amylosesandwins
New member
My name is Amy. Last year, I lost a total of 26 lbs and have kept it off. I have not, however, lost any weight since before Christmas of 2007. I actually had an old diary on here, but I have scrapped that one and started a new one. Why, you ask? I want a clean slate.
Since my preteen days, I've been a binge-eater. The other day I had a huge breakthrough and remembered the first time I "comfort ate." It's made a huge difference to remember the events surrounding the first time I did this and unravel the mystery. I guess I blocked it out. Long story short, I have issues with food and eating, but I also love the fact that maybe I can learn to have a more positive relationship with food. I can turn it around, and I will!
For the last few years, I've felt that I would love to become a chef who specializes in rustic "peasant" foods and whole foods. I love creating flavors and feeding people healthy food, and I have a talent for cooking that I get high compliements on. In order to be successful in this, my relationship with food has to get more functional.
I also go through periods of time where I experience a funk and a sense of apathy, so I fall into old habits of sedentary and overeating behavior, and gain weight. The sedentary behavior comes from a lack of motivation, usually the product of me making an excuse that since it doesn't matter, why should I work for it? Yep.
On the flip side, I have goals and ambitions. I'm saving money to finish my education, doing some financial planning for the future, have a lot of healthy relationships in my life, am getting into gardening, and getting really into the current presidential race. I'm generally optimistic, and usually I have no idea when I'm slipping up. It's like a subconscious form of self-sabotage. Because if I'm not fat, what will be my excuse for failure, right? Yeah, you know the drill.
So here I am, starting over. I'm grateful for the fact that during this nearly 5-month binge-fest I haven't gained back any weight. I'm not satisfied with just that, though. I'm determined to finally be healthy and happy. I know being thinner won't make me a happier person, but it's going to make my health better, and it's going to give me the gift of greater mobility and physical resilience. That is a gift that will allow me to really reach out and live my life to the fullest. Of course the first step for me has been, in the last WEEK, to go ahead and start living like that despite the fact that I'm still overweight.
I've given up my trigger foods. My triggers are anything sweetened with refined sugars, and chocolate. Oh, yeah. I totally gave up chocolate. After giving it up, I actually feel free. If I don't eat it, there's no way I'll binge on it. I TRIED being liberal with myself by setting out to only seek out a small portion at planned intervals, but I just couldn't stick with it. I would constantly obsess over it. Sweets are a trigger. My first comfort eat was a chocolatey treat. See the connection? So I've just removed it from my palate of food.
Fruit now tastes sweeter and more flavorful than it has in a long time.
Since my preteen days, I've been a binge-eater. The other day I had a huge breakthrough and remembered the first time I "comfort ate." It's made a huge difference to remember the events surrounding the first time I did this and unravel the mystery. I guess I blocked it out. Long story short, I have issues with food and eating, but I also love the fact that maybe I can learn to have a more positive relationship with food. I can turn it around, and I will!
For the last few years, I've felt that I would love to become a chef who specializes in rustic "peasant" foods and whole foods. I love creating flavors and feeding people healthy food, and I have a talent for cooking that I get high compliements on. In order to be successful in this, my relationship with food has to get more functional.
I also go through periods of time where I experience a funk and a sense of apathy, so I fall into old habits of sedentary and overeating behavior, and gain weight. The sedentary behavior comes from a lack of motivation, usually the product of me making an excuse that since it doesn't matter, why should I work for it? Yep.
On the flip side, I have goals and ambitions. I'm saving money to finish my education, doing some financial planning for the future, have a lot of healthy relationships in my life, am getting into gardening, and getting really into the current presidential race. I'm generally optimistic, and usually I have no idea when I'm slipping up. It's like a subconscious form of self-sabotage. Because if I'm not fat, what will be my excuse for failure, right? Yeah, you know the drill.
So here I am, starting over. I'm grateful for the fact that during this nearly 5-month binge-fest I haven't gained back any weight. I'm not satisfied with just that, though. I'm determined to finally be healthy and happy. I know being thinner won't make me a happier person, but it's going to make my health better, and it's going to give me the gift of greater mobility and physical resilience. That is a gift that will allow me to really reach out and live my life to the fullest. Of course the first step for me has been, in the last WEEK, to go ahead and start living like that despite the fact that I'm still overweight.
I've given up my trigger foods. My triggers are anything sweetened with refined sugars, and chocolate. Oh, yeah. I totally gave up chocolate. After giving it up, I actually feel free. If I don't eat it, there's no way I'll binge on it. I TRIED being liberal with myself by setting out to only seek out a small portion at planned intervals, but I just couldn't stick with it. I would constantly obsess over it. Sweets are a trigger. My first comfort eat was a chocolatey treat. See the connection? So I've just removed it from my palate of food.
Fruit now tastes sweeter and more flavorful than it has in a long time.
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