T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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352.1 | You Have Nothing To Lose - But Lbs. | MJOFS::FREELAND | | Thu Aug 25 1988 19:00 | 12 |
| I can relate to your problems of stress related weight gain, and
the added stress of feeling totally helpless in your endevor to
do anything about it. What's great about this conference, is that
you can rely on a good support group to help you. The replies that
I've gotten have all been supportive and compassionate. Let some
of the "veterans" give you some of their pointers. I know it helped
me.
Good Luck!
Barb
|
352.2 | you can do it, if you want to | ANT::ZARLENGA | the Great Dane remembers .. | Thu Aug 25 1988 20:34 | 24 |
|
I've been there. I've had the sugar and fat cravings come
screaming out my name in the middle of the day and night. I've
eaten cookies and junk food until I was either out of time, or
out of change.
The first 2 weeks of a new diet require dedication. Occupy
your spare time with hobbies : reading, walking, anything that gets
your mind off food.
Once the diet has started and you have adjusted to it, it WILL
GET EASIER. It becomes second nature to grab a carrot or apple
rather than a ring-ding or twinkie. And when you wake up the next
day, knowing you did well, it helps carry you through that day.
And the cravings are not nearly as bad or as frequent.
Some 'tricks' that help include imagining yourself as thin,
writing down reasons why you overeat, and even promising your-
self, when you wake up, that you will not cheat. This last
technique helped me a lot. If I promised myself, out loud, it
was nearly impossible to break my word.
-mike z
|
352.3 | Motivation | JANUS::CROWLE | On a clear disk you can seek forever | Fri Aug 26 1988 05:24 | 24 |
| Well, i think you've already made the right start - by entering
a note here.
True motivation - the feeling of real determination - can come quite
suddenly: a chance remark someone makes, a change in personal
circumstances, an anniversary, whatever. What happens then depends
rather on you. For me, the change in mental attitude was a sort
of internal calming down, followed by a feeling that i could like
myself rather more if i were a somewhat different shape. Then the
actual process of dieting, and exercise, started, and i actually
managed to shed a few pounds. All the while there's WEIGHTLOSS and
PROGRESS to read - and write to - and a little bit of success combined
with a _lot_ of encouragement from all these good people has helped
enormously.
I agree 100% with Mike - the first two weeks are hard (and i'm only
on week 5!). But get past that hurdle, and you _will_ start to like
yourself more - and that'll help motivate you to continue, so you
_will_ succeed, and ... voila! recursion!
Keep in touch. Be happy.
- brian
|
352.4 | WE CAN DO IT | RDGENG::MCCARTNEY | Tubby or not tubby, fat is the ? | Fri Aug 26 1988 05:42 | 44 |
| I think (no I BELIEVE) that you can only diet sucessfully if you
like yourself as you are. When I had a bad self image I couldn't
stick to diets, because I didn't believe in myself.
I had a few year of lots of things going wrong in my life, and steadily
the weight crept up. About 7 years ago I got down to my "right"
weight, and kept it off for 2 years. I lost it during a period
when I was preparing to moving back to England from Germany after
10 years. I was really keyed up about the move, (no job or home
in the UK), and I stayed keyed up, new job, new home, new friends.
After about 2 years my mother who was 75 began to suffer from health
problems, and I started to worry about her, then to eat.... same
old story.
My Mum died last July, and as I got back to "normal" I began to
like myself again, and to get more confident. I started dieting
again last year, but was very up and down. I went to a hypnotist
for a while before my Mum died, and it didn't seem to help, so I
gave up. But I suddenly realised early this year, that my self
image was ok, and I felt good even though I was about 90 pounds
overweight.
I have managed to lose 35 of those excess pounds since February.
I am calorie counting, and ok, I have "off days", but I can usually
make up for them, by eating less calories next day. If I have a
real craving for chocolate I can have 1 bar I know how many calories
it has, and I can have a low cal evening meal. A lot of my social
life is around eating out, or at friends homes, so I try to eat
only 500/600 cals on Thursday and Friday, so that I can eat a little
extra on Saturday.
These 2 notes files have really helped me, when I was really low
last July, I had mails from other noters, which were great.
I try to be really honest here, and if I have a problem I'll write
about it.
Stick with it you can do it. We all can.
Jenni
|
352.5 | longwinded, but hopefully helpful! | JJM::ASBURY | | Fri Aug 26 1988 09:41 | 57 |
|
Hi,
> ... How do you get the self discipline? The
>strength, the will power?
Good question. I think you have to want to take the weight
off more than you want anything else. Gee, that sounds awfully
simplistic, doesn't it? But it makes sense. you have to want to
lose more than you want those Snowballs from the vending machine.
You have to want to lose more than you want anything in your fridge.
There are, of course, other little things you can do to help yourself
along the way. Keep a diary. Of what you eat, yes, but also of how
you feel. Try to find other ways of dealing with whatever emotions
roll along rather than eating. (Believe me, I am personally aware
of exactly how hard this can be!)
Empty your house of all tempting-but-bad-for-the-healthy-new-you
foods. If you have a husband or kids around who don't want or need
to be "deprived" of this stuff, then maybe you can designate one
cupboard WHERE YOU WILL NEVER GO where you can keep this stuff.
Then you just have to make yourself forget that it is there.
Try to think of what you are doing ("dieting") not as depriving
yourself of all that yummy stuff you love, but rather as BEING GOOD
TO YOURSELF. Each time you have a salad instead of fried clams and
french fries for lunch (or whatever, you get the idea), mentally
AND CONSCIOUSLY pat yourself on the back for doing such a great
thing for you.
Try to walk every day, or at least as many as you can. Walk at
lunchtime. Walk after dinner. Whenever it best fits into your schedule.
Even with a small change in eating habits and adding walking to
your routine, you will notice a difference. Maybe you can find someone
to walk with. This makes it more fun. or do what one lady in my
WW class does. She gets audio tapes of books she's wanted to read
and she walks with her walkman and her books. She only allows herself
to listen to the books when she's out walking. (It's a great incentive
when the story gets good!)
Maybe you are overwhelmed with the idea of a "permanent change in
eating habits" and all you "have" to do to lose the weight. Perhaps,
then, it might help to change just a couple of things each week.
Say, start out by making a committment to walk 3 times a week and
cut out fried foods. Then the next week, also cut out everything
from the vending machines and walk 4 times. After a while, you will
realize, I think, that you have made some MAJOR changes, relatively
painlessly. I think keeping that diary I mentioned earlier would
come in handy here, too.
Well, this is getting awfully long. I guess what it comes down to
is just making a committment to yourself. Then stick to it. I know
this is not easy, but it IS possible. Good luck.
-Amy.
|
352.6 | Hang in there | CADSE::SPRIGGS | Darlene..Making Music ALL THE TIME! | Fri Aug 26 1988 11:20 | 19 |
| You may also want to read the replies to note 250 entitled, "The
Secret to my Success". There are a lot of helpful suggestions from
people who have made it. Personally, I did well for a while, but
got distracted around July and went totally off program in August
due to moving. We had to eat out a lot and things are just starting
to settle down. I weighed myself this morning and was shocked,
so, no more vending machines or eating greasy food when out. I
have my rice cakes and am ready for success. I really have to change
my eating habits to provide more nutrition because I will be entering
into a potentially stressful situation soon. I also know that exercise
will help me be more healthy. This is a real motivator because
I really don't want to get sick and I want to be the best at what
I'm about to do. Dropping the extra weight (10 lbs) will also
improve my mental health. Just don't give up. You can win. I
really understand what you're going through.
Darlene.
author_of_note_250
|
352.7 | You're taking the right direction | COOKIE::WILCOX | | Fri Aug 26 1988 12:20 | 40 |
| You've taken the GIANT STEP already by being here!
I'm a firm believer in WW FOR ME, not for everyone. The group I attend
in Colorado Springs is very supportive and WE DO NOT DIET. Our group
is firm in its thinking that this is a food program, not diet. In fact,
we many times gently tell the first timers that diet is a word they need
to delete from their vocabulary. Diet has very negative connotations.
It conjurs up visions of depravation, of something to go OFF (afterall,
you went ON it), and a lot of "dont's". Be honest, if someone told you
you COULDN'T HAVE BRUSSEL SPROUTS wouldn't you crave them?! (no intention
to offend those who love 'em)
I've been involved in a weight challange since the day I stepped out of
high school. I gained 50 pounds with my pregnancy and am now down to
a little below pre-preg weight.
One trick I do with myself is put my daughter in her backpack and walk
to the store almost everyday. I say "trick" because when I put her on
I have just put back the amount of weight I have lost. I don't want to
do that to myself again. Side benefits are this is exercise, we get
time together, I can tell her about the sites, and we get fresh air.
(haven't decided about what to do in winter yet).
I struggle with going up and down a pound or two because I don't follow
WW to the letter, but I KEEP GOING TO THE MEETINGS! I personally need
the group support. I've joined 2 other times, and realize that's the
biggest piece for me. Whatever program you become involved in if you
aren't getting the good feelings that **you deserve** find another group.
Enjoy the small successes. Treat yourself well. Go to the nearest make-up
counter and get your face done, get a new hair style, get a manicure, any
little thing to make you feel good. Don't fall into the trap of "I'm
not much so I'll shop at <you most hated discount store>." This is a catch-22
because when you put those clothes you have just confirmed that you're not
much, so you buy there more, etc. Vicious cycle.
REMEMBER YOU ARE A WONDERFUL PERSON DESERVING OF THE **BEST**.
Let us know how it goes!
|
352.8 | Find the reasons behind the actions | ATSE::KASPER | Let's organize an anarchy | Fri Aug 26 1988 12:52 | 17 |
| I think there are a lot of good thoughts in the previous replies; it's
very important to figure out *why* you eat the wrong things, and/or too
much even of the right things. There's more to it than habit, or the
conscious decision to change would carry much more conviction than it
apparently does. I'd suggest that you spend some time doing some serious
introspection, using whatever tools you need: counseling (does your site
have an EAP office?), Overeaters Anonymous, an Eating Disorders program
of some sort (often sponsored by area hospitals), a diary, or whatever.
It's not easy, and I find that I'm still working things through.
You've taken the essential first step: admitting to yourself that you
have a problem.
Good luck
Beverly
|
352.9 | Weightloss noters are the best !!! | BPOV04::SKOWRONEK | | Fri Aug 26 1988 13:13 | 26 |
| I agree with .8, there are alot of good thoughts in the previous
replies. My main motivation came from reading "Progress" (.15 [I
think] in this notes file). Just reading progress reports from
people on the WW plan go me motivated to give it a try. I was very
moved when I read that one guy (sorry, I'm bad with names) lost
198 pounds - my eyes watered when he wrote that he reached his goal.
I was so happy for him, and everyone in this conference is so helpful
and supportive. That is what does it for me - the support.
I wrote a reply in the "who are you" note (at the very beginning
of this conference), and I mentioned that I was going to start WW
and an aerobics program. A day later, I received mail from a couple
of people saying "Go for it - we're with you all the way". Thats
just what the doctor ordered. I am the type of person who lives
on encouragement - and like I said earlier the people in this
conference are very encouraging and supportive.
When you do decide to go on a diet (I recommend WW), please post
a reply in the Progress section, we would love to hear from you
an support you - We are all in this together !!!!
Good Luck !!
Debby
|
352.10 | Your support has helped | NUGGET::BRADSHAW | | Mon Aug 29 1988 11:08 | 25 |
| Hi, it's Sandy again, the originator. First, thanks so much for
all the responses and concern. What better way for me to learn what
this conference is all about but to receive all your encouragement
and understanding. Some even wrote to me directly! I really appreciated
it.
I've done a lot of thinking over what I need to do to get in control
of my life and I'm going to go two different, hopefully complimentry
ways. First, I'm seeing someone from EAP tomorrow to try to get
some emotional help--that old mental attitude problem! And because
I need some immediate help in losing weight, I am joining Physicians
Weight Loss Center. I read previous notes on PWLC and explored other
options and have decided this is the best for me when you consider
location/logistics, cost and the structure I need to follow a diet.
I can't start the diet until I receive a full physical on the 9th
of Sept. so I will keep you posted after that date on my "Progress".
I'll also give you some feedback on PWLC.
Again, thanks for your support. I hope to be to my goal weight by
Thanksgiving Day! (good thing turkey is low in calories and fat---gee,
what about mashed potatoes and gravy, chocolate cream pie, rolls
and butter................................!!!!)
Sandy
|
352.11 | "We are thankful we have each other" | RAVEN1::DAVENPORT | | Tue Sep 06 1988 13:53 | 13 |
| Sandy:
Even if we shouldn't have the mashed potatoes, etc., just think
of all the good things we can have, as well as fellowship with our
friends. This is indeed a day to be thankful for so many other
things than food.
Hang in there, we can all empathize with you for we have all felt
the way you did when you started this note.
M
|
352.12 | Creature of Habit | FRSBEE::WORRALL | | Thu Sep 08 1988 16:23 | 15 |
| Hi! My name is Greg. Ive lost 20lbs in about a month. For years Ive
had the same problem we have all had - bad habits. A humand being is
plain and simple - a creature of habit. I simply changed my habits,
instead of a twinkie, I would eat some type of vegtable.
I mapped out a exercise program, at first I went twice a week,
then I increased my exercise program to 3 times a week. Now
I run about 1 and a half every 3 days mon, wed, and Fri. I have
gotten so used to my routine I dont ever think twice about
skipping a day. Get into a routine, if you stick with it
it will become second nature.
I hope all that BS makes sense.
Greg
|
352.13 | Not BS at all!!! | JANUS::CROWLE | On a clear disk you can seek forever | Fri Sep 09 1988 09:13 | 7 |
| Nicely put Greg! I like it. And now you've got into the good habits,
you could live the rest of your life the same way, right?
Well, that's what I hoping to do, anyway!!!!
- brian
|
352.14 | Habits are tough to change! | NUGGET::BRADSHAW | | Mon Sep 12 1988 14:25 | 7 |
| Greg, I am glad you have been able to change your habits, but for
me, it just is not that simple. Drinking too much alcohol is a habit,
but one that is PRETTY hard to just change for an alcoholic..
Food is my alcohol, and it is real hard for me to mess around with
it!!!!! Today is the first day of my diet and I am just trying
to remember the "One day at a time" motto!
|
352.15 | "A Day at a time" | NPOGRP::WORRALL | | Mon Sep 12 1988 16:23 | 16 |
| I know how you feel. The first two weeks were murder. But the best
workouts are the ones where you dont feel like running or walking.
Thats the point, once you have laided the ground work the rest becomes
a subconcious thing. Before you know it your not eating the things
you once did, I suppose the "one day at a time" saying applies to
anything and everything. Most important keep your goal in mind.
My goal was to lose 4 to 5 lbs a week. I never stoped thinking about
that goal. I believe you must encounter failure, before success. The
sucessful people in the world are not any different than the losers
in life, they just dont give up, they get kicked down, they brush
themselfs off and get up again. The people that dont succeed give
up, lose all faith.
Greg
|
352.16 | Thoughts, and more thoughts. | IOSG::CORMAN | | Fri Sep 30 1988 13:35 | 78 |
| One of my random stories follows. Please get what you can out
of it, or skip on to another note. :-)
I've always been interested to observe people's habits, their
ways of eating, their addictions. (Aren't you?)
I think we are all addictive beings to one degree or another
(and I've talked about my theory somewhere in this notesfile, I'm
sure.)
I watched myself, most of all. I've watched myself
gain weight, lose it, love exercize, hate it, sneer at myself,
dress like a knockout, etc etc. All the time, the only constant
seems to be addiction. I either get addicted to food, addicted
to a diet, addicted to working out, addicted to hating myself,
addicted to clothes, addicted to a programme, or just addicted
to addiction! I think.... maybe I got addicted to
the whole life of dealing with these things. Is that possible?
Holy smokes. And I don't even have an addictive
personality, don't come from a family that contained an alcoholic
or any such thing, don't find myself searching out religions
or whatever. Honest!
Welp, I've finally gotten away from it all! What happened?
A slow process happened, actually:
I counted those thousands of calories, kept those diaries,
tried on those different sizes....and I dropped those
free weights on my toes, did those toe touches, jogged around
those blocks, felt that massive massive guilt while watching
tv and eating potato chips....and I read the zillions of
mental attitude books, I hid the diet magazines in my newspapers,
I chewed over feminism and self-love and such things, and I worried
worried worried worried.
I got tired of it.......
After ten years, no, fifteen years...?...I sort of forgot about
it all. I had lost enough tortuous weight that I could fit into OK clothes.
I was strong enough that I could run a few miles or lift a few
weights. And, mostly, I let myself off the hook, cause it was
just....so....terrible....being ashamed, sad, self-doubting.
Really, who the h*ll is anyone to think they're better than me!
And who am I to agree with them!! (that's the kicker.)
How strange, I really *like* exercise now (who, me?!) I haven't
weighed myself in...a year?... who cares? I'm fine. I'm healthy.
I don't go for the ding dongs in the machines any more, OK, well,
I had a kitkat the other day cause my life isn't perfect. :-)
I really shouldn't eat those kitkats, they give me stomach
aches, ya know? Anyway, I seem to have lost my diet books.
I seem to have lost my foothold in that world, in fact. I look back to
where I was, addicted to sugar, to coffee, to guilt (that's a
fun one), to falling in love with impossible stuckup jerks, oh gee whiz,
to all those fun little habits.
Ain't it a long evolution, a process of growth, though.
It can't be overnight, 'cause it's ADDICTION and that means
fighting with your addicted personality all the time.
I *think* (I don't understand this, really) that I got
unaddicted by trying to change alittle at a time, giving up
the fight, going back to it, forgetting about it, being
obsessive about it. In fact, it's the process that
gets you healthy, you see. It has to be a process because
you have to learn from it.
I still can't give up that coffee. Oh so wat, life's fer living, I say.
~/~ Maybe I'll give it up when I get tired of being kept
awake at night? (Nah...)
Moral of this ramble: Don't give up, keep fighting, treat yourself
well, eat good foods, sugar is physically addictive, self-hate
is mentally addictive, no doubt you're an OK-dokie person,
do whatever you can, give yourself time, take it easy, love yourself.
Cheers! Barbara Corman
|
352.17 | You got it | COOKIE::WILCOX | Database Systems Engineering/West | Fri Sep 30 1988 18:23 | 34 |
| Geeeeze, Barbara, I thought I was the ONLY one who was an addict!
Actually, I think the difficult thing about being addicted to food
(or sweet carbos and chocolate in my case) are that you HAVE TO EAT
to survive. You can live without alcohol, smoking, etc.( both of
which I have given up completely because I was addicted) but darn,
you gotta eat! (well, ok, I don't HAVE to eat sweet carbos and chocolate
but what's life without?).
I think you did what I think is SO important, you decided you liked
yourself, that you were(are) a valuable person worthy of living as
a not-overweight person (if that is what you want!). Self esteem
is critical to this or any success in life. We gotta do it for
ourselves because we are the only person we will live with for our
whole life.
It's a vicious cycle of the worst kind. You gain a little, decide
you don't look good, start to believe if you don't look good you
aren't good, eat more, gain more, aren't good enough to deserve to
be less heavy, etc., etc...
I wish we wouldn't do it to ourselves. We are so precious if only
in our own eyes. We are a miracle, each of us. We are valuable,
we are worthy, we are deserving. This is not meant to sound selfish
at all. As we love ourselves, we more easily love those around us.
When I'm feeling good about myself it's so much easier for me to share
in the joy of those around me. That's good stuff.
Sorry to be so long winded, but I sure do believe every one of us
is worth living the way we want to.
Liz
|
352.18 | Thanks! I Really Neede That! | EASYNT::SNOW | | Mon Oct 03 1988 11:17 | 26 |
| Barbara..
Thanks sooooooo much for this note. The timing in my life for it
right now was perfect! I, too, have done a very good job of beating
myself up 'cause I'm not...the perfect wife, the perfect Mom, the
best cook, the one who always gets bills paid on time, the wash
done (and folded and put away...of course!)...the perfect worker
and the perfect weight for the perfect clothes! WHEW! Makes one
ask oneself..."How many of me are there?"
It's time to step out of myself and let me be me. I tend to lean
towards food when things aren't going right. Someone should put
a big stop sign outside the vending room in the building I work
at so I will stop and think before I get those M&M's or Fritos or
(I chuckle at the name of this one...)Smart Food! (only 80 calories
per bag...but oooooooooh that sodium!)
I, too, like Liz, tend to be able to enjoy what's going on around
me when I feel good about myself. So, it's high time to start liking
myself and to live life on life's terms come what may, right?
Thanks again, Barbara, for your message. Have a wonderful day!
Linda :)
|
352.19 | For the health of it. | IOSG::CORMAN | | Sun Oct 23 1988 08:23 | 52 |
| Re: .17 and .18
I reread my old note (.16) -- my my, I really *can* ramble, sometimes.
Anyhow, I'm glad you got something out of it. It's hard for me to
put into words much of what I want to convey; these things are
so individual. Everyone who writes into this conference
is quite brave for exposing her/his soul to public view,
don't you agree?
[CAVEAT: Here comes another discourse from Rambling Woman]
Given that American (western? industrialized?) popular culture
promotes obsessive
behavior -- consumerism, the drive for anorexic appearance
and behavior, and workaholism, to name a few -- I sometimes
wonder if this notesfile supports those very demons that control
our lives. I mean, if we don't talk about the reasons for
this drive to be thin, and about our overwhelming anxieties about
being fat, but only about how to avoid eating too
many cookies or whatever, aren't we compounding the problem?
Of course, this notesfile is an incredible source of emotional
support and information, a haven of true feelings and a place
to feel connected (wow, a *real* network!) There's nothing like it!
[And, if I didn't like it, why would I be here, reading and writing,
right? I certainly don't mind finding out how to eat less cookies.
:-)]
I'm just always need to remind myself that calorie counting and WWs
and low cal recipes and self help books and tapes and and and....are
only tools for getting healthy.
We have to fight to get to the meat of things (cute pun, hey?)
After all, it's very hard to admit that one defines one's self worth by
the clothes size one wears (for example.)
That sure seems like a trivial way to live.
But then, there are reasons we started living this way, and
I believe we aren't at fault.
How many of us *are* living this way?.....
....who, me?......
Now, excuse me while I go lace up my running shoes -- I'm off to
do a few miles in the hopes of looking like a model in Seventeen
Magazine when I'm fifty.
NO NO JUST KIDDING! Really! :-)
Yours in this strange struggle to not be strungout, Barbara
|
352.20 | Obsessions and Reasons | JANUS::CROWLE | On a clear disk you can seek forever | Mon Oct 24 1988 09:47 | 42 |
| .19 - Barbara,
Well, rambling or not, I really like your reply! I'm inclined to
agree with you about obsessive behaviour. It's almost as if people
are seen only for what they do, not for what they are. So, if you want
to be noticed, be an extremist! Especially as far as the media are
concerned - because it's one way communication, nearly every time.
But of course, none of us are influenced by the media - are we? ;-)
Workaholic? me? nah - I'd rather be noting!!!
In a sense you're right about this conference possibly supporting
obsessive behaviour. But I also think that many people would not be
able to diet sucessfully without making the process of dieting a fairly
significant part of their lives. Or, alternatively, have some really
important reason for wanting to lose weight - like serious health
problems, or a burning desire to be successful at sport, and so on. A
person without such motivation, but with a weight problem, perhaps
needs to fight the obsession with food with something equally powerful,
at least in the early stages. Too much reaction, of course, and you get
to anorexia... But within reason, I don't think that mildly "obsessive"
behaviour towards dieting (and/or exercise) is necessessarily bad.
It's all a matter of degree - and knowing when to stop.
But what about the _real_ reasons for the drive to be thin? I recently
had a go at talking about this in the PROGRESS conference. Yes,
appearance matters. But I think it's of primary concern to the dieter
_during_the_process_ of dieting. Once you're there - don't worry
about it any more! Feel pleased you're not as you were, go off and
live your life with the health and confidence you've acquired. Can't
be bad, can it? I agree that there are some very brave souls here,
very much on public view. But I'd add that, to me, there are some
_very_ personal reasons for wanting to diet - which I wouldn't want
to post here. The fact that I'm not sharing them with you all doesn't
mean I'm deriving any less support from being here, far from it.
It's just that this conference is just a little too public for that
sort of thing.
And to think I've been overweight for more than 10 years! Must stop
this waffle - I get paid to work, not NOTE!!! :-(
- brian
|
352.21 | ONE MORE TIME! | CISM::LANDINGHAM | | Thu Nov 03 1988 12:46 | 33 |
| In 352.10, Sandy, you said that you went through EAP for help.
The Employee Assistance Program. Can you tell me a little bit about
it?
Let me back up: I just, J*U*ST now, today, started to read this
NOTESfile, but it's been in my accunt for a year, at least! I have
an awful lot of the same symptoms as you: Just turned 30 this month,
not a "major" weight problem (20 lbs.), but a MAJOR problem for
me. In honor of my 30th I did give up one vice - smoking. But
I've done that before. In fact, I was off smoking for 2 years before
I started having a cigarette here & there this past July. I "allowed"
myself to smoke til I was READY to quit. My 30th seemed like a
nice, momentous occasion to give it up.
I don't think the fact that I stopped smoking caused this weight
gain-- I've been battling with these 20 lbs. for years now. I need
to have my attitude adjusted. I too need to find the motivation
to change my way of thinking.
While everybody shared some really nice thoughts about caring and
self-acceptance, I don't feel as though that's a part of my problem.
[though it could be and I just don't recognize it!!!]
So, Sandy, how is your program working? Is the Physician's Weight
Loss Center helping? Did EAP give you good advice?
B-T-W: I've got the exercise part down okay. I've been doing aerobics
for the past year (I started last year, to get myself into my wedding
gown!!!).
Best regards,
-marcia
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352.22 | Stayed anonymous until now. | WLDWST::BARTLETT | | Thu Nov 03 1988 13:53 | 13 |
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RE: .16 and .19
WOW!!! I've gotta meet this woman! Talk about insight! I
really needed to read something like this right now - for that
I thank you, Barbara. Isn't it funny how just when you think
your the only person in the world that feels a certain way you
find out that you really are not all alone!!!
Thanks, and God bless,
John B.
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