I am not a nutritionist, a therapist, a coach, a doctor or a dietician.
I am a mother, a daughter, a sister, a friend and someone that doesn't give up.
I am an oversharer on a constant journey. To see a before and after picture does not detail out all the small wins and losses along the way. That is what this is...a journal of the process. Not just the smiling happy self at the end. The struggle and failures that lead me to the success are far more important than the end goal. It's the constant showing up for myself in every little way that allows for the success to follow.
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2001 |
First time I fell off - or realized I was just never on - was in 2001. I was first married and the heaviest I had been, to that point. I joined Weight Watchers in November and by the summer I had lost over 50 pounds. I started to identify better food choices, I understood what foods were better for me and made me feel stronger! I won a food scale at a weigh in and still use it to this day! I was with a group of people at work that joined in this journey and we were unstoppable! We were written up in the Washington Post and we were a force! The common thread that I can sit here today and realize that group mentality plays a huge role in success. Doing something alone is a lot more daunting and less likely for one to continue. While I do the day in day out alone even now, I share this story on repeat to ensure others that this is not a solo journey.
summer 2005 |
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Jan 2014 - Jan 2015 |
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summer 2023 |
Summer 2024...the summer my daughter started her senior year of high school. I had gone to the shore, been with my immediate and extended family. I was hiding behind everyone I could in pictures knowing that this was not the me I wanted on display. Smiles were still given, love was still felt but I knew I would have rather of hid in my shell and continue to remove myself from others. I decided Labor Day weekend that I had come to a breaking point yet again. I didn't know how to go about my eating, I knew that was my main issue, I decided whatever I was doing was going to have to be drastic. Now 46 years old, the methods I used previously were not going to work. I watched my oldest son transform himself after his bulking phase into his lean cut self all while eating all the protein he could. Every social media platform was telling me to up my protein and lift heavy weights...walk all the steps...do all the various things at the same time.
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2/19/24 - 2/19/25 |
So...I decided to start that Tuesday. I decided to remove complex carbs and sugar and alcohol from my intake. I was eating a lot of chicken and hard boiled eggs to start. I was back to logging my food in MFP and starting making my own dinners based off of the protein Ben was making that night. I was substituting with spaghetti squash and cauliflower rice. I found the off switch somewhere in my brain that knew how to say no to certain things and the on switch for so many good things. I was getting up early and walking 2 miles every day. It didn't have to be fast but I knew I had to start moving again. By mid September I was walking 4 miles a couple times a week, taking the dog on her morning walk after my walk for at least a mile. With my increased protein intake I was finding I lost my cravings - chips, cookies, pretzels...they were no longer in my mind or within my reach.
I have a husband that supports me and loves me through all of it. He grills chicken for me weekly and ensures that all my ingredients for my new fun recipes are stocked so there is no question if I will be staying on track. I have friends that understood when I said, I need to take some space and really focus on things for myself right now. I have coworkers that eventually stopped asking why I ate before we went out for lunch. They fist bump me when I leave the office and head to the gym as my accountability partner. I continue to share the process because while the result is great, it didn't happen overnight. I know that things can just happen and continue to pile up on you, and while you see it happening you do nothing about it.
I am almost 40 pounds down since September. I will continue on this journey...again...there will probably be a fourth time but hoping the time off the horse will be significantly less...not three years of a slow build of losing myself. I will continue to share this process in the hopes that someone will want to try for themself, that they can start with small little goals and feel proud of themself for that. I will high five myself in the mirror each morning excited that I showed up. I am not at the finish line yet...still mid run...and not sure what the finish line looks like this time around but wow, I feel like me again, my smile is authentic and my insides match my outsides. Don't count yourself out of this ongoing relationship with you. Stop comparisons with past self, future self, and some other non realistic person on social media. As my 17 year old reminded me of last night...Comparison is the thief of joy.
Embrace the suck...choose you...hard is possible.