Getting discouraged
langelis212
Posts: 4 Member
I know. I know everything everyone is probably going to say. The scale is slow to move. But it still doesn't stop me from being discouraged. So I slip. I sabotage myself. I keep trying, but I'm still floundering around between a couple of pounds. i'm at the highest I've been in 20 years. I try to lose. I track. The completion tells me in 5 weeks I'll be ___. Yeah. ok, but the next day dawns. I try. Someone says pizza. WTH It's slow going, can't deprive myself and I don't want to cook. I'll still be lower just not as low. If I could just get out of these couple of pounds I'm bouncing around. I'm walking more than I did a month ago. still doesn't go down. Yeah, uh huh, muscle. BS. There's no muscle. no fewer inches. I continue. I track. One day it'll start coming off right? Why does it keep saying I'll be down about 8 pounds in 5 weeks but i'm still in the same couple of pounds. Sigh. I'm not lying on the tracking. Honest. I want to see what it says for the 5 weeks at the end of the day. Another day dawns. And another. And another. bounce. bounce. bounce.
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Replies
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That was the struggle I was in for a long time, too - but that was with WW. MFP has been working for me. For the last couple weeks every time I have that "It won't be as low" thought, I just don't do it. It's like I'm running a little experiment. What would happen if you didn't have the pizza this time? Maybe run an experiment for yourself. When I saw the weight coming off a bit quicker, it makes those decisions much easier.4
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OK, this may be wrong, but I'm going to come in kind of "tough love granny" here.
It sounds like you're making eating choices, and not liking the results.
Who can help you change that? You.
You can take the reins, make decisions that get you moving toward your long term goals, but you're choosing not to do that. Be honest with yourself.
If you're not ready psychologically to lose weight, then work on that. Seek out counseling, read self-help books (some people recommend The Beck Diet Solution, sort of a self-therapy thing), meditate, pray, journal, whatever it takes for you to give your future self better odds of a good life, because that's the person you're seriously shooting in the foot now, probably.
You can do this, but you have to want to, and you have to mean it. It's that hard, and that simple.
I've been there, I get it. I was in denial, or not ready, or whatever, for years. Decades. Finally, the health consequences were getting stark enough that the switch in my head flipped to "I'm doing this" and I meant it. The actual skills needed were surprisingly straightforward . . . once I meant it.
If I knew how to flip that switch in other people's heads, I'd bottle it, sell it, be a rich woman . . . but I don't even know for sure how to flip the switch in my own head, I just know it was a thing that needed to happen.
All I can tell you is that IMO the results are so worth the effort. I've been at a healthy weight for around 7 years now, and my quality of life is so. Much. Better. Let alone my health status, which is greatly improved. Kind of excellent for a granny-ager, honestly.
If I'd started sooner, I could've avoided a bunch of bad health consequences, but I didn't start sooner. The soonest time any of us can start a new track is now, y'know? That power is in your hands.
By the way: The "in 5 weeks" is kind of dumb. It's "if every day is like today". Every day isn't like today, no matter how hard we try. We have more chores, or we need more rest, or there's a birthday, or we have the flu, or whatever.
Try to find new routine habits that help you stay in a reasonable zone - calories, nutrition, activity - on average, over a few days or a week, the overwhelming majority of the time.
You don't need crazy-extreme food restrictions, you don't need punitively intense exercise programs, you just need to get your average calorie intake below your maintenance calorie needs, and you'll lose weight. Yeah, we all want to lose weight fast, but give it a thought: It's really more important to lose weight successfully, and keep it off long term. Think about how to make weight loss relatively easy, instead of fast. It can work.
You don't have to be perfect every day. You just need to be good enough most of the time to make progress. It's the majority of our days that determine the majority of our results. Focus on that.
Wishing you excellent outcomes - you've got it in you. We all do.16 -
I don't know about the original poster, but I really needed to hear this! Thanks @AnnPT774
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Yes the first time i made goal i was right in the head. I've been struggling especially hard the past several years to get back there. I think I'm closer than i have been. I keep trying though. It's a slippery slope though.2
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Excellent post by @AnnPT77. When I get discouraged I read the "success threads". It gives me enthusiasm to read how people overcame obstacles to lose weight.3
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My "In 5 weeks" is always way too optimistic on the time frame. My calorie allowance is good and works, just not ever in that timespan. Maybe you're slow, too? There's probably a setting we can change, but I've used mine before and like it. I just have to ignore that message that pops up.0
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MFP has been amazing. The only advice i can provide is count calories (eat healthy calories) and get 10,000 steps in daily. You do those 2 things and the weight will drop off and you'll feel amazing. Though be weiry of the calories you eat. For example, 1800 refined white pasta calories is 10x worse for your body then 1800 calories of whole wheat pasta. It breaks down differently in your body. Within 6 months of tracking my calories and exercise on MFP, I dropped my A1C from a horribly dangerous 11.7 to a very normal 5.3 and I also lost just over 30 lbs. And no meds. I strongly attribute MFP as the guide to my successes, i love this app! I wish these kinds of successes for every one of you.1
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Ignore the "In 5 weeks" thing...it's an oversimplified equation that assumes every single day will be exactly the same as today...same CI...same CO, and that's not humanly possible. It also assumes all of your inputs are perfect...that you've perfectly input your stats and activity level and that your logging is spot on perfect and your estimate of exercise energy expenditure is spot on. None of that is humanly possible.
Losing weight is a slow process and the sooner you just accept that, the better off you'll be. It also requires discipline and consistency over time. That doesn't mean you can't indulge here and there, but overall you have to be pretty on point to see consistent progress. And when you make choices to indulge in something like pizza or fast food or whatever consciously understand that it is your choice and it may or may not set you back...like when I have pizza it's generally a couple of slices and a salad because I know that will fit in with my calorie targets...or sometimes I decide to just let it roll with the understanding that I can get back on with things tomorrow and move on.
Embrace and normalize healthful eating and healthful living and let indulgences be exactly that...an occasion, not an everyday thing.3
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