60 yrs and up
Replies
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healhierhappiness wrote: »I too empathize with your situation, and your wife's. She sounds tired and just wants to kick back and take a break. Maybe in a little bit of time say a couple of weeks she will get some wind under her sails and feel more like doing more perhaps. I hope she will and I will say a prayer for her and your health also. It is the caregiver who puts in a lot of hours and time so you too need that much needed break. Maybe a family member could give you a weekend off?? I get it I really do, Ive been there( 26 yrs cancer survivor) and my husband has been there in your shoes. Its not easy but maybe things will turn around for her. God Bless
Thank you. I respect you for dealing with these issues long term. I'm only 5 months in and I'm already feeling burned out. I have three adult children who are all helping out in various ways, so I am not alone in this battle.
I hope you are right that a chemotherapy break for her will help. Past experience makes me think that any long term behavior change is unlikely, though. I know how hard it is for me to change my own behaviors.
There were problems in this relationship before this cancer diagnosis, and dealing with this has brought some things into focus. The counselor told me - "It won't change the way you feel, but it may intensify the feelings." Certainly true for me. I am coming around to acceptance of the situation, though (as my counselor suggested might happen).
I had a weekend off scheduled three weeks ago, but had to cancel due to emergency hospitalization. Turned out to be a minor issue and I could have left, but canceling was the prudent thing to do. I'm going to try again this weekend - fingers crossed.
For now I'm planning to continue to be the caregiver. It's the honorable thing to do, regardless of problems.
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alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Good to hear from you, Steve! I empathize with your situation, and your wife's. I don't want to intrude, but have they suggested any medication or other types of intervention on the more psychological side of things? A certain amount of depression or anxiety comes with the cancer diagnosis, of course. Some of that is for obvious reasons, but there's also some speculation that mood/attitude may be affected at the biochemical level during the cancer experience as well. Good nutrition is a plus on that side of things, for sure, if you/she can get her there, but other things can be useful. I'm far from the only person I know who used some medication during treatment to help with that sort of thing, though it hasn't been common in my life under other conditions.
On another front, personally, I found professional massage very helpful physically, and that has the plus of being enjoyable and basically passive. There can be some limitations on the modality during treatment, but a good MT can work within the guidance doctors offer. I don't know whether that would appeal to her, be affordable as a complementary therapy - just a thought.
Sounds like you're doing good things for yourself, still, and that'll be good for her as well (to see, and of course for you to keep your own tank a little more topped up as a caregiver).
Sending strength and well-wishes to you both!
Thanks for the suggestions, Ann. She is taking an antidepressant (and has taken various types for years). But that was combined with excessive drinking at times - not a good situation - led to some erratic behavior. No drinking now, though, so that's one less contributor to depression. She was also a daily marijuana user, but no smoking now. Uses edible forms as desired, though - that does seem to elevate the mood. I use them, too, now and then. It does help to reduce my stress level.
I'll suggest the massage option to her. She might go for that. I've tried the direct approach to encourage exercise, but all I hear are excuses about why it can't be done.
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alteredsteve175 wrote: »alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Good to hear from you, Steve! I empathize with your situation, and your wife's. I don't want to intrude, but have they suggested any medication or other types of intervention on the more psychological side of things? A certain amount of depression or anxiety comes with the cancer diagnosis, of course. Some of that is for obvious reasons, but there's also some speculation that mood/attitude may be affected at the biochemical level during the cancer experience as well. Good nutrition is a plus on that side of things, for sure, if you/she can get her there, but other things can be useful. I'm far from the only person I know who used some medication during treatment to help with that sort of thing, though it hasn't been common in my life under other conditions.
On another front, personally, I found professional massage very helpful physically, and that has the plus of being enjoyable and basically passive. There can be some limitations on the modality during treatment, but a good MT can work within the guidance doctors offer. I don't know whether that would appeal to her, be affordable as a complementary therapy - just a thought.
Sounds like you're doing good things for yourself, still, and that'll be good for her as well (to see, and of course for you to keep your own tank a little more topped up as a caregiver).
Sending strength and well-wishes to you both!
Thanks for the suggestions, Ann. She is taking an antidepressant (and has taken various types for years). But that was combined with excessive drinking at times - not a good situation - led to some erratic behavior. No drinking now, though, so that's one less contributor to depression. She was also a daily marijuana user, but no smoking now. Uses edible forms as desired, though - that does seem to elevate the mood. I use them, too, now and then. It does help to reduce my stress level.
I'll suggest the massage option to her. She might go for that. I've tried the direct approach to encourage exercise, but all I hear are excuses about why it can't be done.
We have found that having joints available for my husband to use at will has helped keep his mood elevated too.
He hadn’t (as far as I knew) smoked pot since coming back from Vietnam.
But the dementia he has definitely changed his personality. It’s vascular dementia. A result of strokes. So part of who he was is literally gone.
He had been a black belt. Calm, cool in a crisis. Always athletic. Taught classes. Was a judge numerous times at the Nationals in Vegas. Everyone loved him.
Then ZAP! He is easily irritated. Quick to want to throw a punch. Over imagined things.
God. Bless. Cannabis.
That’s all I have to say about it.4 -
alteredsteve175 wrote: »alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Good to hear from you, Steve! I empathize with your situation, and your wife's. I don't want to intrude, but have they suggested any medication or other types of intervention on the more psychological side of things? A certain amount of depression or anxiety comes with the cancer diagnosis, of course. Some of that is for obvious reasons, but there's also some speculation that mood/attitude may be affected at the biochemical level during the cancer experience as well. Good nutrition is a plus on that side of things, for sure, if you/she can get her there, but other things can be useful. I'm far from the only person I know who used some medication during treatment to help with that sort of thing, though it hasn't been common in my life under other conditions.
On another front, personally, I found professional massage very helpful physically, and that has the plus of being enjoyable and basically passive. There can be some limitations on the modality during treatment, but a good MT can work within the guidance doctors offer. I don't know whether that would appeal to her, be affordable as a complementary therapy - just a thought.
Sounds like you're doing good things for yourself, still, and that'll be good for her as well (to see, and of course for you to keep your own tank a little more topped up as a caregiver).
Sending strength and well-wishes to you both!
Thanks for the suggestions, Ann. She is taking an antidepressant (and has taken various types for years). But that was combined with excessive drinking at times - not a good situation - led to some erratic behavior. No drinking now, though, so that's one less contributor to depression. She was also a daily marijuana user, but no smoking now. Uses edible forms as desired, though - that does seem to elevate the mood. I use them, too, now and then. It does help to reduce my stress level.
I'll suggest the massage option to her. She might go for that. I've tried the direct approach to encourage exercise, but all I hear are excuses about why it can't be done.
If she thinks it sounds good, ask her oncologist if there are any medical limitations. These days, IME, most oncologists are open to the modality in general as a complementary add-on, but some types of cancer treatment might mean the MT should avoid certain body areas or techniques.
For example, after my breast cancer surgery, I was not able to lie on my stomach for a while, so my MT worked while I was lying on my back (could still access back muscles). Later, during radiation, she was to avoid any skin that was even slightly pink. If your wife as a port, there might be issues of how to work around that. A good, qualified, certified MT will understand, and work with it. Possible that your cancer center may even know of MTs with cancer-related training.
I found massage so, so helpful. It's hard to explain why: It goes beyond simple relaxation as I usually think of it, but I'm also not suggesting anything magical or mystical . . . just that there are subtle physical effects that are hard to describe. Speaking kind of metaphorically rather than literally, it may just be that we hold some of the trauma of the total situation in our bodies, as clenched or restricted areas, and releasing those has subtle physical benefits. I don't know.
Sending strength to you, and her. You're doing good things in this scenario, and they're hard ones. Hope you get to enjoy your weekend off, this time!6 -
I am new...looking to become healthy, happy, and live in peace with myself7
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MargaretYakoda wrote: »alteredsteve175 wrote: »alteredsteve175 wrote: »Drive-by check-in. Met with the oncologist yesterday. Wife's blood chemistry is good/normal now, but she is not fighting to get stronger. She said to the doctor, "This old gal is wearing out." I'm concerned that she is just going to give up. She is not doing the needed physical therapy. She's not long for this earth if she doesn't improve her general physical condition. 😟
Regardless, trying to take care of myself, too. Still walking with the dog. Two gym workouts this week. Keeping the diet under control and not drinking too much.
Appreciate all the kind words, everyone. Thank you.
Good to hear from you, Steve! I empathize with your situation, and your wife's. I don't want to intrude, but have they suggested any medication or other types of intervention on the more psychological side of things? A certain amount of depression or anxiety comes with the cancer diagnosis, of course. Some of that is for obvious reasons, but there's also some speculation that mood/attitude may be affected at the biochemical level during the cancer experience as well. Good nutrition is a plus on that side of things, for sure, if you/she can get her there, but other things can be useful. I'm far from the only person I know who used some medication during treatment to help with that sort of thing, though it hasn't been common in my life under other conditions.
On another front, personally, I found professional massage very helpful physically, and that has the plus of being enjoyable and basically passive. There can be some limitations on the modality during treatment, but a good MT can work within the guidance doctors offer. I don't know whether that would appeal to her, be affordable as a complementary therapy - just a thought.
Sounds like you're doing good things for yourself, still, and that'll be good for her as well (to see, and of course for you to keep your own tank a little more topped up as a caregiver).
Sending strength and well-wishes to you both!
Thanks for the suggestions, Ann. She is taking an antidepressant (and has taken various types for years). But that was combined with excessive drinking at times - not a good situation - led to some erratic behavior. No drinking now, though, so that's one less contributor to depression. She was also a daily marijuana user, but no smoking now. Uses edible forms as desired, though - that does seem to elevate the mood. I use them, too, now and then. It does help to reduce my stress level.
I'll suggest the massage option to her. She might go for that. I've tried the direct approach to encourage exercise, but all I hear are excuses about why it can't be done.
We have found that having joints available for my husband to use at will has helped keep his mood elevated too.
He hadn’t (as far as I knew) smoked pot since coming back from Vietnam.
But the dementia he has definitely changed his personality. It’s vascular dementia. A result of strokes. So part of who he was is literally gone.
He had been a black belt. Calm, cool in a crisis. Always athletic. Taught classes. Was a judge numerous times at the Nationals in Vegas. Everyone loved him.
Then ZAP! He is easily irritated. Quick to want to throw a punch. Over imagined things.
God. Bless. Cannabis.
That’s all I have to say about it.
Margaret, I'm glad that you found something that helps your husband and you deal with his issues. That calming effect is noted by lots of users. I find I'm still able to do normal things around the house - chores, prepare meals, etc. I find that it makes me more active - can't sit still - need things to do. A win-win for me.
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simply_okay wrote: »I am new...looking to become healthy, happy, and live in peace with myself
Good luck on your journey!1 -
simply_okay wrote: »I am new...looking to become healthy, happy, and live in peace with myself
Me too! You can and I will also!1 -
simply_okay wrote: »I am new...looking to become healthy, happy, and live in peace with myself
Welcome! You have came to the right place.1 -
Let's have a great day everyone!4 -
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Hello all, another Canuck newbie in your midst!
I am 61, been yoyo overweight (but ever increasing) since I had my babies in my twenties...so that's lame. Tried so many approaches at weightless. Gearing myself up again.
I retired earlier this year vs total breakdown or heart attack - I had been working flat out under extremely stressful conditions throughout the pandemic, which added a good (not at all good) 50 lbs, year over year.
Now damn close to 300 lbs and not nearly tall enough ... pretty despairing but yet not quite desperate enough apparently...I retired with the goal of regaining my health; emotional, mental, spiritual and physical, and I now finally feel ready for the babiest of steps towards weight management.
I am very, very sedentary - part of my rebellion against working is binge-watching as missed that stage of the pandemic + happily rediscovering my love of reading. My only stated plans upon retirement were to satisfy my pandemic FOMO: wear only yoga pants or leggings (I have added jean shorts), genuinely be confused as to what day it is, the aforementioned binge-watching, get my mail in PJs!
Mission accomplished!
So I downloaded this app a few days ago and started tracking food. I am also tracking water which went from what I needed to use to swallow a pill to 4 glasses a day, so that's something. Actually 2 somethings lol.
Today made my way to the forums and here I am! Hello 👋13 -
If you can manage a trip to the Len Foote Hike Inn in north Georgia I highly recommend it. It's a 5 mile hike just to get there but once you are there it is so peaceful. I hiked over to Springer Mountain, the southern terminus of the Appalachian Trail. I have wanted to do that for a long time. Hiked out in the pouring rain (kind of liked that), decided I hated my boots but hate my pack more; so time for some new gear. It's past time to lose some weight (I did so well last year but then....) and get in better shape. The KEY is to track. Ugh.3
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Ladybug8882021 wrote: »Hello all, another Canuck newbie in your midst!
I am 61, been yoyo overweight (but ever increasing) since I had my babies in my twenties...so that's lame. Tried so many approaches at weightless. Gearing myself up again.
I retired earlier this year vs total breakdown or heart attack - I had been working flat out under extremely stressful conditions throughout the pandemic, which added a good (not at all good) 50 lbs, year over year.
Now damn close to 300 lbs and not nearly tall enough ... pretty despairing but yet not quite desperate enough apparently...I retired with the goal of regaining my health; emotional, mental, spiritual and physical, and I now finally feel ready for the babiest of steps towards weight management.
I am very, very sedentary - part of my rebellion against working is binge-watching as missed that stage of the pandemic + happily rediscovering my love of reading. My only stated plans upon retirement were to satisfy my pandemic FOMO: wear only yoga pants or leggings (I have added jean shorts), genuinely be confused as to what day it is, the aforementioned binge-watching, get my mail in PJs!
Mission accomplished!
So I downloaded this app a few days ago and started tracking food. I am also tracking water which went from what I needed to use to swallow a pill to 4 glasses a day, so that's something. Actually 2 somethings lol.
Today made my way to the forums and here I am! Hello 👋
Welcome! Many others and I have found great success here. Have a great day!
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Good Afternoon...I am 67 and newly retired. I have COPD and that makes exercise difficult for me. I know how to eat healthy, exercise, etc...etc... I just can't seem to keep on track with it. Moved in with my son and his family recently. Now I am transporting children back and forth to school, so only have a few hours each day to myself. Not the way I had intended my retirement to start.
They have a pool, so at least I am getting some no impact exercise 3 times a week, and I walk the other days. But respiratory issues prevent me from walking very far. So far I have only been able to walk a half-mile, But I guess that is better than nothing at all.6 -
It's great to see so many new folks joining us: Welcome to all, wishing you much success! If there are any questions you have about using the app, need to vent, want to brainstorm solutions for some challenge or temporary roadblock, etc., please post. In my experience, MFP-ers are extremely helpful. Possible that not all of others' approaches will fit you, but odds are good of finding some ideas that sound plausible to try.
@Ladybug8882021, I don't know where you are in Canada, but I'm Canada-adjacent (Michigan, US). @1BadAssGranny, sounds like you're off to a good start with your walks: All we can do is start where we find ourselves, but careful persistence tends to bring progress, IME. Exercise is great for fitness, but it's the eating side of things that was the biggest route to weight management, for me; I didn't change my exercise schedule much if at all to lose, but worked on figuring out portion sizes, proportions, frequencies for foods I enjoy eating, to balance satiation, nutrition, tastiness, practicality, within calorie goal. Figuring out a workable set of habits was a gradual thing, but honestly, that made weight loss/maintenance easier than I'd expected. Wish I'd done it decades earlier!
Minor update from me: I mentioned eye surgery that happened last week. My 2nd follow up with eye doc was yesterday, and it seems healing is going OK. Still using the 2 kinds of drops 4x daily for a while, still have limits on exertion (sigh!). Yesterday, I learned that if I see vision improvement from this procedure, it will most likely evolve slowly over weeks to even months, so I need to manage my expectations accordingly. There may've been the tiniest improvement eye-chart-wise (from 20/150 minus, to 20/150 plus, basically), but that could also be random luck at guessing letters 😆. I see zero difference in daily life, so far. Patience!
I expect that I can resume most normal activities next week, including rowing, though I need to keep it at moderate intensity for a while. I'm chomping at the bit, gotta admit.
I've settled down to eating at/around maintenance calories again, after a short stint of compensatory over-indulgence on the eating front out of pique or boredom or whatever. In year 5+ of maintenance, I don't get too worried about a short thing like that, but I know I need to get back to normal within a reasonable time. I think that's getting more automatic: I've made it a point all along to eat foods I like, not avoid anything I truly love, within calorie goals on average. This time, after a few days of more than normal pizza and such, I was really *feeling* the need to get back to my happy, veggie-heavy, protein-sufficient way of eating, as in craving that routine. Maybe there's hope for permanence, or something near it! 😉
Wishing everyone a happy week/weekend, and success in your health/fitness/weight goals, whatever they may be!5 -
Sharing but no-one needs to read I just have learned not to bottle this up. It has been a tricky year so far my husband has started showing signs of memory loss some days are good some bad but because he gets frustrated I often have to take the flack and I am aware it will only deteriorate as he gets older (71). My best friend of 35 years died this year I miss her advice , and friendship greatly.
We went on holiday with my youngest son and grandson but youngest has always been challenging but now in his 30s he finds managing money difficult, he has a drinking problem and can be hard to talk to as he flys off the handle, I pray daily but suspect he will end up in trouble soon.
My oldest son has a difficult time his son 6 yrs old is autistic and has sensory problems it's very draining emotionally.
I know I need to keep being supportive but feel so worn down and tired, stress takes its toll. I am trying to focus on positive things whenever I can. Thanks for listening.13 -
If you can manage a trip to the Len Foote Hike Inn in north Georgia I highly recommend it. It's a 5 mile hike just to get there but once you are there it is so peaceful. I hiked over to Springer Mountain, the southern terminus of the Appalachian Trail. I have wanted to do that for a long time. Hiked out in the pouring rain (kind of liked that), decided I hated my boots but hate my pack more; so time for some new gear. It's past time to lose some weight (I did so well last year but then....) and get in better shape. The KEY is to track. Ugh.
That is so awesome! Thanks for sharing!0 -
Sharing but no-one needs to read I just have learned not to bottle this up. It has been a tricky year so far my husband has started showing signs of memory loss some days are good some bad but because he gets frustrated I often have to take the flack and I am aware it will only deteriorate as he gets older (71). My best friend of 35 years died this year I miss her advice , and friendship greatly.
We went on holiday with my youngest son and grandson but youngest has always been challenging but now in his 30s he finds managing money difficult, he has a drinking problem and can be hard to talk to as he flys off the handle, I pray daily but suspect he will end up in trouble soon.
My oldest son has a difficult time his son 6 yrs old is autistic and has sensory problems it's very draining emotionally.
I know I need to keep being supportive but feel so worn down and tired, stress takes its toll. I am trying to focus on positive things whenever I can. Thanks for listening.
My husband also has dementia.
If you’re active on Facebook, and want a great support group, send me a PM.
It’s a rocky road. I know. ❤️
In part because so many people think they know because their parent, or a friend, etc. has or had dementia. But when it’s your spouse it’s so much harder.
For me my rock changed to the exact opposite at the very time I needed him most. And, although we see occasional glimmers, the person I married is mostly gone.
Editing to add: We might not be able to message each other since we’re not friends here. Let me know if you want the FB group information.3 -
Sharing but no-one needs to read I just have learned not to bottle this up. It has been a tricky year so far my husband has started showing signs of memory loss some days are good some bad but because he gets frustrated I often have to take the flack and I am aware it will only deteriorate as he gets older (71). My best friend of 35 years died this year I miss her advice , and friendship greatly.
We went on holiday with my youngest son and grandson but youngest has always been challenging but now in his 30s he finds managing money difficult, he has a drinking problem and can be hard to talk to as he flys off the handle, I pray daily but suspect he will end up in trouble soon.
My oldest son has a difficult time his son 6 yrs old is autistic and has sensory problems it's very draining emotionally.
I know I need to keep being supportive but feel so worn down and tired, stress takes its toll. I am trying to focus on positive things whenever I can. Thanks for listening.
I did read your post, @annliz23. That's all really hard stuff, let alone all of it at once. Hugs!
If you need to vent, this is a good place. Sending strength!5 -
My kid just sent me a picture of the car he bought without my help, parked in the driveway of the gorgeous little historic house he and his wife just bought… also without my help.
I haven’t been this proud since he earned his Eagle Scout badge.14 -
So much support. From this group. Weight is just one common struggle for all of us but we all have other struggles too and everyone is so helpful. You are never alone. Lots of prayers and well wishes to you all. I've dealt with dementia for seven years with my mom and now early stages with my husband of 46 years and for me it seems harder. Hugs to all.10
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MargaretYakoda wrote: »My kid just sent me a picture of the car he bought without my help, parked in the driveway of the gorgeous little historic house he and his wife just bought… also without my help.
I haven’t been this proud since he earned his Eagle Scout badge.
That is something to be very proud of! Have a great day!3 -
So much support. From this group. Weight is just one common struggle for all of us but we all have other struggles too and everyone is so helpful. You are never alone. Lots of prayers and well wishes to you all. I've dealt with dementia for seven years with my mom and now early stages with my husband of 46 years and for me it seems harder. Hugs to all.
I feel the same been there with my mum, hugs3 -
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Checking in.......Been in maintenance since April. I am holding my weight. Actually couple pounds under. I am seeing a lot of NSV. I am wearing a smaller waist size. I actually have muscle tone. I have been doing a lot of house remodeling and noticed I can do things that would not be possible at the beginning of this year. Simple things, like drop down to my knees to pull a nail, stand on a ladder for a long period of time painting, loading a washer and dryer by myself with no pain, and get in the back of my truck simply by stepping on let down tailgate and stepping in with hand on corner of truck bed. Previously I would have sit on tailgate and rolled in. I still haven't been able to stand on my head. I used to could when younger. I am getting closer. Maybe by the end of the year. I hope everyone is doing well with their goals. Have a great day!11
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richum1960 wrote: »Checking in.......Been in maintenance since April. I am holding my weight. Actually couple pounds under. I am seeing a lot of NSV. I am wearing a smaller waist size. I actually have muscle tone. I have been doing a lot of house remodeling and noticed I can do things that would not be possible at the beginning of this year. Simple things, like drop down to my knees to pull a nail, stand on a ladder for a long period of time painting, loading a washer and dryer by myself with no pain, and get in the back of my truck simply by stepping on let down tailgate and stepping in with hand on corner of truck bed. Previously I would have sit on tailgate and rolled in. I still haven't been able to stand on my head. I used to could when younger. I am getting closer. Maybe by the end of the year. I hope everyone is doing well with their goals. Have a great day!
Wow Rich! Congrats to you!!1 -
Go Rich! That regaining of strength is a great benefit to weight loss as that needs to be a part of it especially as we get older. As for me, I don't want to be a frail looking old lady just a healthy smaller one. Keep up the good work!3
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So much support. From this group. Weight is just one common struggle for all of us but we all have other struggles too and everyone is so helpful. You are never alone. Lots of prayers and well wishes to you all. I've dealt with dementia for seven years with my mom and now early stages with my husband of 46 years and for me it seems harder. Hugs to all.
I feel the same been there with my mum, hugs
Me too. My mom lived to 95 years of age.1 -
Trampolining today with grandchildren normally I would say I would sit out and not take part in things like that but although hips hurt a bit now really pleased I had a go it was such fun.9
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