Weight Loss Successes

Woman drops 110 pounds, 8 dress sizes - CNN.com
Woman drops 110 pounds, 8 dress sizesStory Highlights
Sharon Twitchell barely fit into a size 22 as her weight peaked at 227 lbs.
An online weight loss program and regular exercise helped her lose 110 lbs.
By Jacqueline Adams

(CNN) -- Three years ago Sharon Twitchell was miserable.

Sharon Twitchell lost 110 pounds and went from wearing a size 22 to a size 2 in 10 months.

Carrying 227 pounds on her tiny 5'2" frame, the 51-year-old mother and wife could barely squeeze into her plus-size clothing.

Twitchell is the first of eight CNN.com I-Reporters who shared their weight loss stories with CNN. Over the next several weeks, we'll reveal their secrets, the defining moments that motivated them to lose a combined total of 1,167 pounds and how the weight loss has changed their lives.
"I was wearing a size 22 and getting my clothes at stores where the biggest size was a 24. I asked myself, 'Where are you going to buy your clothes after you get bigger than a size 24?'" said Twitchell.

Adding to her misery, Twitchell says her ballooning weight was also wreaking havoc on her 31-year marriage.

"We were literally just co-existing together, like roommates," recalled Twitchell.

"Friends asked my husband to e-mail them a picture of us. Later, I discovered that he had sent them an old photograph taken when I was much smaller. Even though he loved me, he was embarrassed at how much weight I had gained."

Afraid she would have to purchase clothing from online stores catering to larger women, Twitchell told her husband she'd had enough and was ready to make a change.

Initially, Twitchell made an appointment with her physician in hopes that he would write her a prescription for a pill to help her lose weight. Instead, she says she saw the "w" begin to form on his lips and knew he was going to recommend she try Weight Watchers.

Uncomfortable with the thought of going to actual meetings, Twitchell lost 30 pounds on her own and eventually joined the online Weight Watchers POINTS program on October 26, 2004. She also bought an elliptical machine and a recumbent bicycle and started working out six days a week.

The pounds melted off.
Ten months and another 80 pounds later, she reached her goal weight on August 26, 2005.

Twitchell says she hasn't been this size since before her first daughter was born. She now weighs 117 pounds and wears a size 2 or 4, depending on the store.

How has this changed her life?

"I have a marriage again," says Twitchell, who recently retired and relocated with her husband from New Jersey to their new home in the mountains of western North Carolina.

"When I finally reached my goal (weight), my wedding ring was two sizes too big. I had already had it resized twice and the jeweler was hesitant that I might lose more weight. Rather than resize it, my husband bought me a new beautiful diamond ring and when he gave it to me he said this was a renewal of our wedding vows," she recalled.

Twitchell says her husband keeps telling people that he's got his wife back. This August, the couple will celebrate their 33rd wedding anniversary and they couldn't be happier.

"If I can lose 110 pounds, anyone can," says Twitchell.
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Saw this story on CNN.COM's front page today and much of it just irritated me - surely we've got better successes than this one...

Send in your own success story :) and tell it here :)
CNN.com - Send an I-Report
 
Funny, cause I initially had the same reaction...."and this is newsworthy why?"....then I thought about it for a second and realized that we have not only become a increasingly overweight culture - but one that no longer really believes in the basic principles of moderate calorie reduction and sensible exercise for weight loss.

We believe in weight loss through supplements (both OTC and prescription), weight loss via surgery, weight loss by following expensive plans which trumpet nonsense such as the "scientific breakthrough of the glycemic index" and weight loss at the speed of light as promoted by shows like "Biggest Loser".

So, in a weird, sad way it is newsworthy that an ordinary, middle aged woman, armed with nothing more than a desire to shed the pounds, a (relatively) sensible diet plan and some basic exercise equipment, lost over a hundred pounds...and took a rational, healthy amount of time to do it. Shouldn't be newsworth...but....
 
Funny, cause I initially had the same reaction...."and this is newsworthy why?"....then I thought about it for a second and realized that we have not only become a increasingly overweight culture - but one that no longer really believes in the basic principles of moderate calorie reduction and sensible exercise for weight loss.

We believe in weight loss through supplements (both OTC and prescription), weight loss via surgery, weight loss by following expensive plans which trumpet nonsense such as the "scientific breakthrough of the glycemic index" and weight loss at the speed of light as promoted by shows like "Biggest Loser".

So, in a weird, sad way it is newsworthy that an ordinary, middle aged woman, armed with nothing more than a desire to shed the pounds, a (relatively) sensible diet plan and some basic exercise equipment, lost over a hundred pounds...and took a rational, healthy amount of time to do it. Shouldn't be newsworth...but....

good post! reppd...


im happy to see this in the news rather then bad news
 
I do think this is newsworthy too...I'd much rather read good news than bad, which is why I don't read/watch the news. And maybe more people would get off their butts if they keep reading about how real people are doing this intelligently.
 
I agree its great to see someone who has done this. I think just by the fact that we are all on here, we are on the path to achieving our goals, maybe there is someone who isn't on their path yet who will see this & it will motivate them to start doing what they need to do to get healthy.

Much better than the guys like sexy gals story a few days ago!
 
Funny, cause I initially had the same reaction...."and this is newsworthy why?"....then I thought about it for a second and realized that we have not only become a increasingly overweight culture - but one that no longer really believes in the basic principles of moderate calorie reduction and sensible exercise for weight loss.

We believe in weight loss through supplements (both OTC and prescription), weight loss via surgery, weight loss by following expensive plans which trumpet nonsense such as the "scientific breakthrough of the glycemic index" and weight loss at the speed of light as promoted by shows like "Biggest Loser".

So, in a weird, sad way it is newsworthy that an ordinary, middle aged woman, armed with nothing more than a desire to shed the pounds, a (relatively) sensible diet plan and some basic exercise equipment, lost over a hundred pounds...and took a rational, healthy amount of time to do it. Shouldn't be newsworth...but....

Great post Cym.
 
I guess a lot of people on this forum deserved to be in the news then... they just do not work on CNN... it is nice to hear about others weight loss successes :bigear:
 
Thanks for posting this story! I love WL stories; they are very inspirational. I am a big advocate of the WW programme, and it is the one I am on right now. I have found it to mainly point people to portion control, which is what I needed. I also needed to cut out the junk food! Pretty simple, huh. Oh, not to mention getting moving, which was easier and easier as the weight came off!

Thanks for some good news,
:eh:
 
Funny, cause I initially had the same reaction...."and this is newsworthy why?"....then I thought about it for a second and realized that we have not only become a increasingly overweight culture - but one that no longer really believes in the basic principles of moderate calorie reduction and sensible exercise for weight loss.

We believe in weight loss through supplements (both OTC and prescription), weight loss via surgery, weight loss by following expensive plans which trumpet nonsense such as the "scientific breakthrough of the glycemic index" and weight loss at the speed of light as promoted by shows like "Biggest Loser".

So, in a weird, sad way it is newsworthy that an ordinary, middle aged woman, armed with nothing more than a desire to shed the pounds, a (relatively) sensible diet plan and some basic exercise equipment, lost over a hundred pounds...and took a rational, healthy amount of time to do it. Shouldn't be newsworth...but....


Agreed!
The general public needs to know that any average person can get into the shape they want. It's what inspired me to pursue working in the fitness industry after uni - because I took 6 inches off my own waistline and was far from a 'jock' growing up.
 
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