A Broken Man, But Better...
Replies
-
Great Job. I see that it took a lot of courage to post what you have. I too, am a trauma survivor. I don't like getting into the *nitty gritty* of what happened, but let me tell you that it was trauma upon trauma from age 4years until 9years old when my mom took her own life and it was not my mom causing the trauma either.
Anyway, I did not do what you did- you tried to be better even physically even if you were still trying to hide your pain. I think all survivors do this, hiding their pain behind fake smiles and comedy. I was the opposite of that. I had no energy or will to put up the front. I was just a sad, melancholy teen and young adult who grew into a severely depressed, anxiety ridden woman with PTSD among other disorders INCLUDING binge eating disorder and agoraphobia. I didn't leave my apartment for years, like around 8 years except 2 times. Once for my dad's funeral and once for my twin's funeral. Needless to say, I gained weight. Lots of weight. I was never ever thin. I was never fit (even as young child). I didn't like exercise and I found comfort in carbs. Still do, truth be told.
I say all this not to diminish your positively impressive weight loss journey, but to show you that you are not alone, even as you spend almost all your time alone. I am lucky in that regard, because I had a child who is now an adult and I have a partner. But the pain of meeting people is frightening to me. I trust very few. I love people but it's too emotionally taxing for me to be the type of friend others deserve. So I stay away.
I ***know*** that you speak the truth in that weight loss alone does NOT fix everything. It just doesn't. I still see myself as the 555lb woman I was. I am now 285 lbs with more to lose obviously. However, I can't take pride in what has or should have been transformative. My knees are ruined and next week I will see a spine specialist for the very first time. I can't even lay down in a bed without my back and knees really hurting me, really keeping me awake all night. I even got an adjustable bed with a nice cooling gel mattress. No go still.
But I too, am now in therapy. I go for intensive treatment 3 times a week for now. I know I need it. I have been having panic attacks every day this week since Saturday afternoon. Too many flashbacks and stuff like that. We just have to keep soldiering on, people like us. We have to keep reaching for goals whether they be the weight or mental health or physical health. Our lives are short and after losing my entire immediate family I realize that I will have no legacy left after I am gone except my son and partner. That hurts. A lot. It's regretful that I wasn't even there to hold my twin's hand when he passed. But I know what's important now. I can't even begin to help anyone else until I find a way to help myself. And I imagine you might be the same. You are on your way, but it will take a long time, perhaps the rest of our lives to learn to really handle what we have on our "mental plates". To learn to deal with the real world again in a healthy way.
I commend your bravery, your perseverance and your integrity. Take care of yourself. Try to find something good about every day even if it's simply a cup of coffee or the sun shining on your face or a beautiful sunrise/sunset, the smell of fresh cut lawns. There are good things out there. We have to look for them. We need to see beyond our pain without running from it. I wish you luck and happiness for a better future.
Take care.16 -
The article you wrote about your journey was well written and your expressions were what we all can relate to.
It seems you had a goal to make a significant physical change and you accomplished that, the weight loss is only the beginning!
Set your next goal to venture (Safely) out and LIVE AGAIN! Don't let fears or doubts, guilt or shame keep you from living your best life because we all have a short time period that vanishes way too quickly.
Wishing you the best and Congratulations on accomplishing your first goal, now on to the Next!1 -
I send you support and caring thoughts. My boyfriend and I both discovered various traumas from the past and with therapy, meds, love and support, we're working through them and getting to a better point. I wish you healing, and know that it's hard work. I believe you can do this too.1
-
Glad you had a good time at the park! Being outdoors in nature and in the sun really can be a big mood lifter. Being around other people, too - even if we aren't interacting. I commend you for seeking out therapy, too.0
-
ShatteredLady wrote: »Great Job. I see that it took a lot of courage to post what you have. I too, am a trauma survivor. I don't like getting into the *nitty gritty* of what happened, but let me tell you that it was trauma upon trauma from age 4years until 9years old when my mom took her own life and it was not my mom causing the trauma either.
Anyway, I did not do what you did- you tried to be better even physically even if you were still trying to hide your pain. I think all survivors do this, hiding their pain behind fake smiles and comedy. I was the opposite of that. I had no energy or will to put up the front. I was just a sad, melancholy teen and young adult who grew into a severely depressed, anxiety ridden woman with PTSD among other disorders INCLUDING binge eating disorder and agoraphobia. I didn't leave my apartment for years, like around 8 years except 2 times. Once for my dad's funeral and once for my twin's funeral. Needless to say, I gained weight. Lots of weight. I was never ever thin. I was never fit (even as young child). I didn't like exercise and I found comfort in carbs. Still do, truth be told.
I say all this not to diminish your positively impressive weight loss journey, but to show you that you are not alone, even as you spend almost all your time alone. I am lucky in that regard, because I had a child who is now an adult and I have a partner. But the pain of meeting people is frightening to me. I trust very few. I love people but it's too emotionally taxing for me to be the type of friend others deserve. So I stay away.
I ***know*** that you speak the truth in that weight loss alone does NOT fix everything. It just doesn't. I still see myself as the 555lb woman I was. I am now 285 lbs with more to lose obviously. However, I can't take pride in what has or should have been transformative. My knees are ruined and next week I will see a spine specialist for the very first time. I can't even lay down in a bed without my back and knees really hurting me, really keeping me awake all night. I even got an adjustable bed with a nice cooling gel mattress. No go still.
But I too, am now in therapy. I go for intensive treatment 3 times a week for now. I know I need it. I have been having panic attacks every day this week since Saturday afternoon. Too many flashbacks and stuff like that. We just have to keep soldiering on, people like us. We have to keep reaching for goals whether they be the weight or mental health or physical health. Our lives are short and after losing my entire immediate family I realize that I will have no legacy left after I am gone except my son and partner. That hurts. A lot. It's regretful that I wasn't even there to hold my twin's hand when he passed. But I know what's important now. I can't even begin to help anyone else until I find a way to help myself. And I imagine you might be the same. You are on your way, but it will take a long time, perhaps the rest of our lives to learn to really handle what we have on our "mental plates". To learn to deal with the real world again in a healthy way.
I commend your bravery, your perseverance and your integrity. Take care of yourself. Try to find something good about every day even if it's simply a cup of coffee or the sun shining on your face or a beautiful sunrise/sunset, the smell of fresh cut lawns. There are good things out there. We have to look for them. We need to see beyond our pain without running from it. I wish you luck and happiness for a better future.
Take care.
Now that I know first hand how difficult it is to post things like this I want to tell you how much I appreciate you doing so. I’m sorry that you’ve dealt with so much, especially losing your mother at such a young age. I lost my mom at an early age as well and know how much that hurts and how the effects can linger.
I’m proud of you for your weight loss even if you aren’t yourself. It’s a major accomplishment and you should try to not let other things in your life prevent you from relishing that. It can be hard to change the image you have of yourself in your head. I was lying in bed the other night and went to scratch my lower abdomen and was surprised when my fingers hit firm muscle instead of a thick layer of fat. I’ve had a fairly firm stomach for a few months now but my brain has yet to catch up. Your transformation has been much more drastic than mine so I don’t blame you if you find it hard to accept. I know the lingering health issues you have are difficult but try to focus on how the weight you’ve lost and continue to lose have and will continue to help with those things. We can’t change the past but you’re doing the right thing for your future.
I wish you the best with your therapy. I’ve only been going for the last three months or so but I know that opening up about these things can be like ripping open a wound. The day after therapy is generally very difficult for me for that reason. After making my first post yesterday and reading all the replies today has been a struggle for me and I’ve had a hard time reigning in my emotions. I’m not ashamed to say that I’ve shed a few tears today due to some of the responses I’ve received, including yours. I think that will get easier over time, but I know that it is an uphill journey.
I am happy that you have at least some people in your life to be there for you. I would only ask that if you have other people that are willing to be there for you when you are struggling that you try to extend them some trust. Having people that are willing to be there when it’s not all sunshine and roses is something that should not be taken for granted. I’m not saying that’s what your situation is, but you said it’s something you have a hard time with. I’m not just saying that either, I have actually tried to follow my own advice on that. A few times over the last couple of years I reached out to people that I once considered friends and told them how bad things were for me and asked for help. I was told more than once that I wasn’t their problem and to get in touch when I got better. I can’t tell you what I’d do to have someone willing to be there for me. So if you have that opportunity please don’t let fear stop you from reaching for it. If I misunderstood your statement or am speaking out of turn I apologize, but it felt important to say.
Thanks again for your openness and compassion, I really appreciate it.8 -
Great job so far and having the courage to post! It is an inspiration!0
-
wishing you victory after victory and success after success!
I sure hope you keep us all posted...we're kind of on this journey with you now as well.0 -
BendableButMendable wrote: »
I wish you the best with your therapy. I’ve only been going for the last three months or so but I know that opening up about these things can be like ripping open a wound. The day after therapy is generally very difficult for me for that reason. After making my first post yesterday and reading all the replies today has been a struggle for me and I’ve had a hard time reigning in my emotions. I’m not ashamed to say that I’ve shed a few tears today due to some of the responses I’ve received, including yours. I think that will get easier over time, but I know that it is an uphill journey.
I am happy that you have at least some people in your life to be there for you. I would only ask that if you have other people that are willing to be there for you when you are struggling that you try to extend them some trust. Having people that are willing to be there when it’s not all sunshine and roses is something that should not be taken for granted. I’m not saying that’s what your situation is, but you said it’s something you have a hard time with. I’m not just saying that either, I have actually tried to follow my own advice on that. A few times over the last couple of years I reached out to people that I once considered friends and told them how bad things were for me and asked for help. I was told more than once that I wasn’t their problem and to get in touch when I got better. I can’t tell you what I’d do to have someone willing to be there for me. So if you have that opportunity please don’t let fear stop you from reaching for it. If I misunderstood your statement or am speaking out of turn I apologize, but it felt important to say.
Thanks for your reply. I just wanted to address a couple of things that you said that really touched my heart...
First- day after therapy blues is real. It's hard facing, confronting and learning to accept and deal with past traumas and how they can affect us today. It's been that way every time I go to therapy. I kind of get pumped up immediately after therapy but then become severely morose as I linger on things shared, problems and different possible solutions. I tend to find myself become (for some reason I still don't understand)- stubborn about changing. Like actively stubborn. Kind of angry that someone wants me to be someone other than "me". The "Eeyore" me. The sad/anxiety/untrusting me. Well, I don't like being that me either! lol... But I find that anger dissipates a little over time.
I am sorry that you shed tears so frequently while going through the posts. But that only means that you are seeking help and perhaps have found a group of people with whom you share interests and pain and know that life isn't always going to be a walk in the park. It's refreshing sometimes to feel for others too. It makes ya know you're human and have an empathetic heart.
The other thing I want to briefly touch on -(lol, as if I am ever brief)- is the things you said about my trust issues. You are correct. It is one of my real problems. I know I've hurt my partner because I get too wrapped inside my anxiety. I try to tell him that I love him and it isn't his fault, but he would "feel" more loved if I could show trust a little more. I am working on that in my own therapy right now. You know what, your words opened my eyes a little too, because they come from a place where you were trying to be open, honest and reaching out to find support and no one cared enough to reach back for your hand to pull you beside them and simply be there with you as you talk or perhaps just feel the comfort of quiet companionship. I realize I am lucky in this regard. My partner is my world in every sense of that word. He has stuck with me through so much...
I wanted to say thank you. You were paying attention there, seeing that trust issue thing as more than a passing comment. It is a main point and focus in my life right now.
Also, I hope that you will find some deeper friends when you can. Your gym seems like a good place to meet some like minded people to maybe get to know better (maybe if more people will become fully vaccinated, I am also a germaphobe too and have panic attacks about that issue a lot). But even online and here too. Find some small group that you don't mind chatting with, even me if you want.. although I have to admit, I get (LOL) "tight lipped" sometimes. (I am laughing so hard right now, you don't even know)... When I have something to say, Imma say it. If I am feeling something really negative though, Imma swallow it and hold it down for as long as possible until I explode and no one knows what made me "crazy all of a sudden". I like talking with you on here though. And wouldn't mind if you friended me. I would accept that. I usually don't accept friend requests. (trust and all).
Anyway, have a good night. or day... whatever it is where you are. I understand if you don't want to friend me. I wouldn't.. (lol). Take care. I appreciate the time you've taken to read through my weirdo thoughts and rough journey. It's not always pretty, but I try to be as honest as I can be without becoming (hopefully) too overwhelming for others all at once.
-Heather4 -
Congratulations! please keep the journey in other areas of your life also. Best wishes for it.1
-
Wow, thank you so much for taking the risk to post. Your experience is so inspiring because it is so honest about mental health and how that connects to physical health. I wish you all the best in your continuing journey!💜1
-
ShatteredLady wrote: »
The other thing I want to briefly touch on -(lol, as if I am ever brief)- is the things you said about my trust issues. You are correct. It is one of my real problems. I know I've hurt my partner because I get too wrapped inside my anxiety. I try to tell him that I love him and it isn't his fault, but he would "feel" more loved if I could show trust a little more. I am working on that in my own therapy right now. You know what, your words opened my eyes a little too, because they come from a place where you were trying to be open, honest and reaching out to find support and no one cared enough to reach back for your hand to pull you beside them and simply be there with you as you talk or perhaps just feel the comfort of quiet companionship. I realize I am lucky in this regard. My partner is my world in every sense of that word. He has stuck with me through so much...
I wanted to say thank you. You were paying attention there, seeing that trust issue thing as more than a passing comment. It is a main point and focus in my life right now.
Also, I hope that you will find some deeper friends when you can. Your gym seems like a good place to meet some like minded people to maybe get to know better (maybe if more people will become fully vaccinated, I am also a germaphobe too and have panic attacks about that issue a lot). But even online and here too. Find some small group that you don't mind chatting with, even me if you want.. although I have to admit, I get (LOL) "tight lipped" sometimes. (I am laughing so hard right now, you don't even know)... When I have something to say, Imma say it. If I am feeling something really negative though, Imma swallow it and hold it down for as long as possible until I explode and no one knows what made me "crazy all of a sudden". I like talking with you on here though. And wouldn't mind if you friended me. I would accept that. I usually don't accept friend requests. (trust and all).
Anyway, have a good night. or day... whatever it is where you are. I understand if you don't want to friend me. I wouldn't.. (lol). Take care. I appreciate the time you've taken to read through my weirdo thoughts and rough journey. It's not always pretty, but I try to be as honest as I can be without becoming (hopefully) too overwhelming for others all at once.
-Heather
Trust is a difficult thing. I can't remember where I heard it or from whom, but I remember a quote that goes something like "betrayal hurts so bad because it can only come from someone you trust." Trust is often intimately associated with pain, but it is also intimately associated with so many good things as well. It's hard to know who you can trust but if you have people in your life putting in the work to earn it you should try your best to extend them some. Even if you have to compartmentalize it by trusting them with issues A,B, and C but not with issues X,Y, and Z. It would at least be a small step on the path.
As for the rest of what you said... friend request sent.3 -
Thank you all again for your comments and well wishes. I have been isolated so long that they really do mean a great deal to me.5
-
Way to go, the only thing concerning me is your maintenance cals...2100? How do you arrive at this figure? Are you active, sedentary, how much exercise do you do and do you train with weights at all (resistance training)...?Are you afraid to gain water weight when increasing your cals to maintenance? How many calories have you been consuming daily up to this point? You mentioned 1100 to1200 (oh my dear gosh, what the hell?!), but nothing after that apart from mentioning not under-eating anymore? How tall are you, plug your stats into a TDEE calculator which will give you figures for varying activity levels, bearing in mind estimations all round, even the cals on food packets are not 100 % accurate....
I am female, 5 foot 5, 47 years old, weigh in at 63 ish kg (140 lbs) and I maintain on 2500 cals a day. Yeah yeah we are all different, yada yada, just using it as a reference point...I see so many people on MFP undereating after years of heavily over consuming (they could be being dishonest in the tracking obviously)....it just does not make sense to me. Consistency, balance, flexibity, life...2 -
Brilliant insight, courage and progress!! 💭🌟💫. You’ve got this!! 👍🏻😃1
-
Thanks for sharing!0
-
You are amazing! Thank you so much for sharing! I am so impressed by you and the courage it took to go through that all and then share it with others in the hopes of helping someone! Good show sir! Thank you for being such a kind human!1
-
nexangelus wrote: »Way to go, the only thing concerning me is your maintenance cals...2100? How do you arrive at this figure? Are you active, sedentary, how much exercise do you do and do you train with weights at all (resistance training)...?Are you afraid to gain water weight when increasing your cals to maintenance? How many calories have you been consuming daily up to this point? You mentioned 1100 to1200 (oh my dear gosh, what the hell?!), but nothing after that apart from mentioning not under-eating anymore? How tall are you, plug your stats into a TDEE calculator which will give you figures for varying activity levels, bearing in mind estimations all round, even the cals on food packets are not 100 % accurate....
I am female, 5 foot 5, 47 years old, weigh in at 63 ish kg (140 lbs) and I maintain on 2500 cals a day. Yeah yeah we are all different, yada yada, just using it as a reference point...I see so many people on MFP undereating after years of heavily over consuming (they could be being dishonest in the tracking obviously)....it just does not make sense to me. Consistency, balance, flexibity, life...
These are great questions and it is important information. I had planned on including this info in my original post but I got self-conscious about how long that post was getting so I chickened out and didn’t add it.
I am a 6 feet tall 37 year old male with a fairly broad/athletic frame currently weighing in at 168lbs (~76kg).
When I started on this journey my first step was to stop living on delivery pizza and sandwiches. March 2020 through May 2020 I started cooking for myself and lost ~20lbs in roughly three months. If I had to guess I was probably eating 2,000 – 2,500 calories a day at that point. I don’t have any way to know for sure but I wasn’t doing anything special other than trying to eat better food in general. Since shopping at that time was difficult due to pandemic related shortages, my diet mostly consisted of rice and beans, pasta, eggs, and vegetarian meat substitutes.
When I started going to the gym in June 2020 I also tried to “optimize” my diet for weight loss. I did this by cutting back on carbs, switching eggs for egg whites, and eating a lot of vegetables and fiber. June 2020 through August 2020 I lost an additional 25lbs or so but I would routinely get light headed and dizzy. It was only occasionally at first but as I started to be able to work harder at the gym it became more and more of a problem. I tried to address what was pretty obviously too large of a deficit by adding rice back into my diet but that only helped so much. Eventually I started looking at the nutrition info on what I was eating, having never counted calories before I was pretty shocked to see how few calories I was getting. As I mentioned, I would estimate in that three-month period I averaged 1,100 – 1,200 calories prior to adding in the rice and maybe 1,300 – 1,400 after. I was also not eating additional calories to offset what I was burning at the gym, which was significant as I was prioritizing cardio at that point.
I want to be clear about this, I was not intentionally starving myself nor do I recommend anyone try to maintain that large of a deficit without it being prescribed and monitored by a doctor. I was eating 5 or 6 times a day and was never hungry to the point of concern. If I got hungry, I ate. I was simply naïve about high volume/low calorie foods and took my being satiated as a sign that everything was fine when it wasn’t.
In September 2020 I knew that if I wanted to do this safely and in a way that would last I needed to start tracking calories, which is when I joined MFP. I had worked my way down to 202lbs at that point and when I went through the set-up steps here it assigned me a 1,500 calorie goal. I imagine it would have been higher had I joined when I was 50lbs heavier. That is what I stuck with until only a few months ago. On top of the 1,500 base calories I tried to take in additional calories to match what I burned off while exercising. This was the same time period that I stopped going to the gym so it wasn’t as much of a concern but I if I worked out at home I did my best to offset it.
Maintaining that 1,500 calories allowed me to continue losing weight (although the pace slowed down as one would expect) until I hit just over 170lbs in late February of this year. After that my weight stabilized and didn’t change more than a pound or two for a couple months (normal variance). I had maintained a deficit, at times a fairly large one, for over a year at that point and my metabolism had slowed down so that 1,500 was my new “normal”. I knew then that I needed to start eating more to hopefully reboot my metabolism. From probably late April I started eating 1,700 -1,800 calories with the intent of titrating up form there. When I started eating that amount I unexpectedly started to lose weight again, which was a good sign for my metabolism. Earlier this month I started eating 2,100 calories and going to the gym again. I am not doing too much differently with my diet other than increasing my protein intake to at least 130 grams a day. Other than that it is still my relatively healthy plant based diet with occasional treats.
The ~2,100 calorie goal came from two sources: that is what MFP now recommends for me since I have switched to maintenance mode as well as using the Mayo Clinic’s calorie counter (screen shot below). This number is when calculating for inactive or sedentary, which I largely am. Other than going to the gym I am almost always lying down. That being said, the last three weeks I have been going to the gym 4 – 6 times a week. I do an hour to an hour and a half of weight training, 20 -30 minutes of cardio, and 10-15 minutes of stretching. I am not currently offsetting my exercise calories since I am only burning ~150 from cardio and it is difficult to calculate for strength training. I am also very weak at this point and not able to do really heavy weights.
As I said before, my goal is no longer to lose weight but rather to get my body fat % into a better place. As I continue to add muscle, and hopefully start living a more active lifestyle again, my hope is that my metabolism will continue to rebound from the deficit and I will be able to increase the amount I eat. I only just started trying to dial in my maintenance calories so I need to keep an eye on it, monitor trends, and adjust accordingly. If my metabolism continues to recover and if I can peel myself off the couch more often and add muscle I imagine I will end up somewhere between 2,500 and 3,000 calories for maintenance. I just need to give it at least 3 - 4 weeks after each adjustment to see how my body responds. I don’t want to add too much too soon and start storing fat again. I am not concerned about water weight but I am still in re-composition phase.
Once again I apologize for the lengthy post. I know that I could have just given some bullet points of the amounts and general time lines but I wanted to give context to the numbers so that nobody misunderstood and thought I might be recommending or advocating an unhealthy deficit. I am, or at least was, a scientist and I have a minor case of OCD so I am trying to go about this in a methodical and accurate way. I know a lot more about nutrition now than I did a year ago, but we all make mistakes and I certainly made one early in this journey by under-eating. All I can do now is try to do the right thing moving forward.
Here is a link to that calculator in case anyone finds it useful:
https://mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/weight-loss/in-depth/calorie-calculator/itt-204023041 -
I promise this will be a shorter post...
I uploaded a photo to my account last night and it shows up on my main page and when I go to my profile, but I am still a gray snowman here in this thread. Can anyone let me know if I missed an obvious step for getting that to show up here?
Thanks.1 -
nexangelus wrote: »I am female, 5 foot 5, 47 years old, weigh in at 63 ish kg (140 lbs) and I maintain on 2500 cals a day. Yeah yeah we are all different, yada yada, just using it as a reference point...I see so many people on MFP undereating after years of heavily over consuming (they could be being dishonest in the tracking obviously)....it just does not make sense to me. Consistency, balance, flexibity, life...
Darn it, the OCD part of my brain wouldn't let me off the hook without making another point about this. I'm sure there are people out there that, intentionally or otherwise, don't accurately track their calories leading them to make false claims about how much they eat to maintain. But another possibility is what I touched on in my previous post. After adhering to a long term deficit my metabolism had slowed down to maintain my weight at 1,500 calories. That is definitely not ideal but it can happen over time. People that find themselves stuck at a certain weight after a long term deficit should consider looking into things like "re-feed days" or spending some time at a higher calorie intake to help their metabolism reset. I'm not saying that's the case for everyone who is stuck at a plateau, but that can explain some of the cases that look like a person is under-eating but claiming they're at maintenance calories.
Sorry, I'll shut up now.1 -
I feel you, OP! 💛
1 -
I’m glad you’re in a better place and hope the future continues to be better and better.
Just wanted to say, I have friends who deliver pizza and you were almost certainly not the only shut-in who was a regular. People who live almost exclusively on pizza due to social anxiety are surprisingly common, at least before Covid caused more businesses to offer delivery. Pizza guy doesn’t judge! Except for noticing if you tip well.4 -
nexangelus wrote: »Way to go, the only thing concerning me is your maintenance cals...2100? How do you arrive at this figure? Are you active, sedentary, how much exercise do you do and do you train with weights at all (resistance training)...?Are you afraid to gain water weight when increasing your cals to maintenance? How many calories have you been consuming daily up to this point? You mentioned 1100 to1200 (oh my dear gosh, what the hell?!), but nothing after that apart from mentioning not under-eating anymore? How tall are you, plug your stats into a TDEE calculator which will give you figures for varying activity levels, bearing in mind estimations all round, even the cals on food packets are not 100 % accurate....
I am female, 5 foot 5, 47 years old, weigh in at 63 ish kg (140 lbs) and I maintain on 2500 cals a day. Yeah yeah we are all different, yada yada, just using it as a reference point...I see so many people on MFP undereating after years of heavily over consuming (they could be being dishonest in the tracking obviously)....it just does not make sense to me. Consistency, balance, flexibity, life...
You must be really active to maintain on 2500 a day. What is your exercise routine? Because I'm taller than you, and weigh slightly less, and I will maintain on about 1500-1600 if I'm totally sedentary, but more like 2100+ most days because I'm exercising (running, mountain biking, weight training) and adding those calories back in. If I ate 2500 calories a day, I'd be gaining for sure.
I'm a long-term maintainer (10+ years) and I log daily as a general habit, so I know what I'm consuming. I'd have to run 10+ miles every day to maintain at 2500 calories a day. I've never actually been overweight or underweight, so I don't have any metabolism issues from a pattern of over and then under consuming. I came to MFP to help me lose a few extra pounds (upper end of healthy range) that were starting to creep up as I aged, and then stayed here to maintain. 5'7", 135 pounds.2 -
Congratulations!! You have done well with all the obstacles you are dealing with!! We applaud your perserverance and many blessings we hope for you!! Never give up!! You are worth it always in the past and present!!2
-
rheddmobile wrote: »I’m glad you’re in a better place and hope the future continues to be better and better.
Just wanted to say, I have friends who deliver pizza and you were almost certainly not the only shut-in who was a regular. People who live almost exclusively on pizza due to social anxiety are surprisingly common, at least before Covid caused more businesses to offer delivery. Pizza guy doesn’t judge! Except for noticing if you tip well.
Thank you for letting me know that I wasn't the only one, although I'm not sure how I should feel about that. On one hand I feel less embarrassed now, but on the other I'm sad that it's such a common issue in the world.
And yes, I always made sure to tip well. I've always been pretty good about that but when you see the same drivers so regularly there is really no good excuse not to.1 -
I feel you, OP! 💛salleewins wrote: »Congratulations!! You have done well with all the obstacles you are dealing with!! We applaud your perserverance and many blessings we hope for you!! Never give up!! You are worth it always in the past and present!!
Thank you both for your kindness, I really do appreciate it.2 -
I’m glad you have given up! One day at a time!1
-
Thank you so much for posting your story. You have already impacted many people's lives.1
-
Thank you for posting, you have come such a long way in a short time. Have you considered getting a dog? Then you would need to leave and walk your dog and least once a day and you can have easy non-threatening interactions when people say hi to your dog. We have a Rough Collie (the Lassie dogs) and I would highly recommend this breed. Not only are they gorgeous and get positive attention but they are very lovable and sensitive by nature. She has literally clambered over a chair to give me a “hug” when I was sitting crying one day. They are great because as much as they enjoy being outside and long walks if you want, at home they are calm and happy to just hang out with you and lie around. They are not hyper or anxious. They are often used as therapy dogs so you could see if a breeder in your state trains therapy dogs. They can literally train a dog for you personally, so whatever your struggles are the dog will respond. For example if they sense you are anxious they will sit by you. They are an intelligent breed originally used for herding and if you want to get out and be more adventurous they are up for anything. They are very good with people, especially children, and other dogs so you won’t have any issues at dog parks with aggression or jumping up.3
-
I'm glad you shared! I can only imagine how difficult it was, but you're story is inspiring. I'm willing to bet there are people lurking and reading who will find motivation from your journey.1
-
Chanda7799 wrote: »I’m glad you have given up! One day at a time!
Oh boy, that's an unfortunate typo... at least I hope it is3
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions
Do you Love MyFitnessPal? Have you crushed a goal or improved your life through better nutrition using MyFitnessPal?
Share your success and inspire others. Leave us a review on Apple Or Google Play stores!
Share your success and inspire others. Leave us a review on Apple Or Google Play stores!