So, why are you here again, and why will this be the last time?

What the title says, really.

For me, food has the following associations:

- a treat (something to celebrate)
- a crutch (something I eat if I am unhappy or stressed)
- a barrier (if I'm fatter, people will leave me alone)
- something to do (if I'm bored, I can eat mindlessly)

I recognise all the above. Now, I'm OK with food being a treat, as everything in moderation is fine, and I'm trying to be much more aware of my body, so I only eat if I'm hungry, not if I'm bored. However, the other two are bigger things I know I need to work on to break the yo yo cycle - I can't eat my feelings anymore. These are things I know I have to tackle and I am finally being honest about that.

What about you? What brought you back here, and what are you doing to avoid staying caught in an endless loop of lose, maintain, gain?

Maybe if we write down our truths we can hold ourselves accountable and make this our last rodeo.

Your turn.

Replies

  • thelastnightingale
    thelastnightingale Posts: 725 Member
    Ccricfo wrote: »
    I joined again this morning because I am finally sick enough of the health problems that are caused by being this heavy and realizing that I am going to have a miserable life in old age if I don't do something.

    Deciding to take your health more seriously is a really powerful reason - welcome back, and well done on finding your motivation.
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    There's no such thing as the Finish Line. It's the Hit the Pause Button mentality that will get you.

    I used to belong to a weight loss club but I'm not really a club member of anything. I didn't want to let the weight loss club define me. I looked at the same people sitting on the same stools ending up exactly where they started after decades of trying to reach their dream weight. I'm not going out like that.

    Diets are now a mind warp for me. I joined MFP and left all of that dieting dogma in the dust.

    I started fighting for the causes that do define me. I rail against diabetes because it seems so patently unfair in the way it really messes with lives.

    I fight for myself, my overall health and wellbeing. I will not be deterred. In the back of mind and deep down in my heart there's a passion for people. I care. I sure do.

    I love to decorate and sing as I'm tooling along. Post songs and photos. That's just the way I roll.
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    Why did the mind allow you to eat until you reached the highest weight you've ever been. Why didn't the mind stop you, not one single time during the eating it all back excursion and say, stop and look around. Let's reassess what's going down.

    With every passing month and year that goes by the ground grows colder. Why didn't the mind stop you before it allowed rebound weight gain with friends so show right back up on your doorstep.

    So many become overconfident once all of the weight releasing is done until they realize how strong the mind and neural pathways really are. Those old grooves in the brain will fight against you. They'll actually encourage you to eat it all back while you're in the unconscious mode on remote control by autopilot.

    Why didn't your brain stop you. The brain doesn't really care if you eat it all back. Lack of direction and flying by the seat of your pants won't fix the brain. Your brain needs to implement a strategy you can live with for the rest of your life.

    It can't be a plan filled with the Shock and Awe Approach to food. All or Nothing Thinking. It doesn't last and it doesn't work. When was the last time you were at your dream weight. How long were you able to toe that line.
    The brain won't quit fighting against you until a couple of years or even 5 years after you've reached your dream weight. It requires focus and direction but not food restriction to find long term stability with your weight.
  • thelastnightingale
    thelastnightingale Posts: 725 Member
    @Diatonic12 I know for me, watching my weight went from something important to something that didn't really matter (because I'd hit goal). The weight crept back on slowly, and because of that, I didn't take it seriously. The amounts weren't big at all each time, but I didn't keep an eye on the cumulative effect, and that's what really got me. I took my eye off the wheel through complacency. Lesson learnt.

    Eventually, my weight was so far down my priorities list I didn't even notice what was going on at all, and when things went wrong in my life, I reverted to using food as a crutch without any part of my brain registering this was a bad idea.

    Letting myself autopilot when it comes to food doesn't work for me. I need to be more aware of what I'm doing and retrain myself to pick up the phone and call a friend when I'm sad, rather than reaching for something unhealthy. Rationally, I know I'm there for my friends and they offer repeatedly to repay the favour, so I have to learn to accept more help. Don't bottle up sadness, don't lock away grief - talk it out until the compulsion to stuff my face is gone. Easier said than done, I know. But this thread is all about honesty, and admitting the things that we know we need to change, as writing them down makes us personally more accountable.

    I'm always going to need some food restriction in my life because I have no willpower over certain foods and I am physically capable of eating after I'm full and then some. (Worst special talent, ever.) Some restriction isn't bad - I mean, I have allergies, so I'm used to restricting 100% of certain foods to save my life. This is a similar principle - obesity can kill. Removing the triggers that push me towards obesity will benefit me in the long-term.

    There are plenty of things I don't need to restrict that mean I can still lead a healthy, varied diet with plenty of enjoyable meals - no doctor is going to get upset about me cutting out certain brand names when I'll still eat other brand names, for example. I just know from experience which things have a hold over me due to childhood associations.

    Sleepwalking through weight isn't an option - we have to be more alert, we have to recognise and forgive our own flaws, and we have to live our best lives. I feel like this is the first time I've really understood and believed what it means to change your mindset to change your life. It's not going to happen overnight, no matter how many accountable messages I write, but at least I now know what I'm really working towards. It's not just taking back control of the calories, it's about taking back control of how I deal with negative emotions.

    Much love to everyone who has posted so far to admit what they are working to change. I really believe admitting this is the first step to us all conquering our demons. The weight might be the most visible part of our battle but it's not always the main part.
  • Xiaolongbao
    Xiaolongbao Posts: 854 Member
    @Xiaolongbao But why do you always lose, maintain and gain? Does something set you off? Do you get bored/complacent and have the weight drift back up? We don't put the weight back on for no reason - there's always a reason. I believe if we can reflect on what that truth is - it could be something big, it could be something seemingly trivial, but it's our individual truth - and find our real motivation - and it doesn't have to be noble, it could be really petty - we are setting ourselves up for success.

    Not sure I agree with you here. I think some of us just tend towards being overweight. It's like pets. I'm sure we all know that some pets you can make us much food as you want available. They'll self-regulate and stay a healthy weight. Others you have to closely monitor or they put on weight at every opportunity. I don't think there needs to be some reason for putting weight back on (other than it's my natural tendency). So it takes a lot of work to lose weight and I really have to be able to focus on it. Once I stop making it a focus my weight drifts back up until I am in a place where I have the time/energy to make it a focus.

    I guess you could define that as getting bored/complacent but I don't really think that's it.

  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    Domesticated pets have diseases, too. Diabetes, heart disease, cancer and others. Genetics. Boredom is a big factor for pet obesity. In the wild kingdom you don't see don't see obesity until those critters are placed in a zoo. It's not really fun or natural for an animal to be kept inside of a house without ever seeing the light of day. They do become depressed.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4636368/
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    It's human nature to go right back to the food protocol that gave you the greatest benefits aka weight loss. Shock and Awe/All or Nothing Approach to food, restricting certain food groups and food triggers. If it didn't last the first go around it's time to implement a strategy that will work.

    Why the hows are nice to know you also need to know the whys to find long term weight stability. Gummy bears used to be a food trigger for me but I have learned how to moderate myself with them. I can have some every single day if I want to. Depriving myself of them and restricting them didn't work in the long run.

    Doing what we've always done will get us what we've always gotten. Thinking this is going to be my last rodeo and this is my last time will only dig you into a deeper hole with food.

    Rebound weight gain with friends. Sux.

    There's only choices and consequences. To fall right back into thinking that you must restrict all the things will fall apart at some particular point. You may be able to keep up that vigilance for a couple of years or even five but at some time all of that restriction has diminishing returns.

    A recent British study of over 170,000 people found that the chances of achieving even a 5% weight loss were 1 in 7 for severely obese women and 1 in 8 for severely obese men. The chances of attaining a normal weight were 1 in 210 for obese men and 1 in 124 for obese women.

    We have to face the hard questions. There is no bandwagon. There is no last rodeo. We have a brand new meal coming around the corner every few hours. If you need a new beginning or clean slate just readjust your dials. Use your new meal to UP your game but don't restrict the things you love.

    Track your data points. MFP is subtle. It's not in your face. It doesn't police your food or thoughts. ;)
    MFP lets you do everything on your own terms. That's a good fit for me.
  • goalpeace
    goalpeace Posts: 272 Member
    I am here again because I simply need to get rid of this excess weight that is bogging me down. I genuinely feel worse with it on my body. I've successfully done this before. Add to the statistic. I gained it all back.

    This will be my last time because I need to once and for all take responsibility for my day to day.
  • pika67
    pika67 Posts: 12 Member
    I’m here again because I got really far last time then God and life had other plans and I lost focus. I lost my support network in the last year so this will be harder but I’m depending on the kindness - and a kick in the butt! - of strangers!

    CW-265
    Short term goal: 250 by Sept 1
    GW-145
  • sdgbta
    sdgbta Posts: 11 Member
    I'm here because I'm not comfortable in my body at all. Have been losing and regaining the same weight over and over but have stuck with things much longer than usual this time around. I'm hopeful some of the changes are starting to stick. 🤞

    If anyone wants to be friends I'd be more than happy 🙂
  • pika67
    pika67 Posts: 12 Member
    Sdgbta- I’d welcome a friend!
  • elisa123gal
    elisa123gal Posts: 4,324 Member
    I have two yorkies....bother and sister from the same litter.. she is a little piggy.. she even snorts looking around for food...she would eat endlessly if she could and she eats up every single crumb on the floors. My little boy, I have to trick him to eat..he is skinny and I worry about him constantly.. he eats half of his foods and leaves it. Even when he does start eating well.. he stays thin... I have to watch her weight all the time..she's my little chubby girl. This is life...and this is why it is easy for some..and so hard for others.
  • panda4153
    panda4153 Posts: 418 Member
    Well, I can’t really say I’m back, because I never left, I suspect I will need to count calories and measure servings forever. Wether I am in lose mode or maintenance mode. I’ve been in both over the last 7 years. I have not made it to my ultimate goal weight yet, but I take maintenance breaks when I need them or want them. Even when. I get to my goal weight I know I will still need to track. I have a HUGE appetite and I can eat an impressive amount of food if I am not tracking. Some days I really wish I could be the “I just can’t eat all my calories” person. Instead I’ll eat all of mine and that person’s lol. So for me logging and tracking is a lifelong tool I will use to stay on track.
  • jugar
    jugar Posts: 10,262 Member
    Hi all!

    If any of you would like to try the team approach to getting through this crazy time with a wonderful group of people, take a look at the Fat2Fit Challenge. This group has been running for many years, and the community spirit on the teams is both supportive and effective. There is accountability (weekly weigh-ins, team chats, getting in there to share and help your team), all kinds of fun challenges, and general helpful friendship. There is space on a couple of the teams for some new members, so come check it out!

    General info page:
    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/114605-fat-2-fit-weight-loss-challenge-and-support-group

    Registration for July:
    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10801389/july-2020-f2f-registration-for-new-members#latest

    Give it a try if you want some real encouragement and success! The pandemic is a challenge, and we are all in there working through this together.
  • E_Val
    E_Val Posts: 27 Member
    I am back because my mental heath and physical health will finally let me get back to it. This time around I can workout. Not just count calories. I haven't been happy with my self image for some time now. Its time for a change!
  • flagrantavidity
    flagrantavidity Posts: 218 Member
    I am here again because I want to take control of my health (again). This time around my goal is to help make myself aware of what I am putting into my body instead of simply limiting calories. Calorie counting, while very insightful, can turn food into something taboo - which does not make for a healthy relationship with the energy I need.

    Feel free to add me as a friend.

  • avtlove
    avtlove Posts: 82 Member
    I am here because I have started a new "diet" or way of eating hundreds of times. Every Monday morning for the last 17 years (since my last baby was born). I failed each time. Usually because I was trying something too restrictive, or I got overconfident and thought "I can do this without tracking. I know how to eat right now (after I'd tracked and ate more veggies for ONE WEEK)." and then it goes south from there. But the difference is, ALL THOSE TIMES I WAS TRYING TO LOSE FOR VANITY REASONS. I WANTED TO LOOK BETTER. Now, I'm wanting to take control of my health. I have two kids (17 and 19) and I shudder to think that if I don't take care of myself I won't be able to be there for my grandchildren someday or worse MY KIDs WILL HAVE TO TAKE CARE OF ME. When the thought hit me that I could be a burden to them someday~ it was a huge wake up call. That was a month ago and i'm all in now.
    I'm also being MUCH more realistic about how I'm going about this that I did before. I am eating healthier than ever, but I'm also eating treats in moderation. And more protein. I'm so excited about what the future holds.
  • Joy1580vb
    Joy1580vb Posts: 437 Member
    I'm back again! Was doing really well last year and then stopped logging in November. Covid happened and I have now gained back about 10 pounds. Weight is now back up to 177 pounds....my goal is to reach 150 so back to logging my food and reading through the comments on this site for motivation.
  • thelastnightingale
    thelastnightingale Posts: 725 Member
    I'm really impressed by all your pledges, especially where you've decided you're doing this again for your health, like @avtlove. Trying to get healthier (even if that's just losing the weight, rather than working out) is such a powerful goal. Our bodies will be much happier when they don't have to work so hard from the extra strain of all the extra weight we're carrying.

    I had a bit of a wobble today, then reminded myself why I was doing this, and managed to stay on the straight and narrow. We're all capable of eating sensibly and managing our weight, we just have to keep reminding ourselves of that.