Amazed by people's assumptions of how you lose weight
iowalinda
Posts: 357 Member
It always gets me when people ask how you lost weight and then seem to expect a "quick and easy" miracle for the answer. They lose interest real fast when you explain the months of dedication and the slow process of losing.
Was it the latest fad diet? LOL
Was it the latest fad diet? LOL
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Replies
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Right? I no longer engage- just show them the MFP app and give them my user name, tell them that’s the only place I discuss it.8
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This is a "quick and easy" culture - I usually start with "portion control plus exercise, and better nutrition" and then elaborate when they have questions. I'm just waiting for when I finally come back to work, I'll be surprised if a rumor doesn't start about bariatric surgery, because a lot of folks seem to think that's the only way you can lose more than 100 pounds.14
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People aren't looking for answers in any real serious way. They're just looking to acknowledge they notice and are impressed, not hear the details, about 85% of the time.
My go to answers range from a brief 'my fitness pal' to 'running from bears'. They're equally happy with either one. Which is amused, and moving onto the next subject.15 -
I am amazed by this as well. I told two of my doctors and I got the response, "what did you do?" Really? I just answer "eat less, move more."11
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Yup. Just say diet and exercise. They will either move on or ask for details. Makes life alot simpler.
And most of the time they immediately move on. If your answer isn't "this super secret pill" or "not eating after 7" or "I had this powder with every meal" or "I did this 30 mins a day and lost all my weight" then they don't care.9 -
100% - tracking calories, exercising and most importantly, being consistent. This is not what people want to hear because it's boring. I remember thinking like that, wanting to just add a magic tea to my meals and watch the fat slip away. Something that requires a complete change of lifestyle over a long period of time is not attractive like these quick fixes7
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I find the whole thing fairly comical... I've only used this answer a few times with friends who I hadn't seen in a long time:
Question: "You didn't get sick, did you." Generally some such question...
Answer: "I got sick and tired of being fat."
What the *kitten* did they think I looked like before? ROFL😳🤣🤣8 -
yeah, they never seem to like my answer of 'eat less, move more'
its almost as though they want you to say 'yeah, let me give you this magic pill and you too, can lose 200 pounds....' *kitten*. i wish.7 -
It just occurred to me that people wouldn't expect a quick and easy answer to weight loss if they weren't constantly bombarded by ads promising to sell us that very thing. When a person hasn't done the research or had the experience, it can be tempting to believe those promises.8
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It doesn't surprise me. For some people, that's all they know, for others, that's just human nature. If they seem genuinely interested, I try my best to explain in as simple and as nonjudgmental terms as possible. If they're just making small talk or looking for ways to justify their unwillingness to take that step, I try not to stir things up. For one thing, I don't like getting involved in needless opinion flexing, and for another, I don't think my choices are necessarily better than someone else's.
When we lose weight, we tend to lose sight of how things were before weight loss. I often brushed off any weight loss talk because, at the time, not losing weight was the choice I went with and felt was the better choice. Whether it was just excuses or not is irrelevant, I was satisfied with it (until I wasn't), and any other talk was random noise that had nothing to do with me.11 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »It doesn't surprise me. For some people, that's all they know, for others, that's just human nature. If they seem genuinely interested, I try my best to explain in as simple and as nonjudgmental terms as possible. If they're just making small talk or looking for ways to justify their unwillingness to take that step, I try not to stir things up. For one thing, I don't like getting involved in needless opinion flexing, and for another, I don't think my choices are necessarily better than someone else's.
When we lose weight, we tend to lose sight of how things were before weight loss. I often brushed off any weight loss talk because, at the time, not losing weight was the choice I went with and felt was the better choice. Whether it was just excuses or not is irrelevant, I was satisfied with it (until I wasn't), and any other talk was random noise that had nothing to do with me.
This is also true. I was happy enough for them and was willing to inquire in some vague way or make happy noises if it felt appropriate but it was completely irrelevant to me.
I was fat, I knew I was fat, I wanted to stop being fat but only in an abstract way which was separate from any desire to LOSE weight. Until I was ready to actually lose the weight they could have told me the answer WAS a magic pill and I wouldn't have done it.7 -
@amusedmonkey Before I lost any weight, I never asked people how they lost weight. I definitely assumed that I would not be able to lose any weight due to my particular issues - chronic illness and all the weight adding meds you can imagine (13+ years on prednisone probably being the biggest offender), and being unable to move in any significant way. So, I do wonder if I could have lost the weight sooner sometimes. But in reality, I had zero control of food or movement. So in a way, it wasn't possible. But if I had learned a little bit more about nutrition, instead of just assuming "losing weight is impossible" - that might have served me better.
But I legit never once believed someone when they said "If I can do it, you can too!" Especially if it was something like "moving more and eating less". Because for me, I have had to revamp my diet entirely. I don't feel I am eating less, but I am eating less calories! I eat for nutrition instead of food pleasure, but since I have such horrible health that is the best thing ever. Totally worth it in the end. As for generally normal health people, I guess they like to converse about weight loss. But I bet many feel a certain powerlessness when it comes to weight loss. I don't think I am alone in that. I hear some on my MFP feed, the ones that pop on for a month or two, then leave for a year. There is a lot of powerlessness, and I think that stems to the amount of change that is necessary. If you are a creature of habit, then losing weight or even gaining weight is so incredibly hard! Anything out of the status quo is going to take some real grit.8 -
Losing weight is simple, but isn't easy. Losing a hundred pounds is one of the hardest things I've done, but the formula is simple. People don't always want to hear that.
I say things like "I got scared of diabetes". It's easier than explaining a non 'gimmick' diet and people can relate to it.12 -
I usually say I lost it with the 4 Ds. Diet, Determination, Discipline, and Dedication. And then they want to know if I'm following a specific plan. I answer with there was no pill, potion, or surgery. I log onto MFP every day and track all my food and exercise. Then they quickly lose interest. LOL7
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Losing weight is simple, but isn't easy. Losing a hundred pounds is one of the hardest things I've done, but the formula is simple. People don't always want to hear that.
I say things like "I got scared of diabetes". It's easier than explaining a non 'gimmick' diet and people can relate to it.
meh. the only thing that is is hard, is being consistent and dedicated enough to see it through. THAT is what is hard.3 -
I tell people that I use mfp to determine calorie goal and weigh and log my food. They dismiss it because it’s free and not advertised on tv or facebook, doesn’t involve huge suffering, special foods or surgery. It just can’t be that simple or flexible!5
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Folks are always looking for a magic pill. I get a lot of people asking me how I have lost 53 pounds since April. But as soon as I say proper nutrition (not just eating cleaner, but tracking portion size, macros...etc) and commitment to working out, they kind of get that glazed look and they lose interest really quickly. The only supplement I am taking is creatine monohydrate pre-workout. That is it. I guess people expect me to use Hydroxycut or some such thing. But I am doing this the right way, not with pills. Not to slam anyone who does use thermogenic supplements. But they don't set well on my stomach and they all make me anxious and jittery. So no thanks.2
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@kshama2001 This was the best clip ever!! "this is starting to sound like some sort of scam like you'd do to an old person" lols so hilarious!! 🤣3
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