My new WHY

anyWendy
anyWendy Posts: 97 Member
edited March 2018 in Health and Weight Loss
So, I spent some time journaling this morning, articulating why it is important to me to achieve and maintain a healthy weight (I am currently 181, down from 225, 5'8", so 164 will be a healthy BMI).

Here's what I realized:
I am someone who puts a lot of effort into my own personal development, physically, mentally, spiritually, etc. I want the body that people see to be one that is congruent with the level of effort that I am putting in. When someone looks at me, or I look at myself, I want to see someone that is motivated, disciplined, and successful. To ME, that requires a healthy weight and a fit and strong body.

This way of thinking about it is new to me, but is very motivating.

What is your WHY?

Replies

  • CarvedTones
    CarvedTones Posts: 2,340 Member
    anyWendy wrote: »
    So, I spent some time journaling this morning, articulating why it is important to me to achieve and maintain a healthy weight (I am currently 181, down from 225, 5'8", so 164 will be a healthy BMI).

    Almost exactly my stats. I am also 5'8". I was 223 and age 58 when I started dieting this time. I am 59 now and weigh ~163. Still going to lose just a bit more, but very slowly. I don't want to go into my 60s overweight; I want to do everything I can to improve the odds of making it to retirement and then having a long active retirement. I also didn't like what I saw in the mirror and didn't like the image I project. I may have my job end and need to find one more before retirement. I already have to get past ageism (even though it is illegal, there is still implicit bias). Being overweight does flavor the impression you make and usually not in a good way. But it is mostly about my health.
  • CMNVA
    CMNVA Posts: 733 Member
    I think maybe I don't have a "WHY."

    I've never really had any lifelong weight issues, but since my 40s, I am constantly 10-20 lbs overweight. I don't really ever care how people see me. It's how I see myself, or rather how I feel. I am back on my plan now after blowing it over the holidays and putting the weight on. I just "feel" gross. I actually look okay in my clothes.

    So the "why" is a feeling for me.
  • anyWendy
    anyWendy Posts: 97 Member
    gebeziseva wrote: »
    I think my why is exactly as yours. However lately I've been thinking more and more about happiness. And I think these three (motivated, disciplined and successful) do not necesserily lead to happiness. I've been pushing myself my whole life to a achieve these and I can't say I'm happier. I think I need to be more peaceful with myself and stop being so requiring of myself.

    Well, I'm not there yet so my why's are still these three but I want this to change.

    Thanks for sharing. This really got me thinking. For me, motivated, disciplined, and successful does not have to be at odds with peaceful and happy. I am definitely a type A high achiever, but part of how I achieve my goals is through meditation, affirmations, and visualization. These help me stay centered and become the best version of myself.

    Good luck finding your peace and happiness!
  • anyWendy
    anyWendy Posts: 97 Member
    anyWendy wrote: »
    So, I spent some time journaling this morning, articulating why it is important to me to achieve and maintain a healthy weight (I am currently 181, down from 225, 5'8", so 164 will be a healthy BMI).

    Almost exactly my stats. I am also 5'8". I was 223 and age 58 when I started dieting this time. I am 59 now and weigh ~163. Still going to lose just a bit more, but very slowly. I don't want to go into my 60s overweight; I want to do everything I can to improve the odds of making it to retirement and then having a long active retirement. I also didn't like what I saw in the mirror and didn't like the image I project. I may have my job end and need to find one more before retirement. I already have to get past ageism (even though it is illegal, there is still implicit bias). Being overweight does flavor the impression you make and usually not in a good way. But it is mostly about my health.

    Cheers to us! Congrats on your loss and a great perspective.
  • 1houndgal
    1houndgal Posts: 558 Member
    My why is for my health both mentally and physically.
  • HoneyBadger302
    HoneyBadger302 Posts: 2,069 Member
    My biggest "why" and motivator right now is racing. Being fit and in shape is going to be absolutely essential if I want to reach my goals.

    After that, it's simply the fact that I feel better. The more active I am, the more energetic I feel throughout the day and it affects my mood, too.

    I see my mother (who's never been much for physical activity outside of the very occasional hike) and how much things like rough terrain really give her problems, and I don't want to be like that at her age.
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  • lkpducky
    lkpducky Posts: 17,636 Member
    My old and ongoing WHY is to stop being plump, plain and dowdy.

    My new and now far more important WHY is to avoid getting type 2 diabetes. Type 2 runs in my family. For the first time, I had an HbA1c reading in the pre-diabetic range. I got that result back in January. I really need to be extra careful from now on.
  • jefamer2017
    jefamer2017 Posts: 416 Member
    Because I want to be able to walk well into old age. I want to rollerblade again, I am too heavy and have little core strength. I want to wear a swim suit without a cover up. I really would like abs too, but that's may never happen.
  • MegaMooseEsq
    MegaMooseEsq Posts: 3,118 Member
    I was raised to define your worth by your successes in life, primarily professionally and financially. When I went to law school in 2009 after floating around career-wise for a few years, I immediately knew I'd found my calling. A year later I met my spouse and we immediately hit it off. And then things started going off plan - jobs I'd hoped to get didn't come through, grades fell a bit, friends got busier and distant, nights out got later and later, my mental health got shakier and shakier, and my weight started going up and up and up. This continued through graduation in 2012 and four more years of regular interviewing and striking out. And then it was the beginning of 2017 and I realized that I had nothing to show for the past two years but a stack of rejection letters, a big old belly, crummy lab results, and the beginning (middle?) of a drinking problem. So I decided to get my *kitten* together, take control of what I could, and start making some changes in my life, with my health front-and-center. To frame it another way, proving to myself that I was capable of growth and happiness even without career success was my why.