I would argue that education leads to consistency.
I can only speak for myself here... but in the begining of my trip down the rabbit hole... the scale would move... inches would move but slowly -and almost one year into it... I'm still obese... We live in a quick fix world - buy things on credit, buy now buy now - we're not - at least im not accustoming to havin to wait for something.
I gave lip service to wanting it. I thought I wanted it. But, time and time again when push came to shove, there were other things I wanted more.
Steve, I do get motivated by seeing the good that i have done but the reverse is true as well, if I do poorly I begin to give up then....BOOM, back to the bad and weight gain. Even though I know what I am doing, sometimes I wonder if I am Loopy.![]()
I don't know - even when I was grossly overweight I KNEW that an entire can of Pringles was not a single serving.
Education alone wasn't enough to keep me from devouring a can. What makes me stop now is commitment of living healthier. A constant struggle towards getting away from mindless eating.
I don't buy snacky food for that very reason - even with knowledge and education, the hand to mouth action is a hard one to master for me.
maleficent summed up my exact thoughts on the matter "I didn't really want it bad enough" and until I did all the education and will power and encouragement in the world was not going to keep me from yo-yo weight gain and loss and gain.
Yes I wanted to lose weight, yes, when I lost weight the first time I wanted it to stay off, yes I wanted to stop the regain and lose it again...but I didn't want it bad enough to make the significant, lasting changes in my life that it entailed. I gave lip service to wanting it. I thought I wanted it. But, time and time again when push came to shove, there were other things I wanted more.
That's you... not everyone is at the same starting point... I will see this thru to completion but starting is not easy - and once I commited to dooing it - i was Ok but its that first step and knowing what direction to take that's the tough part.steve said:Never did I think about giving up simply b/c it was too hard or would take too long. But again, this is me personally. I enjoy a challenge.
IMO, if you really want something bad enough, you will do anything to get it, within limits of course.
my subconscious mind is pretty loud - and has been talking to me for a very long timesteve said:And this is why I think a lot of it has to do with "self talk." Sure, rationally, logically, and CONSCIOUSLY many of us may say we want to change. But all along, we aren't paying attention to our subconscious minds, which ultimately guide and dictate our behaviors.
The education part isn't easy - google diets on he web - and most of 'em will tell youo 1200 calories.. or something that we know isn't totally reasonable.. 1200 calories is tough to do...steve said:Once educated about how all this works, why doesn't rational thinking take over?
there are also a lot of pompous windbags that find their way in the door, and people who think they're experts because they m anaged to lose 5lbs by eating snake venom... Consider a new person coming in the door... they have 100lbs to lose - and they're on a 1200 calorie diet - they are told their calories are too low but aren't given a whole lot of direction on what to do - searchingn thru threads here -t here's a ton of info -the same questions get asked over and over - some of it is good info - some of it - not so much... I think itd be frustrating. The people "in the know" dont wear tshirts -- so there's a lot o f sifting thru answers to know what to beleive.steve said:But when they are in a community such as WLF, isn't the playing field different? I mean, there are people here who are actually "in the know" and spend the time to educate people. Once they are educated, why isn't it enough for them to act rationally, assuming they really want to lose the weight?
what is the truth?Is it a matter of actually believing the truth?
almost one year into this I'm still not sure it's worth it to me... Ego is what will have me finish -but at my age - 1 1/2 years is al ong time...If it has to be a slow process, maybe it isn't worth it to some?
that's a big factor with me...Is it the issue of "self talk" I presented above?
My difficulty lies in two things. One is vanity, or being embarrassed to workout in front of people and the other is fear of improper technique while doing any type of workout.
When I am in a gym, trying to do a workout, I feel like the whole room is staring at me..and not because I'm a stunner! More like, "check that girl out, she is totally doing it wrong, ha ha ha" or " look at her fat ass" or name the insult. Even if I KNOW I am doing it right, I still get very anxious and nervous. Even with the trainer I have now, I get shy, quiet, embarrassed, and nervous. It's insecurity and low self esteem.
The other is if I don't know how to do proper technique, I will get injured. I have had too many health issues to add another one! So, I will say that EDUCATION IS HUGE! Knowing I am doing something right is great, but it still doesn't make a difference in me being anxious in front of other people.
As for eating. I have never ever had a problem eating properly. I love healthy food! I enjoy all the bad stuff like other people- I just don't emotionally eat. I will say "I wish I had a whole key lime cheesecake to eat", but it is simply a way to verbalize what I might be craving. I just don't act on it.
That's It!
Deanna
Okay.
I buy into this concept.
Now, is there a way to pre-maturely make someone want it "bad enough." Or do you have to wait for the "end of the road" so to say?
I know my answer, but what do you all think? Is there a way to generate "hunger?"
If so, how?
Exactly - for me it's been tunnel vision. In the big picture, I want to lose weight. 24/7, I want to lose weight. But right there in front of me is that thing I want to eat and surely this one meal or snack isn't a problem, except that the justifications were endless. I thought I wanted to lose weight, but when push came to shove, I wanted to eat that *whatever* more.
you can't make someone do something they don't believe they can do themselves or want to do themselves... I'm going to quote my essay again - whenin another situation - my friend said to me - I can't do it for you - You have to do it for you. People have to want it for themselves and believe they can do it for themselvesNow, is there a way to pre-maturely make someone want it "bad enough." Or do you have to wait for the "end of the road" so to say?
One of the words that gets tthrown around sites such as this is Inspiration.. Personally I can't stand the word and I don't thinK i am anyone's inspiration.. However I would like people to think, oh that mal, she's a lazy good for nothing moron -- if she can do it -then so can I..\ Is there a way to generate "hunger?"
This is a fascinating topic, that's for sure.
I supect there are as many reasons why people don't do what's right for their bodies as there are people on this forum.
For me, the whole subject of food and weight is incredibly emotional. When I was a baby, my parents were a butler and a maid, and the only time they could see me was when I was fed. I'm sure the food=companionship equation was imprinted on my brain at a very early age.
Growing up, my father started a construction business and became successful. Even then, eating was a major emotional component of our relationship. My parents went through the period in German when the hyper-inflation hit, so they raised me as a lifelong member of the "clean the plate club." Food was so short for them so often in Germany that taking seconds and thirds was expected. It was almost an insult if you didn't.
At the same time, they were heavily influenced by the Berlin cult of youth and beauty. They detested fat people, and often derided them at the dinner table. You can imagine how that worked inside my pre-adolescent brain.
At a very early age, I began to associate being overweight with isolation and failure. I remember in little league football, I had to have a big white patch sewn on my jersey, which designated that I was too heavy to ever carry the ball.
There was only one period really in my youth when I was an ideal weight -- from 7th grade into the 3rd year of college. That was a period I exercised and played sports like crazy, 2 to 3 hours a day. Then, when I dropped out of college, I started to put the weight on again.
Now don't get me wrong -- I had great parents, and a wonderful life. I don't feel like my life has been anything close to a failure. After all, I live very well, I have two kids I'm enormously proud of, and I've been with a woman I love for 33 years. But when it comes to weight and food -- well, that's where I feel like I've been a failure most of my life.
This was NOT a failure borne out of ignorance. True, I've had a lot of screwy ideas about food and exercise, and I feel like I know more now than I ever had, but I can't blame my past 8 failures on lack of knowledge. I think the fundamental problem was that I simply could not rise above my psychological problem with food. I would try, and every time I'd see my parents or speak to them, I'd revert to my infantile ways. Incredibly silly, I know, but that's the sad truth.
My father died 10 years ago, and my mother, though still alive at 96, has dementia. I no longer feel that emotional tug from them. Believe me -- I'm not blaming them for anything; this is my weakness, not theirs. But emotionally, for the first time in 40 years, I really feel I can lick this thing once and for all. [Wow, this sounds really pathetic, I know, but maybe someone else out there who feels equally pathetic can get some solace from this. . . ]
The other element that changed things for me was fear. I have always been prone to depression (family trait), and I suppose overeating is a form of slow suicide. Until now, though, I never had to confront the realities of dying from this. But last year, it suddenly came into clear focus. On the one hand, there was my wife, my beautiful adult kids, the incredible surprises they brought to us every time we talked to them, the visions of marriages and grandchlidren, etc. On the other hand, there was my stupid psychological hangup, my death wish, and my laziness.
Life, or death - that was the choice.
I chose life.
That's you... not everyone is at the same starting point...
my subconscious mind is pretty loud - and has been talking to me for a very long time
The education part isn't easy - google diets on he web - and most of 'em will tell youo 1200 calories.. or something that we know isn't totally reasonable.. 1200 calories is tough to do...
there are also a lot of pompous windbags that find their way in the door, and people who think they're experts because they m anaged to lose 5lbs by eating snake venom... Consider a new person coming in the door... they have 100lbs to lose - and they're on a 1200 calorie diet - they are told their calories are too low but aren't given a whole lot of direction on what to do - searchingn thru threads here -t here's a ton of info -the same questions get asked over and over - some of it is good info - some of it - not so much... I think itd be frustrating. The people "in the know" dont wear tshirts -- so there's a lot o f sifting thru answers to know what to beleive.
what is the truth?
almost one year into this I'm still not sure it's worth it to me... Ego is what will have me finish -but at my age - 1 1/2 years is al ong time...
no.Okay, I put the smiley to make it sound less harsh..but my gut feeling is really "no". Because you don't know what floats my personal boat. You (and I mean "you" in the generic sense) can inspire me, educate me, give me dozens of valuable tools regarding nutrition and exercise, and support me emotionally - but down deep you can't really motivate me because deep down motivation comes from within and is based on what is really important to me alone in the moment. You might think "well, good grief isn't your health, your comfort, your vanity, your very life important to you"...and realistically, at that moment in time, for whatever reason the answer might well be, if I chose to admit it "no...right now the satisfaction that will come from eating half a cheesecake is more important to me" (random example)...and until and unless you come up with a way to peer inside my head and rearrange my thought patterns, you won't be able to generate any thing but the "means" of successful weight loss/maint...not the hunger to reach for them.
you can't make someone do something they don't believe they can do themselves or want to do themselves... I'm going to quote my essay again - whenin another situation - my friend said to me - I can't do it for you - You have to do it for you. People have to want it for themselves and believe they can do it for themselves
One of the words that gets tthrown around sites such as this is Inspiration.. Personally I can't stand the word and I don't thinK i am anyone's inspiration.. However I would like people to think, oh that mal, she's a lazy good for nothing moron -- if she can do it -then so can I..
I'm a fairly competitive person by nature, generally against myself
Oh Mal, I love debating with you
But for now, I truly think aside from hiring a "good" trainer/coach, finding a good community such as this is your next best option.