TRAUMATIZED by video of myself
tweedabird
Posts: 17 Member
Does this happen to you guys? You see a picture or in this case it was a video (which I’m convinced is 1000/x worse) and you just fall apart because you can’t believe that’s you???
It should motivate me to work harder but sometimes it makes me feel hopeless and just want to sit and binge on Netflix and ice cream.
How do fight that disappointment and sadness?
It should motivate me to work harder but sometimes it makes me feel hopeless and just want to sit and binge on Netflix and ice cream.
How do fight that disappointment and sadness?
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Replies
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Yes I catch a glimpse of my reflection in the window while walking the hall at work. It can really shatter my confidence. Don’t let it defeat you. You deserve to be successful. Focus on tracking and staying in plan. It’s never hopeless7
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You bet, photos are harsh feedback. I have a picture of me with family before I lost any weight, I look inflated. Take some drastic "before" pictures of yourself and keep them tucked away. When you hit your goal weight you will be so glad to have a before/after photo comparison. We are always our own worst critic, be assured that the people around you don't see what you see in that video. Instead of turning to comfort food, go for a walk. Lose two pounds in the next 7 days--you can and it makes a difference.10
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I hate the sound of my voice when I hear it. LOL. I sound dorky.7
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I'm kind of on the opposite end. I was so skinny before due to an autoimmune flare, and now I'm at a healthy weight thank goodness. I always tear up when I look at old pictures because I didn't realize how frightening I was.
Now I just hate the sound of my voice too.3 -
I avoid photo’s which is part of the reason I want to lose weight. I want to have photos taken with my kids cause my mum passed away last year and the only pics of the both of us together are ones that were taken without me knowing because I refuse to have my photo taken. I don’t want my kids to look back and realise that there is one 2 photos in existence with all of us in it and they are aged between 7 & 15.10
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I try to remind myself that my perception of my appearance is different from how other people view me (well, most people...we won't include people who don't like me, hahaha). Think about a friend you have you think is so put together and beautiful, but they think they look terrible. In my head I like to imagine I'm a super sexy fitness model, and photos/mirrors/videos help me remember I'm not and keep me honest. Then there's a back and forth in my head between sadness that I'm not now, never have been, and never will be a fitness model versus happiness that I'm not nearly as physically immobile as I used to be and that everything is improving.2
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I feel the same way. Catching a glimpse of myself can ruin my whole day3
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We only get one life. Is that really what you want? I can tell you for a fact that radical change is really possible. But you have to do it. Nobody can do it for you. Time keeps on ticking. What are you waiting for?
Feeling bad for yourself and $2 will get you coffee at Starbucks.5 -
Saw this past xmas work video that set me on a path to change cause I got nauseated when I saw it.
I can feel sorry for myself and bury my disgust in pizza and cake but the next xmas video I will be that much bigger!
That next Video I will be 50 lbs lighter cause that path with mfp is guiding me there.
Aren't you tired of being disgusted with yourself?6 -
Reign in disappointment and sadness into a fighting spirit cause boo hooing gets you nowhere!!!3
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Wow, yeah lots of good thoughts here. Thanks a lot.
It's very true that others don't see us the way we see ourselves. (Thank goodness! lol)
Ok...so refocusing. Tomorrow I'm going to try to go for a walk. I'm gonna keep meal planning and choosing whole foods. I look forward to the time I catch a glimpse and go whoa...I'm looking better!!4 -
It is really hard!
I have a fat photo that I can't look at ... I didn't realise things had gotten that bad
But even now when I've lost a decent amount of weight, there are still areas of my body that doesn't seem to want to let go of that fat.
Soooo frustrating!
Each day is a new day and I will get there0 -
Atta girl!0
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This literally happened to me a couple weeks ago, right after joining MFP and deciding to change my life. I work with kids and apparently make quite a few appearances in their youtube "vlogs" by being in the background.
When I saw the videos I felt everything inside me completely fall apart. I was ready to give up on my diet right then and there. I knew I was overweight but I didn't think it was so bad. It was hard for me to look at people for a while after realizing what they were actually seeing when they looked at me. I was horrified and so so embarrassed.
We can do this, though. We do have the ability to change our lives and the day can come when we will see ourselves in videos and photos and say "hot damn i look *kitten* awesome!" We DO have that ability. It will be hard work, but I would pay a million dollars to never feel the way I felt after seeing those videos again.
It's all about the after photo. The confidence. The new clothes. The happiness. The unembarrassing photos. The joy of catching our lives on video and not being horrified with it.
I can skip a bag of potato chips for that.9 -
Well said @noumena_ Nice to know I'm not the only one.1
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This literally happened to me a couple weeks ago, right after joining MFP and deciding to change my life. I work with kids and apparently make quite a few appearances in their youtube "vlogs" by being in the background.
When I saw the videos I felt everything inside me completely fall apart. I was ready to give up on my diet right then and there. I knew I was overweight but I didn't think it was so bad. It was hard for me to look at people for a while after realizing what they were actually seeing when they looked at me. I was horrified and so so embarrassed.
We can do this, though. We do have the ability to change our lives and the day can come when we will see ourselves in videos and photos and say "hot damn i look *kitten* awesome!" We DO have that ability. It will be hard work, but I would pay a million dollars to never feel the way I felt after seeing those videos again.
It's all about the after photo. The confidence. The new clothes. The happiness. The unembarrassing photos. The joy of catching our lives on video and not being horrified with it.
I can skip a bag of potato chips for that.
Wow. This comment really got me in the feels. I too work with kids (middle & high school teacher) and I am always so terrified that they'll end up filming me. I realise everyday that I'm fat, because I have trouble fitting into my clothes. But I never realise just how overweight I am until I see myself in a photo or video. I can completely relate to the horror and deep embarrassment (shame) that you mentioned.
I'm going to remember your last two paragraphs because they are important. I need to remind myself of similar frequently.1 -
Yes I can very much relate, it sucks doesn't it? Especially when I have been working hard at eating better and exercise for a long time, and then happen to see myself in a picture and think "Oh man i've still got a long way to go !" I try hard not to let it demotivate my goals but it can get depressing.1
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Catch yourself full of joy.
https://www.facebook.com/candaceSpayne/videos/10209653193067040/
It’s not just about the body.1 -
While it can be motivating to get a clear picture of yourself, I’d like you to step forward doing things that honour who you are. Both now and where you will be.
https://www.facebook.com/nbcnightlynews/videos/10153693856113689/0 -
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At one of my previous jobs, they took photos of us constantly. We did a lot of "charity" events in addition to our regular work and would be in awkward positions serving food or assisting people or playing games...AND usually in ill-fitting event t-shirts, too! It was awful - I HATED that so much, it was an excellent job but more than a few times I thought of quitting just based on the constant influx of horrible photos in my email and on the company intranet. Even though it was almost a decade ago now, I vividly recall coming in to work one day and there was a glossy photo of my ex-husband and me, from a gala we attended. I thought I looked so good that night with freshly done hair/makeup and in a brand new dress. In the photo I was seated and all I could see were fat rolls, and my neck looked huge with a double chin. I was at my heaviest but when I looked in the mirror I didn't see THAT. I threw that dress in the trash when I got home.
What made it a little worse, was I felt like I was the only one to be upset about my photos, even among a lot of other very large women & men. They would plaster the pics on their walls and smile. It made me feel so embarrassed and vain that I actually cried sometimes about mine (tried to hide this reaction, but sometimes it was impossible). I knew I was fat but I wasn't used to all of the pictures from different angles and "unprepared". I didn't love posed full body photos in my most flattering outfits either, but I wasn't scarred by those.
Weirdly though I do like the way I appear on video better than in photos. I think I have been desensitized through years of debate and then public speaking, so I don't mind my voice or "active" image even when I was at my heaviest. It's pictures that get me down sometimes. Far less so after losing weight, but sometimes it still happens even now that I've lost the weight I aimed to lose. I know people say this a lot but we really our own worst critics!4 -
Yes! My boyfriend loves taking pictures of us, I can't stand to see my face and double chin so I tend to hide. He took one of me from the back and I could have just crawled into a hole. I couldn't believe I let go of myself that much2
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I have never felt at any weight that a photo or video looked like what I think I look like. I have always felt strange about seeing myself in those ways. I think that is different than someone being in denial about their weight and suddenly seeing it.
I was in denial about my physical condition for a long time until I realized I couldn't walk a few blocks without pain, keep up with my family, climb stairs in my house without being short of breath, not sleeping well.
I think everyone has some moment when they realize things are not the way they should be and want to change that.3 -
Two women I admired have passed away with barely any pictures of them at all. Neither were happy with the way they looked, preferring photos of themselves at their peak of beauty in their twenties. It’s hard to hold on to memories if there are no mementoes from those special moments.
I’m determined to document my life, plump and otherwise, to give those I love solid memories to sustain them. My daughter and granddaughter do not see the blemishes, the double chins, the wattle of extra skin, and the wrinkles.
I was able to help my granddaughter with her algebra yesterday, a surprise to us both. I mean, I learned this stuff thirty years ago. You gonna bet we will both hang on to this memory.4 -
Absolutely. I don't like being in pictures, and when I am, I prefer to have my body hidden in any way possible. I don't tell my friends this, because I love them, but I die a little inside every time I see photos with me in them. I'm very far from the "love myself' stage of things, and photos just remind me of that.
If I don't have photos showing my body, I can work myself, mentally, to the point of accepting that I really am making changes, I really am working hard, I really did move faster or lift more. But a picture throws all of that off and takes me straight back to "you'll never fit in, you're going to have heart disease like everyone else in your family, and you'll be diabetic before you know it."
I "fight the sadness" by just giving in. This isn't really an uplifting or advice-giving post. I've not found a way to actively move past that terrible feeling. It happens over time, albeit not as long as it used to take. So, I guess that's a good thing! I am a little more vocal about my insecurities now, which helps. The people I keep around me have known me long enough to pick up on them even when I'm not vocal, and through their reminding that I am completing my goals, I am able to move past the mental block a particularly bad photo will give me.2 -
I HATE having my picture taken. When I'm in shape I'm still a butterface, which I made my peace with a long time ago, but looking the way I currently do there is nothing about my appearance that I like. Periodically we have to have our pictures taken at work, but always in groups and I'm tall so I end up in the back. From there I can adjust my stance so I'm hidden from the camera. People have commented how I never seem to be in the pictures and I just say I wasn't there that day.0
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Yes! My boyfriend loves taking pictures of us, I can't stand to see my face and double chin so I tend to hide. He took one of me from the back and I could have just crawled into a hole. I couldn't believe I let go of myself that much
Ohhh yes I Know that feel about the from-the-back boyfriend photo. I had a minor fight with my husband over that when we went on our first big trip together, because he was going to post several pics from that angle on social media and I didn't want him to. Although I've gotta give him credit, because he didn't post them, and he kind of "made me" (encouraged) take full body pics on the trip that I WOULD approve of. That is a lot easier for me now but still hard at times. I consider it a big NSV that he took a weirdly positioned unflattering photo of me recently at a museum in some kind of space capsule with my belly looking pretty wonky and I was honestly fine with him posting it. I knew it wasn't my best angle but I wasn't traumatized.3 -
Even at my lowest, hate having my picture taken. There's still areas of my body that will never look good after losing 80 lbs (and now regaining 20. Sigh). I totally sympathize OP.1
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I went to a con and got a pic with one of my favorite actors. Then I looked at it and it ruined the entire rest of the weekend for me - I didn't want to do any more pics with actors I'd been planning on and felt like crap. I have the pic saved on my phone but can't even look at it now without getting upset.2
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Just two days ago we took some photos of us with our daughter on her birthday while we were out for dinner. I was absolutely horrified when I saw the photos later--I have gained about 6lbs since getting down to my goal weight, but I still considered myself to be in an OK range. But in the photos, I look like I need to lose another 20 lbs or more. I honestly didn't look anything like that to myself in the mirror. My daughter said the photos were just taken at a bad angle. I didn't buy it. But then a MFP friend told me about something she saw online about fitness professionals in photos taken at the same time, one when they are posing well, one when they are not. There was quite a difference in the photos. I started reading about how to pose for photos--I'm a total klutz about posing. In the awful photos, my arms were smashed against my body, hiding my waist and looking flattened--and large. Maybe there's something to it. But mostly, it just makes me realize I need to get serious about losing the last 6 lbs again and getting more toned. The photo still haunts me, and believe me I know how you feel. I think the best we can do is let this motivate us to make some positive changes. If we really apply ourselves, it won't be that long before we can look at ourselves and feel better about what we see, right?4
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