Long, Frustrating, And Totally Worth It

Elfy

New member
When I was young, I was the skinny one.

Of course, I'm talking REALLY young.

Up to age nine I was tall, skinny, and had big feet.

Well, I still have big feet.

Around age nine I began to pack on the pounds. I hadn't changed my eating or exercise habits, but admittedly neither had been good for my whole nine years of life. Not that my mother didn't feed me well, oh no, she was the guru of good food.

However, I was the child who snuck around while mom took a bath and stole the chips and cookies from the counter to take them upstairs and munch on them while playing video games, leaving only the cheeto-orange stains on the controller as evidence of my crime.

When my parents noticed I was getting heavy, they paid it little mind. Afterall, children seem to pick up weight at certain times, many a little while before puberty and (since my family has a history of early puberty), it seemed perfectly possible that, at nine, I could be about a year or two away from it.

However, all through and after the main boom of puberty, I continued to gain weight and it was no growth spurt either. I stopped getting taller when I was 11 and quickly fell behind most other girls in my area in that aspect, staying at 5' 3" while some of my best friends (girls) shot up to heights between 5' 8" and 6'1".

I never really paid attention to my weight until I turned 13, not really caring about my appearance. Then at 13 I was called 'fat b*%^h' for the first time. I went home, looked at myself, realized I was fat, and went off and ate a heaping bowl of ice cream to make myself feel better.

That was how it was for me, I'd be upset, or stressed and I would eat right away. Having an anxiety disorder in the mix with that didn't exactly spell weight loss. Scared of dissapointing my parents, failing a test (despite my straight 'A' record I was always afraid of failing, feeling ugly, and eventually despising my very existence all fueled the feeling of need for more comfort food and less activity.

Of course, my first signs of emotional eating came in Elementary School when the big bully, started to focus her attention on me, shoving me into walls, smacking my head on the water fountain, hitting me with books, all with no reprimanding from teachers. I would go home and cry over a serving of three or four Little Debbie's snack cakes. This particular bully went away after my mom sat me down and got the truth out of me, then proceeded to call the school and mention the word 'law suit'.

But then came other parts of my life with stress and dissapointment that, in emotional eaters like me, seem to set off some sort of part in the brain which commands the body to consume as much unhealthy food as is physically possible.

Throughout High School I tried over and over to lose weight, using Weight Watchers, Atkins, South Beach, everything that I could get my hands on. However, nothing ever worked. The constant talk of 'When you think you're hungry, ask yourself if you really are' backfired over and over again because when I was upset was when I thought I was hungry and, with 'mind over matter' I could hardly tell the difference between upset and starving.

Finally, the second half of my Senior year in High School I decided enough was enough (after walking upstairs became a challenge and my 4 year old cousin pointed at me and said 'you're fat'). I joined a weight loss class and cut my calories, sugar, and fat intake.

Since then I have lost 54 pounds from a top weight of 264. My goal is to reach 145 at this point since that is the high end of healthy for my height. However, as that is a very big goal (almost 120 pounds total) My main goal now is to simply be at 199, below 200 pounds. Which means, at this point, just eleven more to go.

Now that you know my life story as far as weight loss goes, know that, if you're interested in looking at this again, there will be more information to come.
 
Seems like weight has always been an issue with you. I too am an emotional eater and get comfort from gorging myself. You've already done a lot and lost quite a big of it back off - you can do it!
 
First off, thanks Ole for the reply. I feel so special. ^^


Every time someone who hasn't seen me in a while does see me they say,

'Wow! Have you lost weight?'

And I will say,

'Yeah, thanks for noticing.'

They reply,

'How much?'

Every time they always ask how much. But, I can deal with that saying,

'Oh, about 50 pounds'

Then they say something along the lines of.

'WOAH!!! How in the world did you do it!!?'

And I say the every unpopular answer,

'Diet and exercise'.

People are always frustrated by this answer because lots of people want to lose weight, but everyone wants a pill that you can take once and then be rid of all of your excess weight forever, but the fact is that it doesn't really work that way.

Some 'miracle diets' do work for some people, don't get me wrong, but most people just need to commit to diet and exercise.

I know I did.

And it feels great. No one wants to think about doing it, heck, even I don't want to get up and do my exercises all the time, but when you're doing it and after your done you feel fantastic, knowing that the past 15 minutes you spent looking like a dork doing sit ups on your floor has bettered your life.

You are 15 minutes of situps closer to being healthy.
 
you have a great way about looking at it

at my point right now id be embarassed to tell any of my real life friends that i am dieting, and probably wont say anything about it even if they do ask ( secretly hope they will when i see them )
 
Haha, I totally know what you're talking about Elfy. People ask me if I've lost any weight and how I did it as well. I give the same answer and people just don't want to hear it.
 
Woah

Long time since I've been on this thing...

Goodness...A REALLY long time....

And there is sad news to give.

First of all - good news: I managed to get to 195 pounds. (yay!)

Bad news: I'm back at 210.

Very depressing.

What's really hurting me now is my terrible addiction to food. My doctors have recognized it now, but we've agreed that I need to try and work through it on my own before they start getting into pills or therapies - personally I would rather avoid them.

Unfortunately, this addiction is really getting terribly frustrating and out of hand. I can hardly go through a few hours without thinking about food - without feeling like I need it! I can go for about five days eating really well and avoiding my horrible crave foods. At the five day point, however, my brain starts to explode and my stomach begins to eat itself - demanding that I put some McDonald's into it. And not just any McDonald's, but at least one and a half sandwiches, lots of fries, a shake, and two pies. And of course when I get home it is completely unreasonable not to have some of that pie that mom made!

Now of course that's not always how it goes... (Sometimes it's Taco Bell or a whole frozen pizza), but that's the basic thing. I've tried to keep my mind away from food and I've tried appetite suppressors, but everything seems to fail and collapse after a little while. Then when I break down and eat something I feel terrible about myself. When I feel terrible about myself I get incredibly depressed. When I get depressed I start craving food - lots and lots of comfort food.

It's a never ending cycle and it's really putting a damper in my hopes for a healthier me. v.v

If anyone shares this problem or has overcome it or has any suggestions for me (or simply 'hang in there, kitty' comments) I'd be happy to hear them! ^^

P.S.- Missed you all.
 
wow, i can identify with this post 100% actually i think anyone on this forum can be able to identify with this post.

i'd like to know if cravings will ever be cured, just like you i'll have a string of like 7 days where i'll do great but on day 8 it's like a monster awakens inside of me and all i can think of is something sweet or deep-fried, basically unhealthy stuff. at the moment i can say i've come a long way with about 1 treat day per week. but i'm starting to notice that every time the treat meal is getting bigger and bigger it's ridiculous!

in my case for now what's working is that the more i workout, the less my mind is preoccupied with food...so on the days i workout 6days a week then temptation is low, but like the last week or two i've worked out about 3-4days a week and temptation has greatly increased.

i guess it's different for everyone, so i'll pop in here to see if anyone else has more ideas about how to cure cravings because i'd sure as hell like to know too...lol! all the best hun xoxo

Long time since I've been on this thing...

Goodness...A REALLY long time....

And there is sad news to give.

First of all - good news: I managed to get to 195 pounds. (yay!)

Bad news: I'm back at 210.

Very depressing.

What's really hurting me now is my terrible addiction to food. My doctors have recognized it now, but we've agreed that I need to try and work through it on my own before they start getting into pills or therapies - personally I would rather avoid them.

Unfortunately, this addiction is really getting terribly frustrating and out of hand. I can hardly go through a few hours without thinking about food - without feeling like I need it! I can go for about five days eating really well and avoiding my horrible crave foods. At the five day point, however, my brain starts to explode and my stomach begins to eat itself - demanding that I put some McDonald's into it. And not just any McDonald's, but at least one and a half sandwiches, lots of fries, a shake, and two pies. And of course when I get home it is completely unreasonable not to have some of that pie that mom made!

Now of course that's not always how it goes... (Sometimes it's Taco Bell or a whole frozen pizza), but that's the basic thing. I've tried to keep my mind away from food and I've tried appetite suppressors, but everything seems to fail and collapse after a little while. Then when I break down and eat something I feel terrible about myself. When I feel terrible about myself I get incredibly depressed. When I get depressed I start craving food - lots and lots of comfort food.

It's a never ending cycle and it's really putting a damper in my hopes for a healthier me. v.v

If anyone shares this problem or has overcome it or has any suggestions for me (or simply 'hang in there, kitty' comments) I'd be happy to hear them! ^^

P.S.- Missed you all.
 
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