add a little more movement into your day. Walk on your breaks at work. Park at the back of the parking lot instead of finding the closest space. Use the stairs instead of the elevator. For me, walking on my breaks lead to trying Couch to 5K which led to running half marathons. I used to hate running and now I'm looking forward to the 9 mile run my sister and I are planning on tomorrow morning. It's amazing what you can accomplish when you start out slowly!

    To address a little more of your original post, practice moderation. I "give in" to the treats at work all of the time. There's nothing wrong with it. I just have a small piece and eat it slowly instead of cutting myself a big slice of cake. I fit it into my calories for the day which means if I have the piece of cake I'm giving up my usual evening snack or I'm going to hit the treadmill for a little walk after my weight lifting session. (Don't be fooled, a 15 minute walk doesn't equal a piece of cake but it helps to mitigate it as long as it's not an every day occurrence.) I also know I may not lose as much weight this week but I don't really care since I don't have a goal for losing the weight, I know I'll get there eventually. My overall goal is just to stay fit and healthy.
  • Lkkiser3
    Lkkiser3 Posts: 52 Member
    Thank you all for the suggestions.. I guess I just need a little more time to think it all through and conquer whatever it is holding me back.
  • 999tigger
    999tigger Posts: 5,235 Member
    Lkkiser3 wrote: »
    Thank you all for the suggestions.. I guess I just need a little more time to think it all through and conquer whatever it is holding me back.

    Get rid of your defensiveness and decide if you wnat to lose the weight and are prepared to commit. If you are then get smart and put some time into preparing a decent plan that has the common recommended traits and principles successful dieters on MFP use.

    Then get the correct mindset which will include believing that you cna do it and push through, basically that you can sustain consistent deficits and are prepared to do all the things needed to diet effectively.

    Then you just need to do it. Only start if you are ready to commit imo. It wouldnt surprise me if you use the defensiveness as a form of control and what you perceive as self protection. You could ofc still be defensive and get on with just dieting by yourself or you may want to listen to others and learn from their experience about whats needed.

    Dueting is not easy, but you can improve your chances and you can lose weight at a steady rate if you want it badly enough and gain some focus as well as mental discipline. It requires a degree of effort, but its perfectly possible for you to do if you wnat it badly enough and are prepared to change. These boards are chock full of information and many thousands of people all losing weight, so read up if you wnat to learn how.
  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    Find a professional (social worker, therapist, . . ) who can be supportive. Everyday people in our lives do not have the background to help us in the way that we want.
  • Richardlaing1
    Richardlaing1 Posts: 23 Member
    Food is everywhere and the more we resist the more it calls. What is it they say?, "what we resist, persist". It's true. Know this. Then break the cycle. Find a eating style that works for you to get started. Some people find it easier to comply doing the low carb thing because there seems to be less sugar swings that make us hungry. What I found was if I delete carbs it gives me direction and my body does not nag me with the blood sugar spikes and drops. And we all know what carbs are and what to avoid. If you can do it for a couple days it will get easier. Good part is you can eat a pretty decent amount of fatty foods and that will help you feel full longer and not have to deal with the constant hunger that carbs stimulate. Then once you get a handle on some of the addictions maybe your relationship with food will become more in your control. After awhile you need to go more plant based. But still limit the carbs. I did this and it helped me alot. No cravings for the nutritionally empty diet I was on. Lots of calories but no nutrition forces us to seek more. Take all the time you need to adjust yourself away from the simple carbs knowing that nature has set you up in a way. It is natural for our bodies to feast to and beyond full when presented we sweet high calorie density because in nature we did not know when we might have the opportunity again. Just avoid that trap. There are tons of good videos on Youtube regarding low carb routines. As to your feeling about people you know wanting to help well maybe you think they don't understand your struggle and how hard it is.
  • eatnojunk
    eatnojunk Posts: 30 Member
    edited December 2014
    First of all have self compassion be gentle to yourself. I have not gotten around to my introduction yet but I started my goal at 70 lbs and should be more like 90 to be at my idea wieght but being 20 over is no biggy there hardly no health risks.

    I found out the goal seem too big and over whelming it would take over a year at one lbs per week.

    I have change my goal to 25 lbs and it feel so much more managetable for me now. After I reach that goal I will do the rest in 20 lbs chuncks.

    I have also started studying mindfullness and metitation and it helps with the feeling that get in the way when we try to make changes.


    About the anger I'm not sure but my girlfriend have more wieght to lose than you and it just crushes her when anyone tries to help, she feel like she is beeing jugde and she is not good enough. I don't know how to help her :(

    Hugs

    Scott
  • CariJean64
    CariJean64 Posts: 297 Member
    I started out with 180 to lose. I've been here a year and STILL have almost 100 to lose. It's ok, though. I'm committed to the long haul, knowing this could take another couple of years, and then the hardest part begins: Maintenance!

    I hated hearing about weight loss from friends and family, probably because I felt judged, no matter how helpful and sincere they were. Here, I get all the info I need, plus good ideas on meals and snacks and such. All from people who know EXACTLY what it's like to need to lose weight.

    Congratulations on being here. Make the most of the site. Really, the only failure is if you QUIT! So keep trying!

  • acmanna
    acmanna Posts: 200 Member
    Weight is a sensitive subject and it is hard hearing criticism but it sounds like you have friends that want to support you. So often you hear people on here that have no supports from friends and that is hard. You friends know that you can be successful and they want to cheer you on! You are in no way alone either..there are so many people on here that have been in your shoes or even worse!
    Make a lifestyle change. Count calories, weigh your food, log everything. You can still enjoy the foods you love. Be more active, but you done need to go crazy. Get some MFP friends to cheer you on! You can do it and we are cheering for you!
  • kristen6350
    kristen6350 Posts: 1,094 Member
    It's totally a mind set. I've done it before, I know what needs to happen, but it took me a good 6 months to realized that I need to get back to it. No more excuses. I didn't want to see anything higher on that scale. I think you have to look at weight loss as a balancing act. I plan ahead more so I can enjoy the food I love. Like last night our favorite local brewery was having a beer release & a sloppy joe food truck. I thought entered my mind - "I can't eat sloppy joes", but after looking at my diary and planning it out, I was able to eat a delicious one with corn relish, pepper jack cheese and banana pepper rings. And 2 beers. And still stayed 100 under for the day. I went into knowing what I could have and stopped when I no longer had anywhere to go. Before the mind set, I would tell myself it wouldn't matter, who cares and would have had 3 beers and 2 sandwiches, then been too full and bloated to enjoy the evening. I don't feel like I'm missing out, I don't feel like I'm deprived and I like feeling in control.

    Loosing weight is the easy part, maintaining is the hard part. I went from 193 - 143 a couple years ago and when I got lower than I originally wanted to I figure I had a "cushion" so I gave myself a pass. That pass made me gain more than 20 lbs back. It comes on WAY easier than it does coming off. Now I'm hoping to lose another 8, get to 157 and stay there.

    Good luck, I hope you can pull through and realize what you can do when you put your mind to it. And we all know where you are, because we've been there before.
This discussion has been closed.