Monday, February 25, 2019

I just held my scale today and cried

This is not going to be a happy story. It's an experience during my weight loss journey that has revealed to me something I've been in deep denial about. This my 6th month into my weight loss journey. I started at 76 kgs (5'3") and I've lost about 11 kgs in the past few months. I weigh myself every week on a Monday. And due to starting my exercise routine and some obvious overeating I've been stuck at a plateau for over a month and half. Last 2 weeks, I had eaten completely clean, maintained by deficit, tracked consistently and exercised regularly. I was sure this was the week I was going to see the plateau move. I couldn't wait for Monday morning yesterday.

Come Monday morning, after the usual pee and poop routine, I get on the scale excitedly. It just starts blinking lights instead of showing a reading. I start to panic. I tried the batteries, I tap it a few times I try everything. I'm starting to losing it now. My boyfriend comes in to see what's up and finds me on the floor, holding the scale and full level bawling. I don't even know what I'm crying about. That's when I realised that I was letting this get to me. It's supposed to be about learning better habits and I just ended mentally wrecking myself. I'm going to see a therapist this week. I'm going to take a step back, learn to process this. My weight still manages to control me and I can't let that continue.

Thanks for reading.

TL:DR I was hoping for the scale to show that I had come over a plateau and it died and I got very emotional over this. I realised that my weight loss journey was taking a mental toll on me.

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Sunday, February 24, 2019

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Monday, 25 February 2019

Welcome adventurer! Whether you're new on this quest or are towards the end of your journey there should be something below for you.

Daily journal.

Interested in some side quests?

Community bulletin board!

If you are new to the sub, click here for our posting guidelines


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My mom cannot stop praising me when I went home!

I’m currently in college and I went home for a long weekend and I swear, my mom has not stopped complimenting me!

It just makes me smile because she was the one who was always helping me out to try and lose weight (I really don’t mind because she’s a pediatrician, and I’m 21 so her advice is still valid to me) and I did it all on my own!

I’ve lost a noticeable amount since December, fifteenish pounds from ~185lbs? This was from CICO and cardio. I guess it IS pretty noticeable since I am only 5 feet! Pretty solid perks for being tiny, I have to say :)

My mom is just the sweetest and she knows to be tactful when it comes to my weight as she did witness the worst of my eating disorder when I was 15/16 so I’m happy this is a HEALTHY weight loss and she’s noticing. She’s literally calling my dad and my brother going “look at her! She lost weight. She’s so thin now!”

(Okay I doubt thin is the word to use but, compared to my 2017 190lb self? Relatively fair!)

Oh, and perk of having a mom that misses her daughter away in college? She wants to take me shopping on my last day here at home! I rarely like getting spoiled but I’ve been having some pretty great SV and NSVs as of late so I feel like I deserve it :) And who am I to deny my own mother?

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Believing you’re attractive after weight loss?

Hey all. I’m a late teen that’s recently lost a lot of weight. However, due to my weight I’ve always seen myself as unworthy of any affection, never mind male attention. It’s now almost instinctive for me to not see myself as sexually attractive. My friends have told me that boys were flirting with me or that they were trying to get with me but I’ve been blind to it all because I’ve never felt worthy of being with a boy.

My question may seem weird but how do you know someone’s flirting with you? And how did my fellow ex fatties realise that they were attractive or more appropriately, felt attractive?

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20 pounds feels like a bigger milestone than I ever imagined!

26/F/5’8 SW: 199 CW: 179 GW: 145

For so many reasons 20 pounds has been an even bigger milestone than I imagined. I started my journey on January 4th. I lost 13 pounds fairly quickly and have now slowed to a healthy 1-2 pounds a week. At my last Sunday weigh in I had lost 17 pounds total.

This last week was really hard on me. I failed exercise wise. I only went to the gym on Wednesday and I’ll be going again tonight. I usually average 3-4 days a week at the gym so 2 felt like a big fail and I wasn’t expecting a good weigh today. I anticipated it was likely be the same as last week.

I made some huge mental strides this week. I did some organizing around the house of messes I had left behind from a period of laziness/depression and it definitely took away from the gym time. I felt that was ok because this journey is about a whole lot more than weight loss to me. It’s about finding a happier and healthier version on me. So getting organized is certainly a step in the right direction.

I stepped on the scale anticipating no change and hopefully no gain. I was shocking and THRILLED to see I’m 3 more pounds down!! This makes my total loss at an even 20 pounds.

If you’re on a journey, and you have a hard week know that one bad week won’t derail you entirely. I’m ready to get back in the gym and level out to my 3-4 days a week again. I had a bad week for fitness, but I had a great week in regard to mental health and that’s still a win. Seeing a 3 pound loss was the cherry on top of the cake!!

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Looooooong time lurker....(finally) weighing in!

First post on Reddit, and it is somewhat triggering my anxiety, but I feel that posting this is an important part of finally committing to a better and healthier lifestyle. Please be kind :)

I have always been interested in being active and was involved in several sports throughout high school, including basketball and rowing. I was at my lowest weight then, roughly 140-150 pounds, but I had a rough relationship with food and my self-image. Looking back, I am fairly certain that even though I did not LOOK like I had anything mentally wrong with me, I suffered from an eating disorder that developed from an overly-critical mother who projected her insecurities by commenting on my looks and weight. I was a beautiful, smart, and well-liked high school girl, but I was convinced that I really was just a giant in my size 8 jeans. I was obsessed with my stomach not hanging out from the top of my pants, and I would throw myself in a depression until I worked out hard again in order to fit into my jeans. I was constantly looking in mirrors to check that my stomach was sucked in because I was afraid people wouldn't think that I was a disgusting, obese slob.

In college, I could not keep up with my grueling workout and eating regiment. Compounded with what I now know to be a serious bout of depression, I gained 20 pounds by my junior year. Even though I was still considered to be on the healthy spectrum of my BMI, I cried myself to sleep on a regular basis hating myself. I cried every time I would see a picture of myself. I would cry anytime I would go to the doctor and they would ask to stand on a scale. In a time when social media and selfies were starting to be on the rise, I stayed away from Facebook and became a hermit because I did not want people who knew me in high school to see what I had become.

In the months leading up to my senior year, I joined WW because I had gotten engaged to be married that summer. I did end up losing those 20 pounds before my wedding, and I felt fantastic. After getting married, I swore to myself that I would never let myself become as "massive" as I was. However, my obsession with binge-eating and exercise had only been temporarily replaced with an obsession of counting points for food (not trying to go too hard on the WW program over here, ymmv). Once the novelty of my weight loss had worn off, I ended up gaining those 20 pounds back by the end of my first year of marriage.

I joined gyms and did very non-committal calorie counting for several years, but I still kept putting off the thought of needing to finally get serious with the way I approached my relationship with food and tried to keep the habits I had in high school to lose weight. I was still binge-eating and punishing myself with food and exercise while never changing my actual approach with food. I knew I wanted to get back to my high school shape before I had a baby, however, I ended up getting pregnant at I think around 180 pounds.

After pregnancy, I was pleased to find that I could fit back into my pre-pregnancy clothes, albeit they were a bit snug- I just chalked it up to my "body shape changing after pregnancy" and my hips just being a bit wider than they used to be, but I was still in denial that I had actually gained even more weight. My attempts at being losing weight by being blasé with calorie counting and exercise ended up with me being stuck in a rut with loathing my body. I ended up going on anti-anxiety medication when my son was about 15 months old to help with my PPA, but it ended up doing wonders with my thoughts and self-image. I started going out more, enjoying wearing makeup again for the first time in years, and buying myself cute clothes that fit by body without worrying about what size the label had on them. I was mindlessly eating whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted. While I have had an incredible year of finally understanding what it means to be self-loving and accepting of the changes my body has made to have my son, I knew in the back of my mind that I wasn't physically healthy.

I have been a long-time Reddit subscriber and r/loseit lurker. I loved getting to see everyone's progress, and I would silently cheer people on from behind my phone, but I haven't had had the courage to jump into the community until now. This past week, my whole family has been hit with a nasty virus, and I had no choice but to go to the doctor. When asked for my weight, I took in a deep breath and stepped on the scale. While I anticipated that the number was higher than I had thought in my head, I couldn't believe that of instead of being at roughly 180, the needle on the scale was sitting at 214. Staring at the number at the scale in the doctor's office, I hit the final stage of acceptance. I am not the girl I was before. I have changed inside and out, for better and for worse. Lasting change, for me, can't come from a weight-loss program or fast diet, but rather a lifestyle adjustment.

I have committed to seeing food as fuel; my body is a machine, which performs best when I can love it through feeding it what it needs- nothing more, nothing less. I fired up my Fitbit app on my phone, and started logging my food so I can see what exactly am I putting into my body. Over just a few days, I have been pleasantly surprised to find that some other mild health issues that I have had recently have been starting to disappear, including some IBS and moderate insomnia. It is amazing what food addictions and eating disorders can do to someone, and I am more motivated now to do this weight loss thing the right way. My plan is to stick around 1500 calories a day, and to honestly log what I eat, even though it may send me over my daily limit at times. I also plan to hopefully become more involved on this sub to keep my accountable. I don't want to be alone, and this community has always seemed super supportive and helpful (at least from the outside looking in). I realize weight loss isn't linear, and there will be some really trying times. For example, my husband and I are actually taking our first vacation out of town next weekend without our son, so I know I will be tempted to celebrate a bit more than I need (btw- if anyone has any great recommendations for what to see or do in the DC area, please let me know!).

Anyway, thanks for reading. Hope you all have a great rest of your Sunday!

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Treat yo self! Ideas for non-food rewards for mini-goals

My fiancée started losing weight before me and she came up with rewards for herself for every 10lbs lost, which I thought was a cool idea. Breaking it up into mini-goals makes the weight loss journey less daunting. I put together a list of rewards for myself too, focusing on things that would further my overall self-improvement health and beauty goals:

-20lbs: gym membership;
-35lbs: hair cut & color, invisible tooth aligners, tooth whitening treatment, new glasses;
-45lbs: facial, shopping spree at Sephora;
-55lbs: trip to San Diego;
-65lbs: new FitBit (Versa);
-75lbs: hair cut & color;
-85lbs: new bedding;
-95lbs: facial, tooth whitening treatment, mani pedi, wedding dress;
-100lbs: clothes shopping spree and victory post on r/progresspics

It started getting tricky to time the rewards just right so they lined up with when I attained each weight goal. Then I read a comment someone posted on r/loseit that suggested instead of rewarding the outcome (weight loss, which you can't control precisely due to natural fluctuations), you should reward yourself for staying on track with the things that are 100% in your control, like calorie tracking. Makes sense to me. So now I've switched to a monthly reward schedule to celebrate staying on track with my calories. And so far, it actually lines up pretty well with my scale milestones too, since I'm losing about 10lbs per month. I'm at -52lbs as of last Friday and I might make it to -55lbs before we leave for San Diego next weekend.

The healthy rewards are helping me reframe my "treat yo self" mentality away from food indulgence and instead towards actually treating myself well. I'm so focused on living better -- getting more sleep, eating healthier (not just to lose weight but to improve BP and cholesterol), straightening my one wonky bottom tooth that's been bugging me since i was a teenager (hence the invisible aligners). It's opening up a lot of possibilities for me, actively working to change these things that I had accepted and assumed would never change. I'm developing more respect and empathy for myself. Momentum is building.

I'm interested to hear if anyone else has experience with this strategy or more suggestions for rewards!

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