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Week 27: Progress Is Measured In Small Steps

This past weekend was an event I look forward to attending every year.  It was a total blast, and I’m looking forward to next year’s event already.

The reason that I mention it is because one of my concerns with events like this is mobility.  There have been times when I have been in such pain, because of my knees, that just walking a couple hundred feet was pure agony, if I was able to do it at all.  Six months ago, when I began this journey, I dreaded going in Walmart because just walking to the door from the parking lot was a huge trip.  When every step is painful, any distance seems like it takes an eternity.

Well, Friday night, our group decided to walk over to a restaurant that was just down the street, because no one wanted to drive.  I immediately felt some anxiety over this; it wasn’t more than a couple hundred feet, but it was up and down hills, across parking lots that were more pot hole than concrete, and not only was I not sure about walking, but I was afraid of falling.  I live in fear of falling, because that’s what sent me to arthroscopic surgery several years back: a hard fall to one knee broke loose a small bit of a bone spur, and it lodged within my kneecap. Both of my knees have a number of bone spurs again, and I really don’t want the same thing to happen.

I sucked it up and walked.  And I did it.  Not only that, but I did it with no problem, and I kept up just fine with everyone else.  That left me with a huge feeling of accomplishment.  I also did this without my leg brace, which can, at times, cause more problems than it solves.  I was able to get around pretty easily all weekend.

Not only that, but I had yet another confirmation of why using a scale as your primary marker of success is a bad idea.  Last year, I mentioned in this blog that I’d bought some short that then fit perfectly; I was at 285 pounds at the time.  I’ve been wearing those same shorts for a while, now, including this past weekend, and they’re bordering on being big on me… at 298 pounds. They fit me looser at 298 than 285, and I know without a doubt that the reason for it is because I’ve been exercising for the entire six months of this current effort.  That wasn’t true last year; I finally started exercising, in part, because I wasn’t losing weight and felt like it was finally time.  Without going to check, I think the lowest I got last year was 283… so I am essentially a smaller size now, at a heavier weight, than I was last year.

WIN.

Week 26: Goal Pants and SHIRT!

This time around, I’ve added a shirt to the mix, so I can tell if I’m losing elsewhere.

I’ve chosen a pair of size 24 jeans that I used to wear quite a bit.  The last pair of jeans were also a size 24, but these fit tighter.  They won’t come up all the way in the crotch, I barely got them zipped, and they sit plumber-low on my posterior.  The rear view to others wouldn’t be pretty.

The shirt is a 2X cotton button shirt.  I can button it fine, but it has a bit of gaping in the bust, the upper sleeves are tight but not uncomfortably so, and it seems like it’s short because the shirt doesn’t fit well.  It’s another style of shirt I’ve worn quite a bit in the past, so I know how it should be fitting.

Also, this past week, I had a medication addition.  I believe I’ve written, before, that I’m under treatment for hypothyroid.  I’ve been taking synthroid for a couple of years, now, but it doesn’t seem like it’s made much of a difference in how I feel or function.  I had blood work done a couple of weeks ago, and while my TSH number was decent, my FT4 and FT3 numbers were on the extreme ends of the diagnostic range, suggesting that I under-convert T3.  T3 is the active hormone that helps set metabolism.  As of this last week, I’ve added T3 to my medications, with review in 6 weeks.

Having an optimal T3 number should help me feel more energetic, focused, and relieve signs of depression.  It may or may not assist in weight loss, but right now, my goal is to feel better.  I’ll be including any differences I see over the weeks to come, because hypothyroid is absolutely a concern for anyone trying to lose weight and be healthy.

Week 26: Half a year.

Half a year.  6 months of working on making myself better through diet and exercise.  26 weeks of improving my lifestyle. That’s pretty awesome.

I try not to think too far down the road, but I will admit that hitting that half-a-year mark gives me thoughts of where I might be in another six months, or even a year down the road.  I’m starting to allow myself to think about participating in events that require a bit more physicality from me, as well as losing more weight.  I do have to reign myself in and remember that this a day-to-day process, and I can’t depend on the next six months producing another 36 pounds off… but I confess it’s still a nice thought to believe it’s possible, and it is.

I’m very glad to have made it this far, and at the moment, I am strong and confident that this effort will continue.  I have good reasons to want to become healthier; incentives to hold in my mind on days when my confidence is flagging. One of the events I’ve been looking forward to is this weekend; it’s an outdoor festival that I attend every year, and it requires a fair amount of walking if you want to fully enjoy the time there.  I can hardly wait!  This is a reward for me.

What will the next six months bring?  It’s up to me.

Week 25: Goal! 36 Pounds Lost!

It’s a happy day!  My goal pants fit, and as you can see, my ticker has been updated to note a 36 pound loss.  I started out at 334, so that means I jumped over that 300 mark.  Let me tell you — that put a smile on my face!

Last week, I went to the doctor and weighed there, but decided I’d do a more consistent weighing this week (first thing in the morning, no breakfast or water, minimum of clothes, no leg brace), and discovered what I suspected: my loss was even greater than originally believed.  I may also have dropped a couple pounds this week, so that 9 pound difference is probably a little bit of weight with a whole lot of clothes and a ton of water that I drank before going to the doctor. (For those that don’t know, if you are a “difficult stick” — if they have trouble drawing your blood — being well hydrated helps, and drinking water doesn’t effect tests.)

I actually wore my goal jeans out and about earlier in the week. I wouldn’t go jogging in them, or wear them hiking, but they fit well enough to spend about half the day in.  I’m also thrilled that my previous goal pants are very nice and comfortable, now; even the *^#*%^ slimming panel. 😀  All in all, I’m thrilled because it appears that what I’m doing is working.  I’m also thrilled, because my current loss has exceeded my last effort, and in my mind, that was a hurdle to jump.

I have new goal pants today; and a new addition — a goal top.  The pants are also size 24 jeans, but they’re cut differently, are a different brand, and are pretty tight. I can zip them, but wear them out?  Not currently, but I’m confident that what I’m doing will continue to work.  I decided to go with a top as well, so maybe I’ll have a better idea of when I might be losing above the waist and not below.  Besides, it should be additional reinforcement, right?  I’m hoping to be close to having these two fit in around 6 weeks, which will be shortly before Thanksgiving.

Finally, I’m feeling pretty good right now.  I’ve lost over 10% of my body weight, and my knee doc once told me that losing 15% of my body weight will make a significant difference in how my knees feel.  I can tell that he’s right.  I’m sticking with exercise, with the weekly goal of getting in the pool 5 days a week for 50 minute sessions.  My mother says she can see my weight loss; she’s usually in the pool with me, so she sees me in a bathing suit.  I haven’t had anyone notice on their own, yet, but I feel like that day is close.

It’s a good day to be Lisa. I hope your day is just as good.

Fear of Thin

I’ve been doing a fair amount of thinking on something that I’d like to share with you.

My most successful weight loss effort resulted in 140 pounds lost — and probably 100 or so of that was in the first year. I dropped weight quickly. What I was doing worked.  Mind you, it helped that I was a bit younger than I am, now, and more capable of a wider range of exercise, which sped the process.  At one point in the second year of loss, though, things slowed down considerably and I had a lot of difficulty achieving further losses, and finally ground to a halt at 140.5 pounds lost.  In my mind, it just couldn’t be good enough.  I was grateful, yes, but I was also angry because I felt like I was doing everything right and not getting results, and even the slightest backslide resulted in an immediate gain.

There are probably 413 different physiological reasons for why that happened, and I’ll likely never know many of them.  So instead, in this effort, I’m working on what I can control, which includes the psychological reasons for blocking my own success.  On some level, I really do think I was terrified of being thin and being noticed for it.

I still feel that fear. An online group I belong to was discussing mental reasons for weight issues, a while back, and while I’m usually pretty emotionally removed, I actually started crying when I typed out the words that  I think I might be afraid of being thin.  Whoa!  It just hit me in the gut.  And I’ve been doing a fair amount of thinking about that, and I believe I have a lot of head work to do in this regard, because I think that might be at the heart of why I’ve held myself back in the past.

I haven’t always been heavy, although like a lot of girls and women, I’ve always thought I was heavy.  As a young adult, I might have been twenty pounds overweight, at most.  I didn’t become obese until after marriage.  Unlike many who have been obese their entire lives, I’ve experienced life as a thin person.  I’ve walked for miles on end for the sheer joy of it.  I’ve hiked, sailed, spelunked, biked, played tennis.  I remember a time when I didn’t ever worry about finding clothes that would fit, wondering if I’d get squeezed into a restaurant booth, being embarrassed by not being able to ride a carnival ride because of weight. Those issues meant nothing to me.

Now, they certainly do.  Being morbidly obese brings with it the awareness that size can be an issue every single day of my life.  I’ve been over the weight limit for using a tanning bed. I’m unable to sit on bar stools, in part because of my knee, but mostly because of my weight, and have had to ask friends to sit somewhere else because of it.  I was looking at cars recently, and got in one for a test drive, only to be thoroughly embarrassed when I couldn’t adjust the seat enough for me to be able to safely drive the car.  I’ve felt claustrophobic in social situations where I’ve been seated in crowded bars, and been in a position where I couldn’t have gotten out of the restaurant without asking people to stand up from their seats and move for me. These are actually the smaller issues at hand, but still some that people of normal size rarely if ever encounter.

There’s also that sense of being singled out because of size.  I just might be one of those women some have pointed to, over time, and thought to themselves “at least I’m not that fat!”  Photos with friends embarrass me, because in my mind’s eye, I’m happy and equal to my friends, only to see the truth of a photo that shows me to be huge in comparison.  These issues are just the tip of the mental iceberg the morbidly obese must deal with.

The 140 pounds lost came off fairly quickly; quickly enough that people could see a difference in my size from one week to the next.  I crossed a line into normalcy, and at that point, people started talking about how concerned they had been about me as an obese woman.  Some were only concerned with health; some bordered on rude in their comments on how much better I looked as a normal size woman.  Regardless of size, I’m still a human with emotions. Simply put, that shit hurt.

Along with the weight loss came some pretty phenomenal physical accomplishments.  People started to hold me up as an example, a success story, not only for weight loss but for physical strength.  There were expectations of me.  I found myself as defined by my weight loss as I had been by my weight, and I started to rebel against that.  I got pretty tired of people constantly asking how much weight I’d lost, expecting a larger number every time.  In the small town in which I live, strangers actually used to stop me and talk to me about my weight loss.

I think it triggered a fear that I’d never be normal, and that unless I moved somewhere where no one knew me, I’d always be defined by something that I was trying hard to escape. In addition to this, those who didn’t know that I’d formerly been such a fatty treated me much differently than they would have treated me, a hundred or more pounds heavier. Most of that was good, but frankly, some of that was scary, too.

Although I was thin as a child and young adult, that was decades ago, and my brain has to relearn what it’s like to be thin.  I think my body was far ahead of my brain.  I didn’t know how to deal with the different input, existing in a different world with different rules.  I’d catch myself realizing that I’d avoided a gap between chairs at a restaurant because my brain gave me basic input that said I wouldn’t fit, when I’d fit easily — that happened a lot, but it’s not even really that.

While I was far from thin as a 200 pound woman, I was within the range of what people considered to be normal, size-wise.  People don’t really realize that they’re treating someone differently; even my friends changed in how they addressed me or dealt with me. Some wanted to pull me in and get me to do all the things I hadn’t done with them, before; others subtly reminded me that I still wasn’t thin.  And, frankly, there were some who decided I wasn’t friend material anymore.

I’m trying to lay this out for those who may read it at some point, and as a reminder to myself: I was in the unique situation of having lost so much weight that I’d say hello to someone I knew as a large woman, and they wouldn’t recognize me.  This happened many times.  On the surface, it felt good.  But I think now, on some level, it added to this insecure feeling inside of me that said I was just faking it.  That I didn’t deserve the good changes I was experiencing.  That I didn’t deserve the differences in treatment, the ability to shop for clothes without worry, or even to simply sit down at a restaurant and order a meal without being judged for it.

Somewhere inside me, I felt like a fake.  Like an imposter, hiding out in a body that wasn’t mine and I didn’t deserve.  I felt like people were surely laughing at me for believing I could buy clothes that weren’t plus sizes.  For whatever reason, my brain couldn’t accept that I really was doing all those things, and I hadn’t somehow cheated to get there.  If someone complimented me, I didn’t want to accept the compliment without some sort of explanation for not being thinner.  If someone flirted with me, no matter how harmless, I wanted to run and hide.  Inside, I was still very much a morbidly obese woman. I could not convince myself that I had already achieved what I firmly believed to be unachievable.

It’s quite the eye-opener to realize this about myself, and to have to accept that if I want to get back to being thin, I have to find ways to incorporate those thought processes as my own.  I have to accept that many things will change for me as I continue to lose weight.  I have to believe that I deserve it.  That’s probably the biggest hurdle of all.

Week 24: Goal Pants and More

Please notice: my weight loss has been updated! I’ve now lost 27 pounds.  I’m happy about that.

However… I’m not quite in the goal pants, yet.  I was weighed at the doctor’s office, and it came in at 307.  Hooray!  And mind you, when I weigh at the gym, it’s first thing in the morning, with a bathing suit and cover-up on, before breakfast.  While I had to fast for the doctor’s office, I did drink a little more than a quart of water before I went in, and I was fully dressed, including my leg brace.  So, there’s probably a few pounds of variance, but regardless, it’s a loss and I’m counting it as a 10 pound loss since the last time I weighed.

My doctor is diving deeper into seeing if he can bring my thyroid numbers more into alignment, so I’ll feel better and perhaps not struggle as much with weight loss.  I’m happy about this.  It may not be the absolute solution, but if we can get closer to where my body is operating in a normal state, I’ll be thrilled.

My pants are definitely looser than last week.  I swear I spent about three cumulative hours peeing this week, so that probably had a bit to do with it!  If I have another couple of good weeks, I’ll be picking out my next goal pants. 😀

Week 24: No More Bench Sitting

No more bench sitting for me.  I need to be back in the game, and I feel like I’ve been sitting out and not participating like I should be.  I think this is the reason why I haven’t been seeing the progress I was hoping to see.

Today, I’m back at it.  I’ve already been down to the gym, and my food intake so far has been on target.  My goal this week is to get back to clean eating, as well as a regular exercise schedule of five times a week.

I have a fear of falling off the wagon; of just sliding back into not exercising, since I hadn’t been to the gym in over a week, and of going back to sloppy eating, because frankly, there are areas I could clean up.  I want that part of me that tells me that I might as well jump off the wagon and stay off of it, to STFU.

That part of my brain has been nagging at me, lately, and telling me that I’m fat and undesirable, and I’ll never be good enough.  That I’m still the fattest person in any given room, that I’m still judged for it, that I’m not making progress — so the solution is to just give up, because it’s easier to just let myself go back into a depressive state and tell myself it just doesn’t matter.

I know with every fiber of my being that the solution to still being fat is NOT to allow the behavior that promotes it, but there’s that dumbass part of my brain that insists that the effort isn’t worth it and I should just eat whatever I want, and sleep in.  I’m reminding myself that this is a battle I’m engaged in, and that changing my lifestyle will take the investment of my time and energy for months and years to come.  Those thoughts that sabotage me, that make me feel like I’m not good enough, need to be dispatched.  Yes, I’m recognizing that those thoughts exist; but I think I need to, in order to work against them.

I’m almost half a year into this effort.  I’ve put in a lot of good work.  I’m sticking with it.  Yes, I’m still the fattest person in the room in many situations.  Yes, there are those who judge me for it, or think to themselves “at least I’m not as fat as her!”  The mental boost I derive from knowing I’m doing something positive for my health, regardless of how it may appear to those around me who don’t know, is so much better than the mental state of recognizing that my size is an issue and knowing I’m doing nothing. And as long as I keep at that good work, there will come a time when those situations are no longer a description of me.  I know that’s possible; I’ve done it, before.

It’s time to get off the bench and start the next inning with my head in the game.

Week 23: Goal Pants

Same old story… no discernible difference from the last time I tried on the goal pants.

It’s been long enough, now, that I really need to change something, and I think it’s the fact that my program hasn’t been the best for the past several weeks; I’ve had a couple weeks in a row where I’ve had more than two up days, and several weeks in which I was unable to exercise my goal of five times per week.  Next week, that changes.

 

Week 23: Life Throws Curveballs

These last couple weeks have been a bit trying, but this past week was probably the worst.  My husband’s father passed away after struggling with Parkinson’s Disease for many years.  As can often be the case, his death was both a relief and the surprising emotions that come with finality after watching him decline for so many years.

In part, I’m bringing this up because it delayed this week’s post.  And in part, I’m mentioning it because things happen that are unplanned, regardless of how strong you feel you might be in your weight loss journey.

I found myself in a real mental war.  Normally, in my carb and calorie cycling, my low days are on weekdays, and higher days on weekends.  But that’s really only when my food choices are totally in my control.  They really weren’t for several days this past week; while I normally don’t have any problems with turning away from potluck foods, it would have been awkward and rude to do so when people were supplying food as a condolence offering to the family.  There are times when you just have to shut up and deal with it, and not make a fuss over it.

Yet at the same time, I was mentally flogging myself for not eating well, for not exercising, for not staying true to the course I’ve set for myself, feeling as if I was backsliding somehow.  With all due respect… WTF? Why on earth do I do this to myself?  Really, truly, the worst thing I had in days was a smallish piece of cake.  My carbs were above my goal range for several days, but my calories were within acceptable range. And here I was, berating myself for not choosing better foods, even though they weren’t available.

Honestly, if I’m investing in a lifetime plan, there will be times when I chose to alter my eating and exercise plans.  While this one was unplanned, it’s not the end of the world, and there’s no harm done.  The world didn’t end.  I didn’t gain 20 pounds from having a couple amaretto sours the night before a funeral.  (There, I probably could have made better choices.)  I have to learn to cut myself the occasional break, or I’ll get back into that punishment mindset that makes me sabotage myself.

So, if you’re standing at the plate and the pitcher throws you a curveball, you can watch it go by and strike out looking, or you can do the best you can.  Any ball player will tell you that striking out swinging is better than to be caught looking; and for you non-baseball people, this is a metaphor for saying that you can either let crap bog you down, or you can try to make the best of it.  😉

Even though I just posted this today, I’ll keep up with my goal pants tomorrow, and hope for the best.

Week 22: Goal Pants

My goal pants try-on report: there doesn’t seem to be a difference in fit from last week.  Neither down… or up, and that’s good, since I had a 3-day up period last week, and didn’t exercise as much as I had planned. That doesn’t mean I haven’t lost weight; it just means that the part of my body most noticeably measured by trying on pants is not currently getting smaller.

That’s really the only downside of using this method.  Bodies don’t reduce all over at a constant rate; weight loss during one period might be all in your stomach, and during the next period, it’s your back and your arms, for instance.  Because I only try on pants from one week to the next, I don’t know if I’m experiencing loss elsewhere, unless I put on a top or something else that’s noticeably looser.  I have noticed that my bras are getting looser in the band; that’s been steadily happening over the past month or so.

Regardless, I’m happy where I am at this point, and will continue.