How Making Real Changes Led to My 87 Pound Loss
godlikepoetyes
Posts: 442 Member
In March 2015, when I began MFP, I weighed 270 lbs. I am 5' 5.5" tall. I was 50 years old. I was the fattest I’d ever been but I did not think that I was ugly or gross or hideous. I mostly thought I was the Cat’s Meow. I took photos of myself all the time and fiddled with them and posted them on Facebook and on my website. I used them as PR for my readings and publications. I just could not, (cannot!), get enough of looking at my face. I find myself Fetching. Cute. Snappy. Stylish. Too Cool for School. I love myself. Of course I have all sorts of weaknesses and great big patches of ugly inside me and I haven’t quite trained myself to not give into road rage, but on the whole I’m pretty fantastic and I love my life and I love being me.
But I didn’t always feel this way. Actually, I felt the exact opposite. I felt ugly, fat, gross. I didn’t want to look at myself. I certainly didn’t want anybody to look at me. I wanted to hide. I punished myself. I wore the same ratty clothes all the time because my hideous monstrous body didn’t deserve nice clothes. And I was stewing inside with all the hurt and anger and pain and disappointment from my childhood.
In 1991 I ended up in the hospital for treatment for major depression. When I got out I did NOTHING. I stopped the medication and I didn’t even start the counseling. Then, 3 years later (to the week), I went into the hospital again. While I was in treatment, I had a realization--I had to make a REAL CHANGE, I had to take my meds and stick to the counseling. And I did. It took years of HARD work before I felt better, before I learned to accept and love myself as I was (as I am), but if I hadn’t made the realization that I had to take the meds and stick with the counseling, I wouldn’t have gotten ANY better. I came out the on other side of all that darkness a different person—happier, stronger. I became confident and proud and resilient. I looked in all the mirrors and smiled. But I was still fat. Happy and Fat.
Just as I realized after my second hospitalization that I had to take my meds and stick with the counseling, I knew when I started My Fitness Pal that THIS time was forever. Forever and ever and ever. This time I would make REAL LASTING CHANGES. It wasn’t a “diet” that would be over in six months so I could get back to normal. I knew I could never go back. Only forward. I also knew that, like or not, I would have to log my food forever. Forever and FOREVER.
I knew from long experience as a dieter, that deprivation had not and would never work for me. I had been a vegetarian and a vegan. I had tried low-carb, low-fat, grapefruit, fasting, high-protein, and that awful thing where you drink apple cider vinegar and honey in the morning. You name it, I’ve probably done it, even when I knew it was stupid or dangerous. Over all the years of food obsession and dieting, of course I’d read about food and nutrition, a LOT. So I knew a lot about counting calories when I started MFP. I was under no illusions as to how much I actually ate--I could easily eat 2,500 calories at dinner with friends over wine and Italian food. I also knew that I would play games if I didn’t stop myself. I would play the all games-- “Move the Scale to the Right and Try Again.” “Just Pick the LARGEST Piece and Pretend it was a Small Piece.” “MFP Says It’s 300 calories, 700 calories, or 850 calories and I’m TOTALLY Logging 300!” “Oh, Hell! I’ve Already Gone Over by 100 calories so I’ll Just Chalk This Day Up As a CHEAT Day and go out for PIZZA.” “No Need to Log This Little Spoonful of Rocky Road.” “Sure, I’m Eating While I Cook but It Doesn’t COUNT!” “Oh, it was only HALF a Donut I won't even log it!” “I’m on VACATION! Who Sticks to a FOOD PLAN on VACATION?!?” Yes, I had played all those games for years. But this time I told myself NO. I refused to play games and I refused to be miserable. I also promised myself not to talk all the time about my food plan or my efforts to lose, unless someone asked me.
So I set my weight loss goal at 1 lb a week, “sedentary” because boy was I sedentary! Since I was so obese, I got about 1,800 calories. I figured it would take a LONG time to lose the weight and I was in no hurry. It had taken all my life to get to the point where I was willing to be reasonable and kind to myself. I promised myself that no food was off limits. No “bad” foods and no “good” foods. No “shoulds.” Just food. I ate whatever I wanted. I didn't deprive myself of anything, I just learned that I couldn’t eat ALL I wanted ALL of the time. I lost 2 lbs a week at first, then about 1 lb a week. I have eaten every calorie (often more) and I’ve eaten back all my exercise calories. I’ve lost 87 lbs. And yes, I know that I’ve been lucky. I know that what I’ve done may not work for you. But maybe it will. Maybe YOU can be lucky too.
Now I hope to lose a bit more, maybe ten pounds, but if I don’t lose more I’m fine with where I am. Slowly, slowly I’m learning to trust myself. I trust that my body will not betray me because I will not betray myself. I won’t make excuses or try to fool myself into believing things that aren’t true. I won’t try to second guess myself or try to wiggle my way around the facts—There is really only ONE way to lose weight. You have to burn more calories than you eat. There is really only ONE way to maintain weight—you’ve got to eat the calories that MFP gives you and just stick with it. All I have to do now is keep on keeping on.
It’s scary to enter maintenance. I have all the fears that anybody else would have. But I also have all my success and as far as I can tell, I have a pretty normal body after all!, a body that likes what I’m feeding it and especially likes it when we dance or swim or just go for a little walk together. And guess what? I get over 2,000 calories for maintenance! And believe me I've checked to see what this would be if I weighed 170, or 150. I would still get around 2,000 calories (check your TDEE) because I move a lot now and I intend to keep on moving. I always thought that I'd get to maintenance and would have to eat 1,500 calories for the rest of my life. But it turns out that I don't.
Over the last week, I’ve read posts from other women who seem so unhappy and are having such difficulty losing weight. I feel for them. I’ve been there. But all too often I hear the same thing over and over—“I’m eating 1,200 calories, I’m working out 5 days a week, I never cheat, I don’t eat back my exercise calories, I’m 5’8 and weigh 250 lbs, I’m going crazy somebody help me!” “I’ll be good all day and then I’ll lose control at night and eat everything in sight.” “I don’t understand it. I log all my food. I measure everything. I walk an hour every day but I’ve only lost four pounds this month.” “I’ve cut out carbs, sugar, fat, and I drink a gallon of water every day what am I doing wrong?” “I know MFP wants me to eat 1,600 calories a day but I think that’s too much so I’ve cut myself back to 1,200.” “My husband lost 15 lbs this month and I only lost 2. Help!” “Please Help! I Need to get into my wedding dress in two months!” “Hello. I’m Back again. I’m only allowing myself 1,200 calories this time. Last time I ate 1,650 and lost a pound a week, but this time I want to lose Fast! And this time I will be successful!”
I read these posts and I wish I could just say STOP IT to every woman who feels she must deprive herself to lose weight. She doesn't. I wish I could reassure every woman was believes she must punish her body, who still believes, like I once did, that she’s ugly and gross and doesn’t deserve a new pair of jeans because they would be a size 26! Or 16! Or 48! Or 20! Or 14! A woman who stands in the midnight kitchen stuffing cookies into her mouth, cookies she doesn’t even LIKE, because she slipped up and was “bad” and had a donut in the morning. A woman who can’t stop thinking about the scale from yesterday (the scale that had moved up 3 pounds!)--she’s sitting in her car right now with a bag of Fritos and a package of Ding Dongs crying because she can’t stop herself. A woman who feels trapped inside a space where there’s nothing but all the good food she can’t allow herself to eat because it’s “fattening” or “bad” and all the awful food she does allow herself because it’s “diet” or “low-cal” or tastes so bad it really must be good for her and she eats it even though she hates it.
I wish that everyone could just skip over all the pain and obsession, all the years agonizing over food and my ugly hideous body that I went through. I wish I could somehow give you enough peace to trust yourself, to trust the proven formula of My Fitness Pal, to believe that for most of us it doesn’t have to be so hard.
Most of us can just eat, if we will let ourselves. We can let go and get on with our lives. There is more to life than our mouths, more than a carefully weighed cup of carrots, more than punishing ourselves because we have a little slip, or a big slip. We all deserve to eat food we like, to laugh over dinner with friends. We deserve to love ourselves and to just LIVE.
`rebecca
p.s. I gave away all my too-tight, too-small clothes and bought things that actually fit me and were flattering. Then I lost weight and needed a new wardrobe!
But I didn’t always feel this way. Actually, I felt the exact opposite. I felt ugly, fat, gross. I didn’t want to look at myself. I certainly didn’t want anybody to look at me. I wanted to hide. I punished myself. I wore the same ratty clothes all the time because my hideous monstrous body didn’t deserve nice clothes. And I was stewing inside with all the hurt and anger and pain and disappointment from my childhood.
In 1991 I ended up in the hospital for treatment for major depression. When I got out I did NOTHING. I stopped the medication and I didn’t even start the counseling. Then, 3 years later (to the week), I went into the hospital again. While I was in treatment, I had a realization--I had to make a REAL CHANGE, I had to take my meds and stick to the counseling. And I did. It took years of HARD work before I felt better, before I learned to accept and love myself as I was (as I am), but if I hadn’t made the realization that I had to take the meds and stick with the counseling, I wouldn’t have gotten ANY better. I came out the on other side of all that darkness a different person—happier, stronger. I became confident and proud and resilient. I looked in all the mirrors and smiled. But I was still fat. Happy and Fat.
Just as I realized after my second hospitalization that I had to take my meds and stick with the counseling, I knew when I started My Fitness Pal that THIS time was forever. Forever and ever and ever. This time I would make REAL LASTING CHANGES. It wasn’t a “diet” that would be over in six months so I could get back to normal. I knew I could never go back. Only forward. I also knew that, like or not, I would have to log my food forever. Forever and FOREVER.
I knew from long experience as a dieter, that deprivation had not and would never work for me. I had been a vegetarian and a vegan. I had tried low-carb, low-fat, grapefruit, fasting, high-protein, and that awful thing where you drink apple cider vinegar and honey in the morning. You name it, I’ve probably done it, even when I knew it was stupid or dangerous. Over all the years of food obsession and dieting, of course I’d read about food and nutrition, a LOT. So I knew a lot about counting calories when I started MFP. I was under no illusions as to how much I actually ate--I could easily eat 2,500 calories at dinner with friends over wine and Italian food. I also knew that I would play games if I didn’t stop myself. I would play the all games-- “Move the Scale to the Right and Try Again.” “Just Pick the LARGEST Piece and Pretend it was a Small Piece.” “MFP Says It’s 300 calories, 700 calories, or 850 calories and I’m TOTALLY Logging 300!” “Oh, Hell! I’ve Already Gone Over by 100 calories so I’ll Just Chalk This Day Up As a CHEAT Day and go out for PIZZA.” “No Need to Log This Little Spoonful of Rocky Road.” “Sure, I’m Eating While I Cook but It Doesn’t COUNT!” “Oh, it was only HALF a Donut I won't even log it!” “I’m on VACATION! Who Sticks to a FOOD PLAN on VACATION?!?” Yes, I had played all those games for years. But this time I told myself NO. I refused to play games and I refused to be miserable. I also promised myself not to talk all the time about my food plan or my efforts to lose, unless someone asked me.
So I set my weight loss goal at 1 lb a week, “sedentary” because boy was I sedentary! Since I was so obese, I got about 1,800 calories. I figured it would take a LONG time to lose the weight and I was in no hurry. It had taken all my life to get to the point where I was willing to be reasonable and kind to myself. I promised myself that no food was off limits. No “bad” foods and no “good” foods. No “shoulds.” Just food. I ate whatever I wanted. I didn't deprive myself of anything, I just learned that I couldn’t eat ALL I wanted ALL of the time. I lost 2 lbs a week at first, then about 1 lb a week. I have eaten every calorie (often more) and I’ve eaten back all my exercise calories. I’ve lost 87 lbs. And yes, I know that I’ve been lucky. I know that what I’ve done may not work for you. But maybe it will. Maybe YOU can be lucky too.
Now I hope to lose a bit more, maybe ten pounds, but if I don’t lose more I’m fine with where I am. Slowly, slowly I’m learning to trust myself. I trust that my body will not betray me because I will not betray myself. I won’t make excuses or try to fool myself into believing things that aren’t true. I won’t try to second guess myself or try to wiggle my way around the facts—There is really only ONE way to lose weight. You have to burn more calories than you eat. There is really only ONE way to maintain weight—you’ve got to eat the calories that MFP gives you and just stick with it. All I have to do now is keep on keeping on.
It’s scary to enter maintenance. I have all the fears that anybody else would have. But I also have all my success and as far as I can tell, I have a pretty normal body after all!, a body that likes what I’m feeding it and especially likes it when we dance or swim or just go for a little walk together. And guess what? I get over 2,000 calories for maintenance! And believe me I've checked to see what this would be if I weighed 170, or 150. I would still get around 2,000 calories (check your TDEE) because I move a lot now and I intend to keep on moving. I always thought that I'd get to maintenance and would have to eat 1,500 calories for the rest of my life. But it turns out that I don't.
Over the last week, I’ve read posts from other women who seem so unhappy and are having such difficulty losing weight. I feel for them. I’ve been there. But all too often I hear the same thing over and over—“I’m eating 1,200 calories, I’m working out 5 days a week, I never cheat, I don’t eat back my exercise calories, I’m 5’8 and weigh 250 lbs, I’m going crazy somebody help me!” “I’ll be good all day and then I’ll lose control at night and eat everything in sight.” “I don’t understand it. I log all my food. I measure everything. I walk an hour every day but I’ve only lost four pounds this month.” “I’ve cut out carbs, sugar, fat, and I drink a gallon of water every day what am I doing wrong?” “I know MFP wants me to eat 1,600 calories a day but I think that’s too much so I’ve cut myself back to 1,200.” “My husband lost 15 lbs this month and I only lost 2. Help!” “Please Help! I Need to get into my wedding dress in two months!” “Hello. I’m Back again. I’m only allowing myself 1,200 calories this time. Last time I ate 1,650 and lost a pound a week, but this time I want to lose Fast! And this time I will be successful!”
I read these posts and I wish I could just say STOP IT to every woman who feels she must deprive herself to lose weight. She doesn't. I wish I could reassure every woman was believes she must punish her body, who still believes, like I once did, that she’s ugly and gross and doesn’t deserve a new pair of jeans because they would be a size 26! Or 16! Or 48! Or 20! Or 14! A woman who stands in the midnight kitchen stuffing cookies into her mouth, cookies she doesn’t even LIKE, because she slipped up and was “bad” and had a donut in the morning. A woman who can’t stop thinking about the scale from yesterday (the scale that had moved up 3 pounds!)--she’s sitting in her car right now with a bag of Fritos and a package of Ding Dongs crying because she can’t stop herself. A woman who feels trapped inside a space where there’s nothing but all the good food she can’t allow herself to eat because it’s “fattening” or “bad” and all the awful food she does allow herself because it’s “diet” or “low-cal” or tastes so bad it really must be good for her and she eats it even though she hates it.
I wish that everyone could just skip over all the pain and obsession, all the years agonizing over food and my ugly hideous body that I went through. I wish I could somehow give you enough peace to trust yourself, to trust the proven formula of My Fitness Pal, to believe that for most of us it doesn’t have to be so hard.
Most of us can just eat, if we will let ourselves. We can let go and get on with our lives. There is more to life than our mouths, more than a carefully weighed cup of carrots, more than punishing ourselves because we have a little slip, or a big slip. We all deserve to eat food we like, to laugh over dinner with friends. We deserve to love ourselves and to just LIVE.
`rebecca
p.s. I gave away all my too-tight, too-small clothes and bought things that actually fit me and were flattering. Then I lost weight and needed a new wardrobe!
102
Replies
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Such great accomplishments!4
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That was so refreshing to read! Thank you for sharing your positivity3
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Congratulations! Very good stuff!2
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Excellent. Now I know why I like your posts so much. You speak from the heart and with experience.
Cheers, h.3 -
Congratulations! Great post. What do you think were the best practices during counseling that helped your self image?2
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Thank you so much for sharing your story1
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CorneliusPhoton wrote: »Congratulations! Great post. What do you think were the best practices during counseling that helped your self image?
I was in counseling for years. Sticking with that helped change my self image, knowing I could put in the work, that I could succeed. I had a marvelously supportive therapist who respected my intelligence and treated me with great compassion and love. The most important skill was learning to turn off the tapes in my head, all the "you're so ugly you're so bad you're a terrible person nobody loves you nobody should love you, you are such a terrible loser somebody should just kill you." It was hard to do but now it is second nature.
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Very real. Heart and eye opening look into a very real struggle. Bravo and congratulations on your success and maintenance journey! One question that will help me in my own struggle. Did you weigh your food or make logical choices? I am finding success at losing and making better food choices and cutting back on the treats and processed junk. I am doing what I can that will flow from into real life when I finally get to a maintenance period.2
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Very real. Heart and eye opening look into a very real struggle. Bravo and congratulations on your success and maintenance journey! One question that will help me in my own struggle. Did you weigh your food or make logical choices? I am finding success at losing and making better food choices and cutting back on the treats and processed junk. I am doing what I can that will flow from into real life when I finally get to a maintenance period.
I never weighed my food, but I did measure the things I use often, like milk, peanut butter, butter. I still measure these on occasion to be sure I'm still on track. As far as making logical choices, I'm not sure what you mean exactly. I ate what I wanted and it wasn't "healthy." I just couldn't concentrate on that at the time. Now, I'm focusing more on healthy which for me just means eating fruits and veggies every day.
I don't concentrate on my "Macros" like so many people on MFP. I know enough about nutrition to know that it's very hard to be, say, protein deficient. So many people worry about protein! It's quite common for someone to have a deficiency in vitamin D. Or iron.
I also make room for sweets every day and I'm not talking about a "piece" or "bite" of dark chocolate. I mean a piece of pie or a double portion of ice cream, or my current favorite, 2 Pop Tarts. Yesterday I changed one of my meals to "Sweets." Done. The decision is made and accepted. I don't have to worry about it anymore.6 -
You rock! That's how I am trying to go about it but have gotten some heat for eating a small slice of pizza at my son's birthday and admitting that I don't weigh every morsel. I just wanted to do something that was sustainable for life long change. I am not the type to whip out the food scale at the Ruby Tuesdays salad bar. I can't become that fixated, since I have a tendency to lean towards becoming fanatical/OCD about it.
I have added in more physical activity and was told lawn mowing, and breaking new ground for a garden and shooting hoops on top of my regular activities didn't count. I get that everyone thinks they're an expert doling out wisdom trying to help out. Truly out of many many posts here, yours was VERY inspiring!4 -
godlikepoetyes wrote: »
I also make room for sweets every day and I'm not talking about a "piece" or "bite" of dark chocolate. I mean a piece of pie or a double portion of ice cream, or my current favorite, 2 Pop Tarts. Yesterday I changed one of my meals to "Sweets." Done. The decision is made and accepted. I don't have to worry about it anymore.
I love this!
Wishing you continued success ahead!
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godlikepoetyes wrote: »
I also make room for sweets every day and I'm not talking about a "piece" or "bite" of dark chocolate. I mean a piece of pie or a double portion of ice cream, or my current favorite, 2 Pop Tarts. Yesterday I changed one of my meals to "Sweets." Done. The decision is made and accepted. I don't have to worry about it anymore.
I love this!
Wishing you continued success ahead!
You, too! Keep on keeping on! I love that image of you at the salad bar at Ruby Tuesday's with your huge polka-dotted purse, loading up a plate with those incredible little black croutons!
Good grief. All movement counts. I recently bought a Polar A 360, which I love. It calculates my calories via the wrist HR. Today I checked to see how much I burned doing a little over an hour of housework--almost 400 calories! No wonder I lost weight without much effort for so long. I had suspected for a while that I burn more calories than some people, for whatever reason. Oh, hummmm, this is sounding super OCD!1 -
I read your post yesterday and again today. Loved it. It's the most inspiring post/story I have read. Thank you!2
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I am glad you think so. I am a writer, it's what I do. I love to move people and, in this case, help those I can.3
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Have you ever thought of becoming a therapist yourself. This is the crap I think about all day long in black and white only you've made sense of it all and I haven't yet. I'm going to keep reading this and beat it into my head. We take this simple task like weight loss and twist it up and turn it so much we can't find our way out. Thank you for taking the time to help the rest of us. I'm conquering this nightmare once and for all.
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Have you ever thought of becoming a therapist yourself. This is the crap I think about all day long in black and white only you've made sense of it all and I haven't yet. I'm going to keep reading this and beat it into my head. We take this simple task like weight loss and twist it up and turn it so much we can't find our way out. Thank you for taking the time to help the rest of us. I'm conquering this nightmare once and for all.
But please be kind to yourself. I've been working on this the last couple of years and it makes a real difference. Living well takes work and courage and I'll be working on it forever.
Therapist! No, though I did consider it a long time ago. I'm a writer and teacher.
Now that I've realized everything is not just about ME, me me me, I am finding a peace and happiness that makes my life richer. Someone posted about this recently--get busy doing other things. Get busy for others is a good way to get out of your own head and stop the madness in there.
I've written other stories that you may find helpful. Good luck in your journey.
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Thank you for this! Very inspiring! Congrats on your success and new found health. I think you might have changed my outlook on life and dieting. Sometimes it just takes the right words. Thank you.1
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amazing....I have tears going down my face as I read this....are you my twin lol...this is truly what I need to read today..no more excuses thank you and good luck in your journey1
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This is hands down the absolutely best post I have ever read here. Thank you.3
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"Enjoy Life Now, This is Not A Rehearsal." Why didn't I think of that?1
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I really needed this- thank you so much for posting and congrats on your successes!!1
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I always enjoy reading your posts and feel inspired. I too have tried every diet out there and I agree they do not work! I have battled with my weight and have obsessed about food and dieting my entire life! I was the fat kid in grammar school and the fat girl in high school (weighing about 20 to 25 lbs more than all my friends. Looking back at pictures, I looked just fine, but I always felt that I wasn't good enough and compared myself to the other girls who looked like the ones in the magazines. I am 49 years old and I am trying a new approach. Actually I was inspired by first reading your post titled success or self-sabotage. It helped me to realize that this is a forever journey. I have this entire time been forcing myself to diet and eat things I didn't like while thinking to myself if I can just get through this! If it takes 3 months, 6 months, a year then everything will be great and things can go back to normal. So, my journey begins! MFP is set for 1 lb a week. I have been doing intentional exercise ( walking which I have always done & enjoy) along with some strength training and some bike riding. I have been trying to drink more water and eat more fruits and vegetables and I eat foods I enjoy. Also, I am logging everything! I am trying not to label foods good or bad. I am trying not to beat myself up and throw in the towel if and when I go over my calories for the day. As you pointed out it is just one day - just a drop in the big ocean. I try to only weigh every week or two. I am easily discouraged by any gains, so I am trying to gauge more by how I feel and how my clothes fit. Also, I took my measurements.
Congrats on all your progress and I look forward to your future posts which always hit home and inspire me.
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What a great post, thank you so much for sharing your perspective and words of wisdom.1
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Thank you for sharing - just what I needed to read. I actually cried in the dressing room of Lane Bryant this weekend feeling terrible about myself...and I wear the smallest size in the store. Really struggling with my self-talk right now so appreciate you sharing your success and way of looking at things. Wonderful read.2
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Happiness is the true measure of success
I love this story more than any other one!!!
Thank you for making me feel sane.
Too many of my friends have struggles and fight so hard for progress.
So much appreciation for being brave and telling everyone the truth: it really can be simple and pleasant if we allow it to be. It only takes a bit of patience.
Congratulations for achieving the ultimate success!!!1 -
kellyw0624 wrote: »Thank you for sharing - just what I needed to read. I actually cried in the dressing room of Lane Bryant this weekend feeling terrible about myself...and I wear the smallest size in the store. Really struggling with my self-talk right now so appreciate you sharing your success and way of looking at things. Wonderful read.
Well, dressing rooms are EVIL! You'd think that the owners, who are trying to sell clothes, would put in magic mirrors and while we tried on dresses these little machines would waft fabulous scents and soft music would be playing and sale associates would bring glass after glass of delicious drinks. Alas. We all have and will always have the dreadful moments in the dressing room. I doubt I'll move beyond that in this lifetime. But I do feel better now than I used to. I hope you do, too.3 -
What a great attitude you have! I so enjoyed reading your posting this morning. Thanks for sharing and contributing to kicking off my morning with a smile.1
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Yes!! Thank you for sharing your heart so openly! If I tell myself I cannot have chocolate or Blue Bell ice cream or whatever, then i want it even more! I want to be able to eat what im hungry for, but in moderation. If my hubby and i go out to eat, I request a to go box when i place my order. I put half the food in it and then eat until im "satisfied", not "full". I just know if i deprive myself of something, it's not pretty. Lol This was all working great for me until I fell, broke bones in both feet. Ive put almost 30 lbs back on.
You've encouraged me to get up and move as much as i can and keep eating like i have been.2 -
I love this, I'm the same weight, the same height just 12 months behind. I've tried several times, and quickly was, 'ah cr*p, I accidentally ate my own bodyweight in mars bars, won't log that, start again tomorrow. Actually tomorrow there's cake at work, I'll start again on Monday'.
I've got over the 'when I'm x weight I'll be happy'. Some 2 years later I'm listening to my councellor and realising exercise does make you feel better.
I don't know exactly what's changed but this time I'm logging eveything, 8 weeks I'm 11lb down. and this time I feel differently about it. I'm not cutting anything out (though I have been lowering my carbs as I know they don't satisfy me for the kcal burden). A moderate do-able deficit rather than 'I have to fit into that size x dress by x date'
I've found that I concentrate less on my daily kcal, but work on my weekly average as no two days are exactly the same
ETA: I don't even like Mars bars that much but I damn well ate them, and also, I've not stopped drinking my calories, because I can't imagine cutting that out forever. I'm only trying to do what I think I can maintain forever. Yes it is annoying that my OH has lost more without trying but that doesn't take away from my success.2 -
Wonderful life story and I am so glad of your happy ending! You are a beautiful strong intelligent personal n! Thanks so much for sharing!0
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