How to get in the right mindset for weight loss?

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  • Alright, so I've been struggling with weight loss since middle school, and as of right now, I'm a junior in University.
    I am at the highest weight I've ever been right now, and I really want to lose weight so I've started thinking about all my past attempts at weight loss, and I've come to the conclusion that it's not just about eating healthy and exercising — you have to be positive and a non-toxic mind in order to really go though with weight loss successfully.

    And that's my problem.

    I absolutely hate myself.
    So much, that I haven't looked in the mirror in so long. I feel like I was bullied into submission in middle school. Before, middle school, I was fine. I never had a negative thought, but after 3 years of torment, I just... learned to hate myself and started agreeing with what everyone said. Whenever someone calls me 'beautiful' or 'pretty', I freak out and accuse them of lying or saying that to be polite or to make me feel better.

    Anyway, I want to get better, but I have no idea how. I've become a binge eater because of my past (and family issues too) and I heard Yoga helps with the mind, so I'm starting to do that and I hope it helps, but it kinda sounds too good to be true...

    Don't hate yourself. That's a Pandora's Box you don't want to open up. The sooner you learn this lesson, the better you'll be... other peoples' opinion of you is their business, not yours. Don't base your self-esteem on whether or not you get external validation. What matters is how you feel about yourself. Your issue is that you need to recover some of that lost self-esteem. Losing weight will do that for you, but so will many other things. Improve yourself. Set little daily goals and meet them. Find hobbies that you enjoy. Do well in your studies. Fill up your life with activities that help you grow as a person and do well at them and your self-confidence and self-esteem will return. Every day that you go to sleep closer to your goals is a good day and one to be proud of.

    It might help to know that lots of people know exactly how you feel. Either they've been there themselves, or are there now. A lot of people who have their lives together now, once felt like you do about themselves.

    Also, find some positive people to spend time with. Don't dwell on negative thoughts and don't spend your time around people stuck on negative thinking.
  • badrury7201
    badrury7201 Posts: 2 Member
    Download "Insight Timer" on your phone and meditate. There are guided meditations for losing weight.
  • OneRatGirl
    OneRatGirl Posts: 124 Member
    It's taken me until 27 to reach the right mindset, and high 320s in weight.

    Getting my mental health better is what's made it possible for me. The unhelpful truth is, I decided one day I was going to do it, made a plan, am sticking with it. I'm not sure what exactly triggered that, but it's a first for me. I want to do it for me, for my health, ability to live a longer and healthier life, primarily. Everything else is secondary.

    A doctor advised me a while ago to just try to keep my weight steady until I was ready to lose, that was great advice for me, and I think it's a helpful strategy. Use the website and set to maintainance maybe, but don't keep trying to eat under it, just try to keep your weekly average around it (so the odd day over is countered by the odd day under).

    I know getting mental health help isn't always easy, but it's worth doing.
  • TonyB0588
    TonyB0588 Posts: 9,520 Member
    Alright, so I've been struggling with weight loss since middle school, and as of right now, I'm a junior in University.
    I am at the highest weight I've ever been right now, and I really want to lose weight so I've started thinking about all my past attempts at weight loss, and I've come to the conclusion that it's not just about eating healthy and exercising — you have to be positive and a non-toxic mind in order to really go though with weight loss successfully.

    And that's my problem.

    I absolutely hate myself.
    So much, that I haven't looked in the mirror in so long. I feel like I was bullied into submission in middle school. Before, middle school, I was fine. I never had a negative thought, but after 3 years of torment, I just... learned to hate myself and started agreeing with what everyone said. Whenever someone calls me 'beautiful' or 'pretty', I freak out and accuse them of lying or saying that to be polite or to make me feel better.

    Anyway, I want to get better, but I have no idea how. I've become a binge eater because of my past (and family issues too) and I heard Yoga helps with the mind, so I'm starting to do that and I hope it helps, but it kinda sounds too good to be true...

    Two things:
    1. Those calling you beautiful or pretty, might not be lying. Fat does not necessarily mean ugly, so appreciate the compliments.
    2. Sometimes it takes a medical emergency for a person to change their lifestyle. Mine was a prediabetic diagnosis. For you, obesity can lead to other medical issues, so your mindset could be wanting to stay healthy. Reducing your weight would be a proactive way of avoiding certain types of health problems.
  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
    Apply the same principles to the rest of your life that you learned in your studies. All in this world is but an output of behavior.

    You don't really hate yourself. I suspect you realize your potential and upset at not fulfilling this, but hate? Too strong a word.

    We don't invest in things we hate, we invest our valuable time and energy on what we love. Any act of self improvement is an inherent act of love.
  • whitej1234
    whitej1234 Posts: 263 Member
    Maybe try to make a big change in your life, that is not weight related. Something you always wanted to do.
    For me it was moving out of my parents place and living on my own. Even though I love my family, and never had issues, I felt I needed to do that for my self, and it did miracles on myself esteem and overall feeling. Your's can be something else, but something you always felt like doing and always thought either "later" or "it is not for me".
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    @Running2Fit
    Yeah, I figured.
    I wish I wasn't this way, you know?
    But, I'm going to try Yoga and just see where that takes me...
    Though, I tried going to a yoga class on my own once a week ago, and I couldn't even make it inside without panicking and running off. I have such a low self-esteem. I saw mirrors and thin people and just scrammed.
    I had a friend come with me after that, but I wonder if I'm going to be dependent on her forever...

    Sure, I found yoga tremendously helpful, and eventually became a certified yoga teacher.

    Where are you taking the classes? I, and many other yoga teachers, tailor the languaging to the location, so Gym Yoga is going to be a different experience from Yoga Studio Yoga, although the postures may be the same.

    In general, Yoga Studio Yoga would be more helpful for people in your situation.

    I first started taking yoga at a small liberal arts college, and that was a fabulous experience. There were two different teachers during my 4 years there, and they were both great in very different ways.

    During that time, I also learned some Cognitive Behavioral Therapy tips from a handful of Smart Recovery and Rational Recovery meetings I attended to deal with my abuse of alcohol, and those tips translate to self-medicating with food as well.

    Oh, I don't like the mirrors either. It was nice when I started teaching, and then my back was to the mirrors ;)
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @kshama2001
    I'm taking them at my University's recreational center. They have sessions everyday in different levels. I'm doing "Intro to Yoga" and "Mindful Yoga". I don't know what the difference between those two are, but they're pretty great.
    I've been able to sleep better because of them.
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @OneRatGirl
    Two years ago, I had an experience like the one you had. The whole "Okay, I'm going to stop my unhealthy habits and just do something" thing. And I did it for about four months, lost almost 50 lbs... but then my cousin, who was helping me, moved to another state, school was starting up again, I had hit a plateau and all that progress just — POOF! Gone.

    I gained all that weight back and more, and it's just really annoying since I always think back to that moment of time and think "if I had kept going, I would be where I wanted to be by now". That makes me despise myself even more.

    I, honestly, don't know how much more I can take of this before completely giving up. I know I don't want to! Just seems like no matter what I try just ends in complete utter failure.
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @ChrysalisCove
    Thank You.
    I'm happy you're doing well. ❤️
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @InsertFunnyUsernameHere
    Yes, that sounds like a plan, and that's kinda what I've been trying to do recently. I'm taking 5 classes this semester, I'm doing yoga almost everyday and I'm wanting to join a club at my University (not sure which one yet).
    I've also met a classmate who is, somewhat, going through the same things as I. It's kinda heartwarming talking to her because we understand each other and we've been through similar things. She's very optimistic about everything, so I hope I'll become like that too.
    Thank You for the advice!
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @nowine4me @emmamcgarity
    I'll look into those podcasts. I've never listened to any, and I don't know if my attention span can handle that, but I'll try.
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @Anita4548
    Thank You for telling me this. It makes me feel better knowing I'm not alone. ❤️
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @saraonly9913
    I'll look into it.
  • Phirrgus
    Phirrgus Posts: 1,894 Member
    Hey @eriellegonzalez01 - Good morning! Nothing new to add, just wanted to say it's great seeing you responding and taking suggestions. Like I said, you got this :)

    Hope you have a great day!
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    @kshama2001
    I'm taking them at my University's recreational center. They have sessions everyday in different levels. I'm doing "Intro to Yoga" and "Mindful Yoga". I don't know what the difference between those two are, but they're pretty great.
    I've been able to sleep better because of them.

    Sounds like great classes! Glad you went back :)
  • aokoye
    aokoye Posts: 3,495 Member
    @apullum
    Perhaps. I currently live in a small college town, so I don't think I'll find anything here, but Austin is 30 mins away from where I am. Maybe, I'll go somewhere there.

    Given the need for therapy more broadly, it would be surprising to me if there weren't therapists in your college town that weren't attached to your university. Psychology Today's therapy search and Goodtherapy.org's therapist search are both good options for finding therapists.

    That said, when I lived in a small town in NY, I definitely went into NYC for therapy. It was a 45ish min train ride there and back, but it was worth it.
  • dsboohead
    dsboohead Posts: 1,899 Member
    I am gonna say 2 things as a mom...


    You are worthy
    It's your ball game...now PLAY!
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @Phirrgus
    Thank You!
    Yes, everyone's responses have been so nice to read. I've started looking things up and I downloaded an meditation app someone suggested last night, and it was great! I'm going to try and use that as much as possible.
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @kshama2001
    I'm glad I went back too. ❤️
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @aokoye
    There are therapists at my University, but they aren't really good with scheduling. I've tried making appointments there many times, but I've always got emails saying my appointment needed to be postponed till weeks or months later, so I stopped trying.
    I'll probably end up taking the bus/train to Austin and go talk to someone over there.
  • eriellegonzalez01
    eriellegonzalez01 Posts: 33 Member
    @dsboohead
    Thank You for your support! ❤️
  • aokoye
    aokoye Posts: 3,495 Member
    @aokoye
    There are therapists at my University, but they aren't really good with scheduling. I've tried making appointments there many times, but I've always got emails saying my appointment needed to be postponed till weeks or months later, so I stopped trying.
    I'll probably end up taking the bus/train to Austin and go talk to someone over there.

    Yeah, I was suggesting looking outside of your campus. For a lot of reasons, scheduling included, I've never really tried to get therapy on a college campus.