Skip to main content

Weight Loss: You Can Do It!

Have you ever stepped on your bathroom scale and heard yourself yell, "I can't take it anymore!" or maybe it was more like "Oh I just cannot go on another diet!" or "How can that number be right? My scale must be broken." Or maybe it was the all-time classic, "The dryer shrank my clothes again."
Are you a diet professional? Have you been on so many diets hoping and knowing this time will be different? Have you ever lost weight only to have it creep back on before you even knew that you had lost it? If this sounds familiar, you are not alone.
I have been on my weight loss journey for what seems like my entire life. Years ago I weighed in at over 300 pounds. I had to learn that dieting the way I was dieting did not work. Dieting made me more preoccupied with food, the number on the scale, and feelings of guilt and shame. Eating too few calories slowed down my metabolism and made it hard to lose weight. Eating too many calories added weight. I kept telling myself, "Just eat less and move more, and you will lose weight." That did not really work well for me, so I eventually started making wishes on birthday cakes, mine and the birthday cakes of everyone else. Needless to say, that did not work well either.

I had knowledge of calories, carbohydrates, and fat grams, and I could count calories like I was a human abacus. However, this knowledge did not guarantee a weight loss for me. As a matter of fact, all that knowledge often caused me more stress and more guilt. I would say things to myself like, "I know what to do, so just do it." "I'm a smart person and can do this once I put my mind to it." "I would have lost weight by now if I had money for proper diet food or a diet program." Basically, I used what I now like to call poison words: woulda, coulda, shoulda. I had intense feelings of guilt, disappointment, and self-disgust.
It really hurts to not succeed when trying to do everything right. The harder I tried, the more trapped, frustrated, and hopeless I felt. So what do you do when feelings of shame, guilt, and hopelessness make you want to give up and throw in the towel for good?
FIRST: It is important to explore what fuels your overeating. Ask the hard questions, do you eat when you are happy, sad, stressed, hurt, bored, scared, mad, overspending or over scheduled? Perhaps you overeat out of habit because there is Halloween candy or free party food at your fingertips. Identify what and when you overeat and make note of the feelings as you are trying to submerge them. For me, each feeling was attached to either salty, sweet, or savory flavors, and I knew what foods I wanted to keep me from feeling something hurtful or painful.
SECOND: Agree diets do not work. Behavioral life changes that can last a lifetime are what works. Reject the diet mentality. Learn when your body is actually hungry. You may not remember what being physically hungry really feels like and may need to relearn this feeling. Make peace with food because food is your friend and needs to be used wisely.
THIRD: Eat enough calories! According to the University of Maryland Medical Center, a relatively inactive female weighing 200 pounds should eat between 2,000 and 2,300 calories to maintain this weight. However, a moderately active woman weighing 200 pounds needs 2,400 to 2,700 calories daily to maintain this weight. The rule of thumb is approximately 10 calories per pound per day when inactive and 12 calories per pound per day for people who are moderately active to maintain their current weight. A pound of fat contains roughly 3,500 calories, so provided your weight is currently stable, you should aim to reduce your calorie intake by 500 calories per day to lose one pound per week.
FOURTH: Listen to your body and learn what it feels like to be physically hungry. You may have forgotten what true physical hunger feels like. Before you eat anything ask yourself, "Is this physical hunger or emotional hunger?" When you are physically hungry you will be eating to fill a physical need. Emotional hunger is an attempt to satisfy an emotional need and unfortunately too much emotional eating can lead to serious weight problems. When you want food and your body is not physically hungry, it is important to stop what you are doing, look at what you are eating, and listen to what your body is telling you. You might be thirsty, anxious, sad, scared, angry, bored or even tired. Identify the emotion, and then allow yourself to feel it. Compulsive overeating only fills emotional voids for a short time, and then the compulsive overeating cycle begins again. To break the cycle, invest time in yourself to learn the difference between physical and emotional hunger. Learn how to identify your feelings, and then allow yourself to actually feel the feelings so you can make healthy changes. The goal is to learn how to eat when you are physically hungry and stop when you are comfortably full.
FIFTH: Anger, guilt, fear, shame, anxiety, boredom, stress, embarrassment, and loneliness are true emotions and are present for a reason. Many people reach for food to ease emotional hunger. But of course emotional eating does not work for the long haul. It is good to take the time to figure out what emotions you are trying to deal with and learn how to cope with them without overeating. I know this is much easier said than done because my own weight loss journey has been long, and sometimes it has been confusing and painful. But I am here to tell you the journey was worth it because I am worth it and so are you.

Julie W. Hubbs

Article Source: EzineArticles.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Fast Weight Gain for Women

By committing yourself to a healthy diet and a workout routine, fast weight gain for women is possible. Here are important tips that will help you to put on weight without making your look fat. There are so many diet plans, workout plans, special foods, etc., for weight loss. Everybody is conscious of their figure, and many people who are overweight or obese are seeking for ways to lose weight. With so much focus on weight loss, there are limited programs that focus on weight gain for women. This can be especially painful for people, who have a fast metabolism or have genetics, which don't allow them to put on weight. Looking like 12, when you are actually 20 is frustrating. If you naturally have a small frame and look very young compared to your friends or people of your age, then being underweight can cause mental stress. You might have to keep telling people that you don't gain weight, and many other women might even give you envious looks, saying that they wo...

Motivation Tips For Weight Loss - How to Build Yourself Up

I am going to share motivation tips for weight loss that will not only move you into motivation but keep you there. The problem many people face with weight loss is they know they should lose weight and they might even fear that staying overweight will lead to future health problems but they just cannot seem to find the motivation to get going. If you can spare just a couple of minutes to read this article you will find new hope and energize your weight loss desire.

Top 10 Secrets to Nip Nibbling

1. Observe: Have you ever seen another Mom eat off her children's plates? When we're able to look at something objectively we often see how we must look when we do the same thing. If you don't like how it looks, don't do it yourself. 2. Visualize: Imagine everything you've snacked on throughout the day...a few handfuls of chips while you're watching TV, a few tastes of the meal you're preparing for dinner, some cookies that were on the counter. Now imagine putting it all on a plate. How does the plate look? Visualize this plate in addition to the meals you've eaten throughout the day. 3. Distract: Often just getting involved in another activity is enough to stop you from "mindless munching". Try cleaning out a drawer, taking the dog for a walk, writing in a journal or any other activity that distracts you from nibbling and gives you pleasure.