T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
205.1 | Good Luck! | NHL::ARNO | | Tue Jan 26 1988 09:46 | 26 |
|
Judy,
Maybe you could say to your friend to stick with it so
both of you can share together. Tell her you need her
support and wished she would continue.. You could tell
her also so read this Weightloss file and read about the
stories about people gaining or winning and that we are
all in the same boat and it's not easy but we can do this
if we put our minds to it..
If your friend gives up she may never lose the weight she
wishes.. also I bet if she hung in there she will see
a lose soon as we do go through times when we don't lose
or we gain some.. but I know myself I am just starting to lose
once again after a long time of staying the same..
No matter if your friend continues or not you show a good example
and you know what she may see how good you look and go back!
Good Luck it's not easy but we are here with you.
Ann
|
205.2 | I've also run into that problem | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas | Tue Jan 26 1988 10:32 | 18 |
| Judy:
Funny that you should put this note in -- my wife and I are currently
experiencing a similar situation with her mother. Her mother did
well for a while, losing just over half of the forty pounds needed
for her to reach goal. However, since about mid-December, she's
been straying from program, not recording losses regularly, and
has been getting discouraged. I'll be reading the replies you get
to this note with a bit of interest; hopefully we'll both find
something in this note that will help us.
I'll second Ann's suggestion about telling your friend about this
conference. Perhaps the support this conference has provided me
and others can be the boost that your friend needs.
py
|
205.3 | Even YOU can lose ONE more pound | WONDER::COYLE | Only 49.8% of my former self | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:44 | 41 |
| I have no idea about how to encourage, successfully at least, anyone
to lose, or continue losing weight. For years people have been
attempting to encourage me, but to no avail. A person either makes
the decision or doesn't. It boils down to being up to the overweight
person themselves. Encouragement may come from outside, but the
determination must come from within.
If I were to try though, I would encourage short term goals. The
real aim might well be to eventually lose all of the excess weight;
but realism dicatates a more practical and attainable approach. This
goal can be a set number of pounds, or just as effective, an attempt
to stay ON PROGRAM TODAY. I firmly believe that any success that
I have had has been because I adopted the attitude of one day at
a time, and aiming at signifigant attainable intermidiant goals.
This made it easier to stay on plan, and equally important to forgive
momentary laspes and get back on plan. Eventually this can lead
to your next goal being your final weight loss goal. I could never
have succeeded in a attempt to lose 204 pounds, but by going one
day/step at a time I have reached the point where my next pound,
hopefully at tomorrow's meeting, will be the final one to that
unatainable feat.
The other thing is to realize that a sense of futileness is bound
to occur sometime. Just don't give up. Try to maintain for awhile.
I ran into this last summer. May 4th I weighed 226 and by October
5th I was up to 229, when I got through this period I had managed
to stay close enough that I was not discouraged and was able to
get my act back together and resume the march toward eventual success.
Whether we are trying to lose weight, write a program, or design
a chip, the whole task usually seems impossible. However, if we
step back and break it into parts we can and will manage it. Failure
seems to be the result of attempting the impossible, success is
the result of breaking the impossible into enough easier pieces.
Good Luck,
-Joe
|
205.4 | Not necessarily a bad idea | ABEL::KASPER | This note contains exactly ---> | Tue Jan 26 1988 14:10 | 25 |
|
> The other thing is to realize that a sense of futileness is bound
> to occur sometime. Just don't give up. Try to maintain for awhile.
> I ran into this last summer. May 4th I weighed 226 and by October
> 5th I was up to 229, when I got through this period I had managed
> to stay close enough that I was not discouraged and was able to
> get my act back together and resume the march toward eventual success.
This is approximately what I was going to suggest. If your friend is
really fed up with being on a diet, maybe she *should* take a vacation!
I have a friend who lost about 40 lbs on WW (before I met her), and is
not currently on program. She plans to go back to get rid of the last
30 (my guess) sometime in the future.
The important thing is that she's not putting it back on. In spite of
not being "on program," she's now thinking about what she eats, and
taking responsibility.
Try suggesting to your friend that she go ahead and try maintaining for
one cycle (ours are 10 weeks); maybe seeing that she can keep it off
will be the extra kick she needs to get back to work on the rest of it!
Beverly
|
205.5 | avoid the yo-yo, though | TALLIS::SLEWIS | | Tue Jan 26 1988 15:06 | 8 |
|
It's very hard on your body to constantly gain and lose weight --
the yo-yo syndrome. So if your friend isn't really psyched, I also
agree that she should take a vacation - as long as she doesn't gain.
She should find it much easier to lose (if and) when she tries to lose
again.
|
205.6 | <You're Not Alone> | CASPRO::SOMERVILLE | | Tue Jan 23 1990 12:23 | 25 |
| Judy,
Don't give up. If your friend wants stop going let her. Maybe she is
not ready mentally to commit herself to the struggle of losing weight.
Ask your WW members, family and friends to be your moral support.
Take each meal first, then each day at a time. I strayed off the program
because I got lazy with weighing and measuring and writing down what I had
eaten, and I started to gain back what I had lost.
I have gone back to WW after not going for 3 months with a different frame
of mind. I weigh and measure my meals and write down what I have eaten,
even if I stray off program. I have been going for 2 weeks and have lost
10 lbs. That's the most I ever lost in that short of time.
We have to take those first tough steps before we get to the easy one!!
Reach for that Goal!
Avis
|
205.7 | Monkey see Monkey do? | ULTRA::DWINELLS | | Tue Jan 23 1990 16:05 | 28 |
| In my opinion you should just leave her alone. The last thing she needs
right now is someone close to her, telling her what to do. It is
obvious that she does not want the same as you do. Give her time. If
she wants to lose weight, she will return to weight watchers or maybe
she will find something different that helps her more than weight
watchers.
Another thing to keep in mind is that people rarely gain say 50 pounds
in a months time, so they can't realistically expect to lose that much
that quick. Sure there are going to be times when you lose 10 pounds in
one or two weeks, but I'd be willing to bet that would happen after
experiencing a "platue". A platue, is when you stay at the same weight,
fluxuating a pound or two for what seems like an eternity. Trust me,
I know as I have been at a "platue" since November. There is no way
anyone could convince me that it is due to lack of effort. It is simply
how the body works.
To make a long story short... You do your thing and she'll do her
thing.
Best of luck at being a loser!
Actually, I see this new "Fast start" program that weight watchers are
advertising, as a rip off. Any one who has been dieting _knows_ that
you lose fast when you just start out. It's after your body has
stabilized a bit that you start losing at a safer rate of about a pound
or two per week. Ask your doctor, they will tell you the same.
|
205.8 | | SNOC01::MYNOTT | Hugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikes | Tue Jan 23 1990 23:12 | 15 |
| The amount of weightloss each week will depend on your body type,
metabolism etc. I have been losing 3.5 to 4 pounds each week for the
past 13 weeks. I am following WW (from their new cook book) not
classes. The only changes I have made are to add one bread, and to
count my fat grams a day. I am keeping this to less than 13% on
average a day. I suppose the bread could be put under the optional
calories per week.
And then I walk 60km (36mile) a week and swim three times a week. I
regularly take my measurements and have kept a chart with twice week
entries for the past 3 months for all the above.
...dale
|