A New Start...

Mike Digital

New member
I'm 29 and I've been overweight my whole life. My family is also overweight so like most people I never had the opportunity to build good eating habits, exercise habits, and just really caring for myself. I smoked at least two packs of cigarettes a day starting at 19. I ate horrible food, crazy portions, and never really gave too much effort to my health.


In 2010, I started to "try". In reality, it was a nice thought but the effort was really misguided. I cut out pop and junk drinks, I stopped eating red meat, and I quit cigarettes cold turkey. I'm happy to say I'm still free of all of those, but it didn't do much for me. I wasn't dropping weight. I could breath better because of the cigarettes being gone from my life, but not much changed. I'd still eat junk food, but would think and pretend I was "doing good" because of the stuff I cut out.


About a year ago I was still not seeing any return on my health investment so I took it one step further. I cut out all bread, all potatoes, all pastas, and all junk and fried food. For months all I ate was grilled chicken or ground chicken/turkey with white rice and veggies. I stuck to this every single day except for a cheat day every month to six weeks. Again... no loss.


Earlier this summer I went through a messy break up. My girlfriend was also overweight and we were supportive of eating better, but like our relationship, she wasn't as serious as I was. We were best friends for over half our lives on top of the couple years of serious relationship so this was REALLY hard. It led to a major bout with depression. Some folks will binge eat during depression. For me, I just stopped eating. I started to notice I was going three or four days in between eating at all. That is some scary stuff. I wasn't feeling any hunger pains and my thought process was "I'm THIS fat, I can live fine without eating for awhile".


It was like the concept of "eating" and "hunger" wasn't getting to my brain. When forced with the thought or threat of eating the idea of food grossed me out beyond belief. I kept explaining to people that it's like that scene in the old vampire movie "Lost Boys" when "Michael" is eating Chinese food and all he sees is a container full of maggots. Food repulsed me. The gaps in between meals started getting up to 7 or 8 days at a time. I KNOW that is horrible, scary, and VERY MUCH wrong. I knew it then too, but the depression made me not care. I researched fasting and would try to justify it. I'd take vitamins and drink nothing but water, black coffee, and iced tea. Nothing else except for those some-what weekly meals. I toyed with the idea of forcing myself to try juicing (even bought a juicer), but never gave in to it.


The darkness of the depression finally started to settle and I knew I had to change. I've always avoided scales, but I went from a pant size 54 to a 48 and 3 and 4 XL shirts to XXL in about sixty days. While I am smaller and physically look better, I know I'm very lucky that I didn't do any serious damage to myself.


As I get my feet back on the ground and start to move forward with my life I'm looking to make a change. I still don't want to eat, but I do every day. Without going too deep, I just stick with natural food. I really like the "if it's advertised on TV, it's not for me" rule of thumb. I'm not doing the exercise I should, but I'm now a few weeks into a daily 20-25 minute basic yoga routine. Big difference.


I'm feeling better now. Food is not the enemy. Bad habits are. Since eating regularly and the addition of the yoga I've managed to not only keep the weight I dangerously loss off, but lose MORE. In the upcoming months, I plan to get into a better routine and get myself out of this fat guy hell and get over this horrible depression.


This is a great website. I've read so many great and encouraging stories from people. You guys prove change AND happiness IS possible! I know my story and situation is a bit different and extremely rough, but like everyone here I'm trying to turn the negative in my life into positive.


Thanks

Mike
 
WOW!!


Mike...that truly is a vary scary story and I am happy for you that you did not fall ill. But then, at 29 the body is quite resilient and since your body seems to be especially so, you should make full use of it, albeit in a much better way than you have so far.


Remember, in 10 years time, the damages caused may begin to show up in some form or another and that is something that you do not want to deal with, believe me.


It is encouraging to hear that you converted to eating healthy, as opposed to starving yourself. But you have to increase your exercise to increase your muscle tone and strength. You need that in life and that will make you feel a whole lot fitter than just losing weight.


If I may, I suggest that you hit some weight training with a trainer, who will design your routine to suit your present physical condition. That way you will not injure anything. Once you feel stronger, you should start adding aerobic exercises. These will help lower your heartbeat and improve your cardiac health.


In my experience of being an obese person for a large part of my younger life, fat people should not be in the company of people who are not doing anything about improving their health. Make friends with people who are constantly trying to boost their energy levels and are succeeding in their endeavor to get fitter. It really helps; and there are many people [like this forum] who are glad to help.


You have shown incredible willpower, quitting smoking and even starving yourself. Just channelize the same willpower to getting stronger and fitter.


Best of luck and keep us posted
 
Welcome to the forum Mike! That's quite the journey that has led you here and I'm also glad that you're making yourself eat something, even if you don't want to. Good luck to you and I can't wait to hear how things go from here on!
 
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