Trying to identify the most common thread in weiht gain. would like your experiences Topic
Febrown
06/12/12
I am try
Febrown
06/12/12
Sorry. I thought perhaps some could share their past experiences regarding consistant use of weigh ins. I kbnow from my own I was not interested in how much I weighed. I feel that not really knowing contributed not only to my staying obese but getting there. Did any of you weigh yourselves consitantly while gaining or overweight? If any of you suffered a regain did you weight yourselves consistantly over that tiem . If not do you think it contributed to the weight gain/regain. Looking to see if weighing in or not weighing in had any impact on weight gain. Is ignorance truly bliss?
Fran
Ccmandel
06/13/12
Fran,
I am a daily weigher. I weigh with good and bad news. It totally keeps me grounded. When I stop weighing, it's a red flag for me. I don't get frantic when the scale is up as I realize there are daily and weekly fluctuations. This is the price for daily weighing..it totally helps me!
Interested in what others do..
Susan
Febrown
06/13/12
Susan wasthat something you always did before you started here. Was it the normal back then? If not would knowing ,do you feel, have helped?
Ccmandel
06/13/12
Always weighed daily...includng the time I participated in this site and others. When I didn't like the results, I would sometimes not weigh. Being accountable definitely forces you to be more honest and helps with motivation.
For me, weighing definitely helps keep me on track!
Dietitian
06/13/12
I never weighed myself as an adult until I was trying to lose and then maintain weight. I didn't even own a scale!
Even now, I keep the scale in the basement (2 flights down from my bedroom) so that I don't see the scale unless I choose to.
Best,
Kathy
Febrown
06/14/12
Looking it see if when a lapse hapens or relase whether people still weigh themselves. In a previous life I did not and feel that contributed to a lase becoming a relase and eventually the collapse of weight maint. Looking to see if I am unique in that or more the norm.
I look back an see I put emotions on a tool. As though not knowing made me not fat or less unhappy. I can say now that was at best stupid as whether I knew or not, the fact was I gained weight. Not really knowing just added pounds. If I had known I don't know if I would have stopped the gain a lot sooner than I did. If I had not at least I would have had more control over decisions.
Ccmandel
06/14/12
I agree Fran...the "not knowing" is just not facing the truth, which in the end, really only hurts us.
All part of the mental process of losing weight, which I believe is so critical.
Susan
Clochette2
06/14/12
Oh, definitely on board for the weighing in. I do it weekly and that works for me. There was a time when I was losing that I did it monthly because progress was slow and discouraging on a weekly basis, but I was really motivated to see the monthly number. Back in the day, I tried to tell myself that I didn't need to weigh in as long as I felt healthy. Well, my weight continued to rise at my annual physical with my doc, until I was 30 lbs above where I wanted to be (and at that point things like blood pressure and blood sugar start to rise as well). I had to make a decision to take charge. I was worried that I would become as obsessed with the scale as I was in high school when my sister and I were so competitive about weight and she developed a full-on eating disorder, and I was pretty close. Slowly (with help and support from some of you) I have come to see the scale as just another tool to help me with my life. I'd much rather check my weight regularly than have to daily check blood sugar or blood pressure because of being overweight.
Febrown
06/14/12
Funny how we give tool power and think deluding ourselves works. I pray I have learned to get past that as I use the Brown university study-red yellow green which requires a daily weigh in with one day per week as the recording day. Kind of made me see the scale as a needed tool like a glucometer is for a diabetic.
You are right has to hurt a lot less than a finger stck! Good for you taking the power away from a tool. You have done so well!-Fran
Trying to identify the most common thread in weiht gain. would like your experiences