T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
903.1 | I can sympathize with your plight.... | GENRAL::HAYES | | Thu Nov 02 1995 22:48 | 33 |
| Mary -
I can certainly sympathize with you. I've been struggeling with my
weight for over 5 years now - I used to be so thin my ribs stuck out,
but now am 50 pounds overweight. No matter what I do, I just can't
loose it. I've been on Weight Watchers twice, tried a "fad" diet
called "Carbohydrates Addict Diet", started walking to work (6 miles
one way), exercise ~5x per week, have tried my own variety of diets
(low protein, high carb and vice-versa)........and I've pretty much
stayed the same. And my Doc. was also so very encouraging.....NOT! He
told me the reason I gained so much weight was that I eliminated a
tremendous amount of stress from my life, which was the reason I was so
thin, and that it would take my body 6 months to realize that the
stress was gone - until then he said my body would act as if I were
fasting - I had burned up so many calories because of the stress that
my body was now hording all the calories I put into it in anticipation
for the next stress. O.K. - that made sense, because I HAD been in a
constantly stressful situation for 6 years - so I asked what I could do
until my body settled down (at the time I was living pretty much on
salad, raw fruits and vegetables, and diet soda), and he told me to
watch my intake of fat. (In other words, he didn't believe me, just as
your Doc. evidently doesn't believe you!) It DOES get discouraging,
doesn't it, when you do everything you can think of and STILL can't
seem to lose weight? All I can say is, Hang in there! If you're 5
lbs. stays off, and you can keep up the loss, even if it IS painfully
slow, at least you're making some headway!
Hopefully someone else will have something more encouraging to say -
which I would really like to hear myself! But at least you know you're
not alone out there!!!!!
Tina
|
903.2 | Some ideas... | MARVIN::CROWLE | Seek not answers; live the questions | Mon Nov 06 1995 13:12 | 37 |
| Mary,
Yes, it's disappointing to have made so much effort and then not lose
as much as you would have liked. But your experience is not too
different from mine. From your note I would guess you are eating about
500 Calories a day less than you need to maintain your weight. A 3500
Calorie shortfall gives you a pound lost, in theory. In my first month
of dieting I was running at 600 Calories a day below, and ended up 7
pounds down. Much the same really - so Tina's absolutely right, hang
in there and you'll succeed! Must admit I find you doctor's reaction
puzzling. Maybe he's just being ultra cautious, wanting you to lose
weight very slowly. He's scared you might go to the other extreme:
near starvation diets may give you rapid weightloss but are downright
dangerous.
Tina, like you say, I think your doctor may be right about the stress,
but its a bit defeatist for him to suggest you need to wait 6 months
before you can expect to succeed. Have you thought of trying a
rotation diet? If your metabolism has been slowed down because of
stress (or the lack of it!) then rotation is one way you might get it
going again. There was a lot of interest in rotation in this notesfile
a few years back - take a look at note 89 and its replies. The basic
idea is that you go on a fairly strict regime for 3 weeks, then slowly
relax back to your weight maintenance level. That way your body does
not have time to adjust its metabolic rate to the restricted intake and
is forced to start burning fat right away. Most of the people who
answered note 89 have very positive things to say about how they got
on.
One last topical thought - if you start a rotation cycle in the next
couple of weeks, you'll get through the strict bit in time to be back
to maintainance level eating for Christmas ... :-) (Thinking about it,
I might just try this myself!)
Good luck
Brian
|
903.3 | Thanks! | GENRAL::HAYES | | Mon Nov 06 1995 14:48 | 5 |
| Thanks, Brian. I'll take a look at notes 89.* and give it a try - it
certainly can't hurt!
Tina
|
903.4 | You're doing great! | STOWOA::NEWBERG | | Mon Nov 06 1995 22:30 | 17 |
| Mary, hang on a second! 5 lbs in 4 weeks is excellent. After 20 weeks it
will be over 20 lbs at that rate.
I honestly believe that the slower you lose, the more likely you will
keep it off. I think more than 1 or 2 lbs a week is not enough time to
change your lifestyle permanently.
Honest! IF you could drop 20 lbs in a month any time you wanted, I'll
bet you would have to do it more OFTEN then you wanted.
It sounds like you're on a good plan, now. If you stick with it, it
will go.
I've been there and I've been maintaining my goal weight for a long
time, now.
Amy
|
903.5 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Nov 09 1995 17:26 | 13 |
|
I used to be 145lbs., size 12/14 jeans/skirts and nothing but nothing
would help to decrease that amount...including 2 weeks at Kripalu (a
yoga center) where I exercised and did yoga 3 times per day, sauna,
whirlpool, walks through the woods and running on occasion, no sugar,
very little fat, all-vegetarian food. After a while, I just accepted
my weight and resolved to always being that size.
A year ago though, I tried Herbalife products (nutrition-based), and
lost 3.5 lbs. in one week. I've now lost 10-12 lbs., down to a size 6/8
pant/skirt, and it's stayed off for a year now with no effort.
Cindy
|
903.6 | YOU ARE DOING GREAT! | VAXUUM::FARINA | | Thu Dec 07 1995 20:04 | 20 |
| Mary, I agree with .4 - you're doing GREAT! Do not be discouraged.
You are doing all the right things, and it has been proven that losing
the weight slowly through lifestyle changes, as you are doing, is
significantly better than losing 10-20 pounds in the first month!
One thing that no one has mentioned is that muscle weighs far more than
fat. Did you take your measurements before starting the exercise and
"eating modification?" If not, why don't you do that now, and check in
another month to see if there is a difference. Exercise will not
really make you lose weight, but it burns fat and adds muscle (which,
as I said, weight more than fat!). So when your exercise program is as
dedicated as yours, you've been adding muscle, which seems to
counteract the weightloss to a small degree. You've probably lost 8
pounds of fat and added 3 of muscle! This is wonderful. Start
noticing if your clothes feel a little different.
Keep up the good work!! And tell us how you did this month.
Susan
|