Who else get weary of it all..............

2»

Replies

  • iWishMyNameWasRebel
    iWishMyNameWasRebel Posts: 174 Member
    Yes, yes, and yes. Every now and then I get so tired of tracking everything and having to be so conscious of food. When I get to that point, I will take two days off and just play pretend, meaning I just do whatever, with no cares. BUT, I have to be extremely careful that it's only two days, and not a week, or a month, or a year. I used to be bad at that, but have gotten much better. And those times of being sick of it all happen less and less often.
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    Francl27 wrote: »
    Francl27 wrote: »
    As time goes by, you'll want those things less and less...

    These days it's much more difficult for me to take a rest day then it is to kill myself in the gym for an hour+

    It's much more difficult to go to a restaurant and order a cheeseburger than to order a salmon salad...

    I'm getting better at not demanding so much from my body though, and getting older..

    And I've probably ordered a cheeseburger from a restaurant twice in the last year, neither one was really all that enjoyable

    I totally disagree there. That's why people gain the weight back... it doesn't necessarily go away. I joined MFP 5 years ago, and I still want to spend some days sitting on my couch watching TV (and I did, last week, because we had 9 inches of snow outside and my legs were too sore to get on the treadmill). I still want to order dessert when we eat out and to have a nice comforting meal of cheeseburger and fries (which I ordered on Saturday, but it WAS disappointing, but probably because it was from a pizza place).

    Sure, in the Spring/Fall when it's nice out, I love going outside and be active, and really dislike spending the whole day stuck at home, but that's just not always the case. I do have a dog too, but my lack of desire to walk around piles of snow in the cold has kept me from walking her much this week too (to be fair, she barks at everything and it's not exactly relaxing either).

    The only difference is that I do feel guilty when I get a rest day or go over my calories (which has been too often as well - thanks PMS and my mom bringing way too much chocolate). I could NEVER eat what I want and maintain easily, unless I walked 25k steps a day, and unfortunately my legs tend to get sore way before that nowadays.

    People gain the weight back because they lost it for all the wrong reasons to begin with...

    If you only "dieted" because you wanted to lose weight, rather than changed your habits because you wanted to become healthier...

    Then yeah, you're probably going to struggle with your diet and exercise and may gain weight back...

    I believe part of the reason why I was able to keep the weight of for so many years now is because, I started eating a healthy diet because I wanted to, not because I felt I had to...

    This is not some sort of a gimmick that I've seen on TV, or some trendy diet... It's the person I've become

    And it's all in your head my friend... Sure I can say I'd rather sit around and eat chocolate cake all day, and I would be right, but I choose to say I want to eat healthy today and workout, and you know what... I'm still right

    How do you know?

    Just because you've managed to stick to your new habits (how long were you overweight for? how overweight were you? all those things DO make a difference) doesn't mean that most people don't.

    It kills me that so many people gain the weight, I'm not trying to sit on a high horse and finger wag... That's not what I'm about.

    But I'm sorry, if you go on some type of fad/crash diet to lose weight... Rather than do this because you want to turn your life around... I'm still rooting for you, but with a 98% failure rate, I'm not going to bet the farm on you...

    What I'm trying to say here is there is no feeling sorry for myself because I can't ear chocolate cake every day... There is only peace and learning to appreciate what makes me healthy every day...

    As for my weight loss, it doesn't matter because I'm not everyone, but you started your post by saying that my line of thinking was why people gain weight back... And I'm sorry, but you're wrong, otherwise I might have

    I would have to agree and disagree. I lost much of my weight the "unhealthy" way. I did not eat enough and exercised wayyyy toooo much. I had been over weight/obese my entire life. I made so called healthy changes as far as exercise, but became nearly afraid of all "unclean" food. I did not learn about certain proper nutritional aspects until about 9 months ago. Basically when I started maintainance. Now I lost started losing weight for myself and my now ex-wife, but a year into it we divorced. The rest was for me. I now make so called healthier choices with some flexibility, but I think there is more to it than that. Bf set point on me is really high, so keeping it off is going to be much more of a fight than some. Franci is right, some of us that were heavier longer will have to fight harder. Is 98% failure right? I sure hope not. From my reading, it's more like 65%. I do wonder if it's a change back to old habits, or biology. I tend to think it's both. As far as being weary of my newer lifestyle, some days it's hard to watch the people around me just eat what they want without thinking about the macro splits, but on those days, I look at an old picture of myself and remember what it is like to be a prisoner in my own body. Usually that enough to get my "kitten" in gear and keep moving. I have heard it gets easier over time. I do hope so.

    You're story sounds all too familiar Man... I've been there and in many ways I still am, but I will say and people can disagree with this if they want but for myself anyway, it has gotten easier and I believe it will for you to...

    Now to clarify, when I say "the wrong reasons", I'm not talking about why you started your journey. I know everyone is doing this for themselves and family and those are as noble of reasons as it gets... I'm talking about all the things you decided to do to help you reach your goals...

    I believe you should eat for health, or at least not to poison yourself... Not because CICO, iifym, ketosis, blah, blah, blah... People can woo me to death for saying it but I'm always going to stand hear and say regardless that eating a healthy, sensible, balanced diet, will always trump cico...

    If you choose to not eat McDonald's today because you want to stay under your caloric goal, I believe your doing it for the wrong reasons... If you choose to not eat McDonald's today because you would rather eat something that is better, or at least not as bad for you... I'll put my money on you

    I choose to forgo McDonald's for several reasons. Calories, food quality, and I can make healthier options. So it is a combo of all of them.
  • slossia
    slossia Posts: 138 Member
    I’ve kept my weight the same now for ten years by watching my calories. If everyone did this their would be far fewer overweight people. And I don’t find it hard, because I always include treats in my plan. Anyone overweight did not track their calories!! Or they were not aware of how many they were eating. Who knew that their could be over 5 hundred calories in a muffin. I didn’t know till restaurants started posting it on their menus
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    iowalinda wrote: »
    Those treats always seem to taste better in my imagination than in my mouth. When I am tempted, I remind myself that I usually regret it when I splurge :)

    That's kinda true here ad well. The 3 bite rule? Except when three bites is all it takes sometimes to finish! Lol
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    pkweier wrote: »
    Does anyone else get weary of it all and just want to eat how ever much you want? I really struggled with that this week. I just wanted to be a couch potato. I did talk myself out of it and got outside and got my walking in. I did log and kept my eating in check.

    I know part of it is the weather I'm tired of the cold and dreary weather and more snow predicted for Monday. This is the first year this type of weather is bothering me.

    Do others feel the same?

    Pam

    I've been more or less in maintenance going on 5 years. I usually put on 8-10 Lbs over the winter and then take it off in the spring...mostly due to it begin dark in the morning and dark when I get home after work (and cold) and my primary form of exercise is road cycling so my activity level drops a lot in the winter.

    I've been at this long enough now that I don't press the issue. I still get in some exercise in the winter, but it can be kind of hit or miss...certainly isn't as regular because I don't really like working on my indoor cycle trainer...but I know that as soon as daylight savings time rolls around I'll be back out on the road more. For me, it's just a matter of it is what it is.

    I don't typically focus much on the number on the scale...I'm more concerned with my health so even with my weight gain in the winter I'm still at a healthy BF%...just a bit fluffier than I am the rest of the year.

  • richardgavel
    richardgavel Posts: 1,001 Member
    sofchak wrote: »
    I get it @pkweier - I am not that far into Maintenance (about 1.5 years now). The honeymoon period was over and sometimes I was just weary of it all. I missed the old days where I never looked at a label, where my husband and I would just hang out and play video games all day, where I didn’t feel like I was constantly saying “no” or finding substitutes for goodies...

    With that said, when I nearly died earlier this year (not being dramatic), the experience forced me to take a step back and reevaluate what was important. Being healthy = totally important! Being a specific, arbitrary weight on the scale.... not so much. This further exasperated my feeling about Maintenance. I guess this is part of why so many people “give up” and regain the weight. It takes a lot of mental strength to have consistency not just day over day but month over month and year over year.

    For me, personally... I ended up doing some soul searching and re-evaluated my “why.” As a result, I restructured some of my goals and the methods to get to my newly tweaked “why.” I’ve heard that nuance helps with the “stickiness” of a habit and I am starting to see that play out - my old goals still make me feel “weary” to think about, but those new goals are keeping me motivated. Perhaps it’s time to re-evaluate your “why”?

    Good luck!

    Hey, I definitely wouldn't consider a year and a half of maintenance "not that far". That's a nice length of time to be in maintenance. Many don't make it even that far.
  • pkweier
    pkweier Posts: 349 Member
    @tmaths thank you for such a great response
    I've lost 195 pounds took me from January 1 2016 till I called maintenance this past September. I'm feeling better and it has helped to see others who have the same feeling and how they managed to keep on going.

    I want to thank everyone who responded I appreciated your insight.
  • swim777
    swim777 Posts: 599 Member
    edited March 2018
    How long have you been in maintenance? I definately remember feeling that way during my first year, in recent years I haven't to think too much about it because I just do what I do, eat what I eat and I maintain effortlessly - at least that's how it now feels. So I think you'll definately not always feel like you do now.

    How long have you been in maintenance?

  • Biker_SuzCO
    Biker_SuzCO Posts: 54 Member
    Yes! Trying to maintain 125 at 5’3’’ seems difficult! I am hungry and just want to EAT! I can’t imagine how I will ever lose the last 5-10 pounds being this hungry. I lost the weight over a year so I should be used to this...
  • ahoy_m8
    ahoy_m8 Posts: 3,053 Member
    edited March 2018
    .... I want to eat more, almost all the time, and sometimes I do, and sometimes I just tell myself "no, not now"....

    This describes me exactly. Plus, I have adult beverages on weekends, and I want more of that, too. Almost all the time. I share kommodevaran's observation that, in general, loving the stuff I do eat makes it easier to feel ok with less quantity than I would like. Quality > quantity. Consuming less, enjoying more. Do I overdo it on occasion? Absolutely. Sometimes planned, sometimes spontaneous. But it all counts, so overdoing must be averaged with doing with less to maintain.

    When I get weary, I contemplate the alternatives. One alternative- and it is very real- is gaining weight or maintaining a higher weight. Something like 2/3 of Americans are overweight, so it is the most prevalent alternative, evidently. I guess we all want to eat more than we need, and most of us actually do. Feeling good in my body matters to me, though. It matters enough that the continual effort is decisively worth it. Plus I'm a terrible shopper and very lazy about it and having to replace a lot of my clothes would be a huge pain I don't want. So it comes down to a "pick your hard" decision for me.

    It's great you have a canine motivator to get you outside, OP. Enjoy the little guy and give yourself a break now and then.
  • pkweier
    pkweier Posts: 349 Member
    ahoy_m8 wrote: »
    .... I want to eat more, almost all the time, and sometimes I do, and sometimes I just tell myself "no, not now"....

    This describes me exactly. Plus, I have adult beverages on weekends, and I want more of that, too. Almost all the time. I share kommodevaran's observation that, in general, loving the stuff I do eat makes it easier to feel ok with less quantity than I would like. Quality > quantity. Consuming less, enjoying more. Do I overdo it on occasion? Absolutely. Sometimes planned, sometimes spontaneous. But it all counts, so overdoing must be averaged with doing with less to maintain.

    When I get weary, I contemplate the alternatives. One alternative- and it is very real- is gaining weight or maintaining a higher weight. Something like 2/3 of Americans are overweight, so it is the most prevalent alternative, evidently. I guess we all want to eat more than we need, and most of us actually do. Feeling good in my body matters to me, though. It matters enough that the continual effort is decisively worth it. Plus I'm a terrible shopper and very lazy about it and having to replace a lot of my clothes would be a huge pain I don't want. So it comes down to a "pick your hard" decision for me.

    It's great you have a canine motivator to get you outside, OP. Enjoy the little guy and give yourself a break now and then.

    Thanks for your insight. I love all the new clothes I can wear now. I gave all my old clothes away just so I would not have them as a fall back just in case mindset
    Thanks for the reminder choose your hard.
  • kayokk
    kayokk Posts: 2 Member
    edited March 2018
    I get so weary of it all. :(

    But, in the end, all I say to myself is this.. "you need to remember what Steve said, that you'll be dead soon.. and while you are alive ... do, forgive, help, learn, try, fail, love, believe, spoil, engage, motivate and all the other personal intrigues to make living, a worthy endeavor." and BOOM! I'm back. I really am. I am not a quitter, that much I know. No dogma is going to catch-up with me. Never!

    Thanks to Steve Jobs for the mental help and clarity. <3 >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1R-jKKp3NA

    Amen :smiley:
  • LivingtheLeanDream
    LivingtheLeanDream Posts: 13,342 Member
    swim777 wrote: »
    How long have you been in maintenance? I definately remember feeling that way during my first year, in recent years I haven't to think too much about it because I just do what I do, eat what I eat and I maintain effortlessly - at least that's how it now feels. So I think you'll definately not always feel like you do now.

    How long have you been in maintenance?

    5 years in June :smiley:
  • KANGOOJUMPS
    KANGOOJUMPS Posts: 6,474 Member
    ME! I eat what I want and I love my booze. BUT I WORK IT OFF, That's a must.
  • rimir74
    rimir74 Posts: 29 Member
    Not weary at all. I like the discipline. I like snacks a lot. 1/4 of my calories comes from snacks. In the past month, I had days where I binged on Haagen Dazs for a time. MFP allowed me to track that though I couldn't bear seeing all that indulgence up there.

    My "cheat" was to portion out the ice cream over several days (though I might've eaten more of it in one of the days). So I woke up knowing that my snacking for that day would be pretty limited since it was already enjoyed (ahead of time) and pre-logged. Seeing the numbers up there really helps me. I just had 2 squares of chocolate and logged that in. In the past I might've had more without thinking about it and even till I was not really enjoying it even. Thank goodness for MFP...
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    edited March 2018
    ME! I eat what I want and I love my booze. BUT I WORK IT OFF, That's a must.

    Haha I could never work out the 1000 calories of dessert that I want to eat daily. Must be nice not to want that much food in the first place.
  • pkweier
    pkweier Posts: 349 Member
    I'm back to feeling discipline and motivated again in part to all the wonderful people on MFP.
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    pkweier wrote: »
    I'm back to feeling discipline and motivated again in part to all the wonderful people on MFP.

    I'm trying, lol.
  • cheryldumais
    cheryldumais Posts: 1,907 Member
    I know just what you are saying @pkweier. I just got back from a girls weekend where I indulged a bit. The funny part though is I'm more motivated now than I was before I went. The little break did me good. I probably ate an extra 600-800 calories for the weekend and it was worth it because I feel refreshed. Like you I finally decided I was in maintenance last fall so it hasn't been that long and at times I really, really want to eat. I also got rid of all my "fat" clothes so I can't afford to gain!
  • pkweier
    pkweier Posts: 349 Member
    I know just what you are saying @pkweier. I just got back from a girls weekend where I indulged a bit. The funny part though is I'm more motivated now than I was before I went. The little break did me good. I probably ate an extra 600-800 calories for the weekend and it was worth it because I feel refreshed. Like you I finally decided I was in maintenance last fall so it hasn't been that long and at times I really, really want to eat. I also got rid of all my "fat" clothes so I can't afford to gain!

    I know I can't afford to pay for new clothes my hubby wouldn't be happy as Everytime I go into a store cause I can now wear normal clothes I buy something.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    pkweier wrote: »
    Does anyone else get weary of it all and just want to eat how ever much you want? I really struggled with that this week. I just wanted to be a couch potato. I did talk myself out of it and got outside and got my walking in. I did log and kept my eating in check.

    I know part of it is the weather I'm tired of the cold and dreary weather and more snow predicted for Monday. This is the first year this type of weather is bothering me.

    Do others feel the same?

    Pam

    Yeah I do sometimes. All my life (the decades when I had no weight problems) I would periodically get off track and gain a few lbs. Then I'd feel my jeans getting too tight and I'd shake it off and get back to normal.
  • JustSomeEm
    JustSomeEm Posts: 20,286 MFP Moderator
    Francl27 wrote: »
    pkweier wrote: »
    I'm back to feeling discipline and motivated again in part to all the wonderful people on MFP.

    I'm trying, lol.

    I find that keeping a positive attitude and looking for ways to make things work rather than complaining about reasons I can't do a thing really helps. :)

    I've been in maintenance for several years. I've recently gained a bit of weight until I'm over the upper limit of my maintenance range by a bit (possibly water weight due to TOM, since I was within the range this morning). My suggestions are to have splurge days sometimes, but moderate them with days where you keep your diet and exercise on point. When you hit the top of your range, use the same intestinal fortitude you were using during the weight loss phase and do what worked for you in the past to get back down to an acceptable weight.

    OP, as someone who has been in maintenance for quite a while, YES, me too.... and as I mentioned above, sometimes I let things go. But I have a (very generous 10 pound) weight range that I strive to stay in... if I find myself outside of it, I buckle down and get back where I was. While I don't think its true that skinny feels better than chocolate tastes, I DO greatly dislike feeling bloated and unhealthy... so sometimes I forgo the chocolate. :flowerforyou:
  • Creofan
    Creofan Posts: 11 Member
    I'm not to the point of being weary, but there are those days where I want to relax my discipline. But I motivate myself for my eating like I do for exercise, and that is when I don't want to exercise i reflect on a different day where I didn't want to exercise and did it anyway and the positive feeling exercise provides... That brings me back on track again! It is going to happen to all of us, and the difference is recognizing where your mind is (which you did!) and recapturing the thought of the gains you have made to get your thinking back in order. Well worth the effort!!!
This discussion has been closed.