I have no damn idea how my sister stays so thin, particularly given she's been injured and hasn't worked out for at least a month. I think the cooking thing is relatively recent, but it's insane the amount of stuff my mum makes. My brother's put on quite a lot of weight, but apparently that's less food at home and more food with friends and such. (According to my mum, anyway)
I think I might go back to trying to weigh some of my food. I won't be able to do all of it, particularly evening meals or leftovers which are cooked for a group (by my mum... who doesn't really want to give up the reigns to the kitchen. And doesn't weigh things unless she's trying to prove a point or something). There are some things that aren't worth weighing- for example I had a big pile of steamed veggies with dinner tonight, and I can safely say they had "pretty much bugger all" in them calorie wise (even before I came back to Australia, my policy with veggies was more or less "track, but have as much as you like"). Or milk with tea or coffee- ok, that can add up, but it's skim milk, it's 37 calories/ 100ml or something, it's not worth the agro with my mum thinking I have an eating disorder or something. I'm definitely not weighing water here. I've been trying other things like, when dinner's being served up, asking for less meat more veg, and that goes down ok. I do wish we didn't have rice with everything though (my mum thinks going gluten free will cause weight loss... sure, it might help, but less so/ not at all if you replace cakes and biscuits and ice cream and bread and pancakes with... gluten free cakes and biscuits and ice cream and bread and pancakes).
We had wagyu beef for dinner tonight (meat is so cheap here- it was comparable in price to rump in Tesco, which is some of the cheapest steak I can get), and Mum weighed that. I'm not sure whether she was trying to be economical or prove a point (we'd been talking about NHS recommendations for meat, and she weighed out that amount and told me it wasn't enough, and gave me more).
My downfall continues to be mum's food and stuff I can't get in the UK. Serious downfall. My mum made more cake today, and insisted we share a whole packet of biscuits I loved from when I was a kid, and some other stuff. And then for dessert she came out with homemade ice cream, which is amazing (I can't think of any ice cream I've had that's been even remotely comparable- seriously tops all the specialist ice cream places and stuff) but I'm sure every bit as evil as it tastes.
I can only get into the gym on weekends (unless I feel like paying $35 a visit to my local gym... screw that), so I'm making up for it by trying to be more active around the house. I don't think it's the same as going to the gym, but it's what I can manage. I've also been taking the dog for walks (as long as I/ she can manage), although that may not happen for the rest of the week because there are severe weather warnings for the rest of the week in Sydney, and it's incredibly rainy and gusty out there at the moment (I don't think the gale force winds and minor flooding have started yet, but they will). Need to motivate myself to get myself back onto the treadmill that's been relegated to the garage, and try to do a couple of sessions a day. Hopefully it'll slow the weight gain and make it less painful when I kick my arse back into gear when I get back to the UK.
Although a couple more stumbling blocks- my boyfriend is planning some major celebrations when I get back- we've been missing each other like crazy, plus a couple of weeks after I get back we'll have been together a year. I'm sure there will be at least two nights when the diet goes out the window again. He's also booked a four night holiday for my birthday (which isn't until November), in what's supposed to be one of the gastronomic capitals of the UK. I'm really looking forward to it, but if I've reached goal by then I'll probably have to accept some weight gain. (I suspect I will have reached goal by my birthday, but I'm looking at this as a lifelong thing. I don't plan to weigh everything forever, but I want to eat well and keep active for the rest of my life, for my health and wellbeing. Plus I have fitness/ strength goals after I hit weight goal)
My mum suggested joining the gym 10 min walk from my house so I go more often and am less disinclined to do half an hour and call it a day (also less chance of injury). Was an awesome idea... they charge a hundred pounds a month. No student rates. I'd tell you what I think of that, but it'd violate my personal "try to limit foul language on this forum" policy. There's another one which, according to the review I read, charged 38 pounds for students a year ago- which is steep, but the gym is amazing (and it's 15-20 min walk rather than 45 min-hour walk/ bus). I don't think I can afford that (especially when the facility I was looking at before was under 20 a month for students) but I need to think it over.
At some stage (not today, too ashamed) I need to start tracking my food again (even if it's "porridge with milk, coffee with milk" rather than "porridge 50g milk 150ml" for the time being).