I just can't do this!

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Replies

  • Meow112
    Meow112 Posts: 20 Member
    Hi everyone
    Sorry I was at work and I wish I could respond to everyone. My whole life I've struggled with depression, my dad died obese and had a heart attack about 16 years ago, and my mom committed shortly after he passed. I remember my mom struggling with depression and binge eating even though she was a marathon runner. My dad was very stressed all the time and just ate. Growing up everything was rewarded with food, from cleaning my room to doing chores to even scoring a few goals in Soccer. When I binge I feel like it's filling a void but it's not there. This past year has been stressful, I turned 30, another year without being asked out, I changed jobs, decided to go back to school full time for school, and I moved a lot. I am taking the antidepressants the dr has prescribed, I recently had some blood work done, my blood sugar and everything looks fine, my blood pressure is low and my thyroid is 2.4 so I think that's normal?

    I just want to be done with this and eat normal and lose weight.
  • oolou
    oolou Posts: 765 Member
    What do you think of the suggestions everyone has been offering? Will you be trying any of the given advice?
  • Meow112
    Meow112 Posts: 20 Member
    oolou wrote: »
    What do you think of the suggestions everyone has been offering? Will you be trying any of the given advice?

    I wrote down a goal for a month total of 10 lbs....
    So this week I'll need to come up with a breakfast-lunch-dinner plan and exercise plan. My goal is to do one week at a time
    That's all I have right now.
  • jahillegas_51
    jahillegas_51 Posts: 143 Member
    Most people have shared some excellent advice, it sounds like you are developing some tendencies to binge eat. Here are some lessons I learned during the start of my road to stop binge eating all the time...

    I can be tough at times, but we have a great community here and we will all support you, answer questions, and help you win:)

    First, admit there was a problem. For three going on four years, I blamed externals, my drive, and my dreams for my actions. Ignoring people in my life hinting at me that I may have a problem, including family, close friends, and girlfriend. I lied to myself, rationalizing it with the mask of a cheat meal. As the punishment for binging increased so did the amount of times I binged. At first once a week, then every couple days, every other, until it consumed my thoughts. At times I would drive to Walmart just to eat it all before coming home. Chances are if you are reading this it is because you are looking for help. Good for you, you are lightyears ahead of where I was!

    Second, I learned to love myself for me, as a matter of fact I am still learning how to do this. Today, the emulated physique is seen as happiness. It is published on social media, magazines, and posters as the symbol of happiness. I believed it, I chased it and chased it. I had it for some time and I was still just as miserable. How you look will not make you happy! Now don’t twist those words as an excuse to just let ourselves become overweight. Chances are you will break step 1 which is lying and rationalizing it. We have to learn to accept our imperfections. We all have them and everyone tries to hide them. Here are my flaws (some I can fix, others are what they are):
    Relationships: I am aweful. I wrecked a 15 year friendship with a highschool sweetheart, I was selfish and an *kitten*. I can also be abrasive and brutal with little to no compassion. However ever since I shared this personal story, I have gotten better. Although I am by no means finished working on this.
    Skin Damage: I never wore sunscreen as a kid. Now I have moles, freckles, and scars. Some I wish weren’t there. Some girls won’t talk to me because of them. I am not “sexy” enough. They aren’t “interested”.

    Don’t let your imperfections stop you from loving yourself. You are the only you this world will ever see, embrace yourself. Perhaps the worst thing about this cycle was I hated myself, I hated my life, I did not want to look in the mirror, I thought I was a failure that I would never make it, I contemplated suicide. When I would binge, I would punish myself. Don’t do that we are human, life is meant to be enjoyed. Life is much too short to never treat yourself to what you love to eat whatever that maybe for you. Look yourself in the mirror directly into your eyes saying “I LOVE myself” at least 10 times a day, if not more. P.S. try not to smile when you say this (harder than you think).

    Thirdly, there is no such thing as good food, bad food. Placing labels on food, leads us to ban them from our intake. We say, “No, No, No, No, No…” We push for the perfect diet, once we eat this food that does not fall into this neat diet box; we throw our hands up, saying we failed so now is the time to eat everything we can. This leads to punishment. Which leads to more restrictions. This is the vicious cycle we as binge eaters face. I used to believe it myself, that there was clean food and bad food. It simply is this manifested idea. If you ask a vegan, he/she will say animal based foods are not clean. Someone who is a vegetarian will disagree, and say it is just animal products that are not clean. Then a paleo guy runs in screaming about how meat is clean, but grains aren’t. So someone has to be right? They are all wrong. Instead, adopt my grandmother’s wise old adage of “everything in moderation.” AKA IIFYM

    Fourth, going along the lines of moderation. You can eat whatever you want just not all at once. I believe I heard Layne Norton say this, I believe this, like the 11th commandment, in fact it should be an amendment to the constitution. When I first began to escape cycle, I would eat one “treat” at every meal. Nothing crazy, but it will allow you still get your “fix” but you won’t binge on it. Any action in the right direction gave me more motivation and encouragement to keep improving. The small wins kept snowballing into large victories later that slammed the door on binging. Disclaimer, it is wiser to eat this food item from a plate not from the container. Don’t test your will to fight binging if you do not have too. As the old saying goes, “work smarter, not harder.”

    Fifth, no more crazy spreadsheets and tracking of nutrients line item by line item like an accountant. I did not worry about counting calories and the works. I would instead eat (3) meals, breakfast, lunch and supper possibly a snack if I was hungry. I would eat slowly, and as I began to feel fuller I would stop eating. You may be like me and scared that you’ll get fat. Well what is our other choice? We can keep binge eating which is not working, because you wouldn’t be reading this. Or we can reach out and try something new. I need to be conscious of my eating, instead of speed eating (still struggle at times).

    Sixth, 180, 190, 160, 225, 200…what number was it going to be today I thought I as I closed my eyes scared to look down at the scale after a night of binging (these were all weights I reached during this cycle). You do not need a scale to help you. It’s about small wins, small wins, they add up trust me; I have been there too. Most people overestimate the damage of a binge. You need to eat in excess of 3500 calories over your normal intake to gain a pound of fat. It is not as bad as we create in our minds. Additionally, when we stand on the scale after a binge our body is bloated, full of food, sodium, and other goodies. This only compounds the guilt feeling.

    It is your lucky day! I said six, but here is a seventh tip. So, what about eating at restaurants and parties? Parties were my kryptonite, the amount of food that I saw and I thought I had to eat three people’s worth of everything. What helped me to win at parties was I made this a game in my head (who cares no one else knows..plus now you know I did it). I am very competitive; I hate losing even if it’s go fish with a girlfriend (I will be a terrible father I will never let my kids win). Since eating slower and not getting seconds was a struggle at first. The game I created was to be the last one done eating, and the last one to get seconds. This helped me in many ways, first to help me eat slower I talked with people, this helped to repair the relationships I had damaged in the past, plus I was not over eating (win/win). Which is why I was last to get seconds, so often I would eat so quick that my stomach didn’t even know it was fed until I was already 4-5 plates of heaping food deep.

    Make that eight, workout for fun! For so long in this process I trained for results no I do not mean goals; I simply worked out to look good that’s it! It was the complete wrong direction, it made training no fun, I dreaded every gym session, and was having a miserable time. It doesn’t matter if you are into bodybuilding, figure, physique, cross fit, powerlifting, strongman, marathons, etc. just train for fun, train to get better and challenge yourself. For me this was powerlifting.
  • Bogcart
    Bogcart Posts: 3 Member
    edited June 2016
    Bogcart wrote: »
    Meow you need support and motivation and discipline. Your local Health Authority or Primary Care Service should have a support system/course to give you all of the above. See your GP (or a GP in the Practice that has an interest in supporting patients with weight loss strategies). It will give you a chance to set Goals, make targets, sort out menus and get back on track. If you have the resources also join a proper Gym and make an appointment to get a Personal Trainer that knows about nutrition and weight loss.
    What you can do right now is sit and write down why you want to do what you want to do. For example, I do not want to become Diabetic. Next, write down you plan of action for next week: make Doc's Appt etc.
    I am surviving on around 800 Calories a day at the moment and it is *kitten* hard I can tell you but I do not want to die just yet. That's my motivation and I have to stick at that for another 7 weeks. I have gone from being an active Windsurfer, cyclist and Gym attender since becoming unwell in January 2015 and have just decided that things need to change as my health and condition is now absolute crap.
    I do hope that you can get sorted and as Lynn and Dresden have said, get professional help now, This could be the first step in your new life.
    Congratulations for having the guts to admit your situation on here. People will support you on here, however you need human contact and someone that will make you keep to your plans. Go for it ASAP.
    Blame you binge on the Referendum.

    Tonight, ask yourself where you want to be in a month's time. Where you are now or where you were when you were fit, active, and eating well.
    Chuck out the crap stuff in your cupboards and fridge as suggested or donate suitable stuff the the nearest Food bank. Do it tomorrow morning and make that your starting point.
    Bless you and the very best of luck.
    Keep in touch.


    Just to point out - 800 calories is not healthy

    The 8 week blood sugar diet = 800 cals per day if at all possible. It is very hard but I am losing weight fast and not feeling too bad (yet) I week in only! This is a diet for Diabetics and pre Diabetics (like me) It also helps one to retrain the eating brain. It also includes Carb detox.
    Coming off carbs is very very tough I can tell you.
    Thanks though
    B
  • Raptor2763
    Raptor2763 Posts: 387 Member
    May I make a couple suggestions:
    1 - toss all the junk food out of the house
    2 -space your meals and snacks and EAT; eat them, even if not hungry at that particular time
    3 - watch your portion control
  • WBB55
    WBB55 Posts: 4,131 Member
    Bogcart wrote: »
    Bogcart wrote: »
    Meow you need support and motivation and discipline. Your local Health Authority or Primary Care Service should have a support system/course to give you all of the above. See your GP (or a GP in the Practice that has an interest in supporting patients with weight loss strategies). It will give you a chance to set Goals, make targets, sort out menus and get back on track. If you have the resources also join a proper Gym and make an appointment to get a Personal Trainer that knows about nutrition and weight loss.
    What you can do right now is sit and write down why you want to do what you want to do. For example, I do not want to become Diabetic. Next, write down you plan of action for next week: make Doc's Appt etc.
    I am surviving on around 800 Calories a day at the moment and it is *kitten* hard I can tell you but I do not want to die just yet. That's my motivation and I have to stick at that for another 7 weeks. I have gone from being an active Windsurfer, cyclist and Gym attender since becoming unwell in January 2015 and have just decided that things need to change as my health and condition is now absolute crap.
    I do hope that you can get sorted and as Lynn and Dresden have said, get professional help now, This could be the first step in your new life.
    Congratulations for having the guts to admit your situation on here. People will support you on here, however you need human contact and someone that will make you keep to your plans. Go for it ASAP.
    Blame you binge on the Referendum.

    Tonight, ask yourself where you want to be in a month's time. Where you are now or where you were when you were fit, active, and eating well.
    Chuck out the crap stuff in your cupboards and fridge as suggested or donate suitable stuff the the nearest Food bank. Do it tomorrow morning and make that your starting point.
    Bless you and the very best of luck.
    Keep in touch.


    Just to point out - 800 calories is not healthy

    The 8 week blood sugar diet = 800 cals per day if at all possible. It is very hard but I am losing weight fast and not feeling too bad (yet) I week in only! This is a diet for Diabetics and pre Diabetics (like me) It also helps one to retrain the eating brain. It also includes Carb detox.
    Coming off carbs is very very tough I can tell you.
    Thanks though
    B

    Do not do an 800 calorie diet unless you are prescribed one by a medical professional who's monitoring your health on a regular basis. This is terrible advice to put on a public website where teenaged girls can read anonymously and get idea of ways to torture their bodies. Just no.
  • JKI19
    JKI19 Posts: 91 Member
    Changing your profile pic to something non-food related would be a step.
  • lexylondon
    lexylondon Posts: 89 Member
    Try a hypnotherapy weight loss recording..
  • lexylondon
    lexylondon Posts: 89 Member
    Sugar makes you want to eat and eat, I've cut a lot of sugar out and I don't have bad cravings anymore. They are mild and manageable where as before I couldn't resist... What I did have to do is get bad foods out of the house for a few months. They are back now - for my partner, but it's been so long I'm not needing them anymore.
  • try2again
    try2again Posts: 3,562 Member
    I just read an excellent article about breaking bad habits and building good ones. It listed 3 general, but useful, principles: Be realistic- recognize your limitations and don't try to change everything all at once. Manage your environment- make it harder to do the wrong thing (don't keep cheesecake & doughnuts in the house), and easier to do the right thing. Take a long-range view- don't conclude relapses mean permanent failure and focus on the times you've done things right. Wish you the best! :)