Category Archives: AIM

AIM: Kickoff to the Eating Season

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Ah, fall.  There are so many things to love about fall.  It’s my favorite season for many reasons. I love the foliage, cooler weather, football and, of course, all the wonderful foods that come about in fall.

 

There seem to be 2 schools of thought once fall hits.  It seems either you have done a fresh new start or are packing it in until the new year. I have always kind of viewed Halloween as the kickoff to the eating season. Of course, Halloween candy is in the stores in September (why???) and chances are if you buy it, you eat it.  Then there is Halloween, football parties and we sail right into Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, Christmas, New Year’s, etc.   It sure can be an eating trap.  While food definitely is for fuel, it’s also a big part of being social with others.  It’s not the only reason to get together, but food brings a lot of pleasure to gatherings.

Most long-time blog readers know of my love for candy corn.  I adore this stuff and always have.  It’s so funny that many people associate me with candy corn.  Or maybe that isn’t funny and just sad…I don’t know.

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I used to head into fall and do lots of baking, eating lots of candy corn, buying Halloween candy that I loved and eating it.  Not minding if there weren’t many trick or treaters because then I could eat the leftovers. Now, I don’t do that so much.  I don’t bake a ton anymore.  Even though I love baking (and eating it), I find I do better when I go out and get something as a treat like cupcakes when I go riding rather than having things at home.  So, baking happens a lot less.

Fall is also the time I have to start rethinking my exercise program.  Bike rides become limited from lack of daylight, colder temps, rain, and I have to pull in my weekend eating when I am not putting 50 miles on the bike.  That takes some adjustment and I can have a tantrum about that.

I will indulge in fall treats, but portion control is *everything*. Yes, I can have a pumpkin muffin, but I only need one.  Yes, I can make a nice stew, but I need to portion out a serving and not be having seconds and thirds just because it is cold out.  I love eggnog, but I make a challenge to myself to not drink any until eggnog season, which is Thanksgiving Day to me.  So despite all the food being pushed on me early by the grocery stores (QUIT IT!!!), I will do it in my own time.

There are also plenty of ways to bring all those fall flavors in without being super indulgent.  I eat pumpkin all year, but I do go into pumpkin overdrive in the fall.  I love to have pumpkin oats or add pumpkin to yogurt.  We often do crustless pumpkin pie to eat, because the crust is where most of the calories come in – and to be honest, I don’t care about the crust.   There are wonderful root vegetables to roast, delicious soups and stews – hello crockpot!  Again, it’s all about portion control.

My goal is to not gain weight this fall.  It’s an easy trap to fall into.  There will be times where I do fall down, but one fall doesn’t mean I have to skid into the new year in a haze of eggnog and pumpkin rolls.

Here are links to a few of my favorite fall eats in my regular diet:

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Make sure you read more  at my fellow AIMers’ blogs for their thoughts on this topic!

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs in

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Lynn, Lori, Debby, Shelley, and Cammy, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you would like us to address!

AIM: The Thinternet: Tool or Tormenter?

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Thinspiration.  Have you heard of it or seen it?  It’s supposed to be motivating to get yourself in shape.  Especially in places like Tumblr or Pinterest.  Pinning images of really thin women, usually accompanied by a workout or some sort of “clean” recipe.  People make vision boards with these to motivate themselves.  You have to be very careful with them, I think.  It’s a double-edged sword.   On the one hand, you want to give yourself some kind of inspiration to get moving.  On the other hand, the images themselves can lead to body image problems and unrealistic expectations. On Pinterest, I saw this one:

nonono

This was repinned many, many times and the worst part?  The caption “I will look like this soon”.  This made me incredibly sad. This is not what the majority of women will be able to look like unless they naturally have that willowy bone structure (and nothing wrong with that at all) or they have to diet to an extreme.  I could never look like the above no matter how hard I tried – it’s just not my body structure.

I have always viewed these with concern and some annoyance.

Then they started messing with lifting.  The newest thing? Strong is the new Skinny/Sexy.  On the surface, the strong is the new skinny is a good thing because it is encouraging being strong.  However, it is often accompanied by a picture like this:

noway

I am annoyed on many levels by this picture. First, this woman is likely not lifting as heavy as what is implied in this photo.  It’s also another very difficult standard to try to achieve.  They are now selling that you need to be both skinny *and* have a 6-pack, i.e., very low body fat.  You know those models that are ripped in the pictures? They don’t walk around like that 365 days a year.  Not to mention all the stylists, makeup and lighting to get the perfect shot.

Then, since I am on a roll, why does everything for women have to be equated with sexy?  Substitute whatever word at the beginning.  Smart is the new sexy, orange is the new sexy, yoga is the new sexy, whatever.  How about strong is the new power?  Or strong is the new equalizer? Women need to stop thinking of themselves only on the level of being sexy (or skinny). Can you be strong and feel sexy? Sure!  There is nothing wrong with feeling sexy, but that is not all you should aspire to. And that’s not what we should be teaching our young girls and boys. Women are so much more than just objects to be judged solely on looks. It’s a small part of the package of a whole woman.  Be the best and healthiest that *you* can be with the body you have.

 

Go ahead, motivate yourself. Just be careful who you use as a role model – and be careful of what little ears and eyes may be hearing and seeing.

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Make sure you read more  at my fellow AIMers’ blogs for their thoughts on this topic!

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs in

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Lynn, Lori, Debby, Shelley, and Cammy, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you would like us to address!

AIM: You Show Me Your Maintenance and I’ll Show You Mine!

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This month’s topic, despite the cutesy title, is really a look at what makes maintenance a unique situation for each of us – and any maintainer!  We all have that one thing that makes us different in our challenges to lose and maintain weight.  My biggest challenge?  Working from home.

For anyone new to the blog, I work as a medical transcriptionist.  That means a lot of sitting and a lot of typing.  Because I use a foot pedal for the audio files, I can’t use a treadmill desk (oh how I wish I could!).  I have tried standing while working, but because my right foot has to be flexed on the pedal, I end up shifting my weight to one side, which is hard on my back.  So, I have to face the fact that this job is sedentary.  Now, you all know that I do exercise.  I ride my bike most days of the week and do some strength training, but it really is hard to erase all that sitting, but I think I do a pretty good job at being active outside of my work time.

My biggest issue actually lies not as much with the sedentary part of my day, but the fact that I have food available to me all the time!  And it’s not just any kind of food like might be in an office environment, but it’s food that I eat regularly and enjoy (or it wouldn’t be in the house).  My working chair is maybe 400 feet from the kitchen pantry, which is also right by the laundry/bathroom.  It’s very easy to take a bathroom break and then swing by the pantry for some nuts or crackers or a piece of chocolate.  It’s just always there.

Now, I also don’t live in a vacuum.  Someone else lives in this house and there are some foods that I probably just wouldn’t have here if I lived alone.  Things like granola, chocolate chips, pretzels, sometimes potato chips.  And the occasional bag of M&Ms.  These are foods John enjoys and doesn’t binge on.  We do keep foods that are problematic for me up high so I can’t just walk to the pantry and get them, but I do sometimes pull over a chair and help myself, particularly when I am stressed.  And most of you know work has been pretty stressful for me lately on several fronts between computer issues and the constant barrage of how behind we are.  I stress eat.

I have had people say to me that I should just ask John not to have this stuff in the house.  My thought is that it isn’t very fair to him.  If he enjoys eating cereal, why should I say it can’t come into the house?  It’s not like packages of Oreos or a bag of peanut butter cups.  I do ask him to really hide those occasional M&Ms so I don’t go looking for them.  But here is the problem with that – John said to me that when he had to hide food, it made him feel sort of guilty for eating it.  Not good.  I don’t want to foster any kind of food issues within someone else.

Of course, if I want to binge on something – I can do it with any kind of food.  It could be fruit, dates, nuts, cheese.  I will even just eat nut butter from a spoon – which happened when I was so frustrated last week.   That is what people would classify as ‘normal’ food or ‘healthy’ food, and yet one can still overeat it.  In my world, calories count  – not just the type of food I am eating.

I do know that I am lucky in that I don’t have to worry about office potlucks or the break room loaded with food or an endless string of office birthdays/retirements, etc.  It is sometimes surprising even to me the difficulties I can have at times.  It’s not all the time (or I would be back at 250 pounds), but it happens often enough and is probably a reason I never got down to my weight goal.

I have worked outside the home and from home and for me, it is much more challenging from a food point of view working from home.  It’s something I will always have to work on -as long as I am doing this job, at any rate.

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Make sure you read more  at my fellow AIMers’ blogs for their thoughts on this topic!

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs in

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Lynn, Lori, Debby, Shelley, and Cammy, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you would like us to address!

AIM: Maintaining Support…Or Not?

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I was pretty lucky in having a lot of support during my many attempts at losing weight.  Not that there weren’t challenging situations and all that, but I think having the people closest to you help you makes a big difference.

Now, John was overweight for a while as well and we were not always losing at the same time.  This last time down the scale, it was probably a year or two into it with me eating my new way of eating and John eating what he did.  However, he never pushed food on me or sabotaged me in any way.

We eat together, but not always the same thing – and this is true today. John will never eat broccoli and I have it pretty much every single day.  He eats a lot of beans and I rarely do.

One thing that is harder when you are maintaining is that the support may not be there like you need it to be still.  Many times you will hear, “Lighten up” or “It’s a holiday” or whatever.  It’s also the time when a lot of the compliments and such that you received while losing don’t happen anymore because you have been at your weight for a while.  There is also the idea that I noticed people have that you don’t need any more support – like you have it all figured out – which is so not the case!

When I do need support, I ask for it. I will read more blogs and websites to help with whatever issue I am having. I will blog about it and use feedback from there.  Even if you cannot get familial or friend support – there is a huge community on the internet willing to give you whatever you need. Even if they don’t know it they are giving it (because you read a blog and never comment).

I also give support when asked and I tend to do tough love support (ask my family about that).  I will ask when I need it, mostly from John – particularly when my eating starts to get way off track (kind of like it is starting to right now).

You do also  need to be careful that the support you are getting is not ‘enabling’ support, but true support to continue on to your goals.

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Make sure you read about “Maintaining Support or Not,” at my fellow AIMers’ blogs for their thoughts on this topic!

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs in

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Lynn, Lori, Debby, Shelley, and Cammy, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you would like us to address!

AIM: Through Thick and Thin

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Welcome back to the next installment of AIM!  This month’s topic is quite interesting and affects all of us on some level.  Weight regain.  It’s so common in life to lose and gain weight over and over again.   And after a really large loss, is it inevitable to have some regain?  I don’t think it is a universal truth, but it is common.  Some people are able to lose the weight and stay there. Others, not so much.

I have lost and gained over my lifetime and it wasn’t until I really made a lifestyle change that the loss stuck (mostly).  I know that you always hear that, but it’s true.

I was here:

250

Then I got to my lowest point here:

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And for the last 2 years I have been here:

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Don’t you love my most recent dressing room shot? This was a couple months ago. I’m a size bigger than the previous picture.  The reason?  More food, basically.  I am a foodie.  Not a 5-star restaurant, snooty nose in the air, must have the latest and greatest item foodie, but someone who appreciates good food.  Simple food that is well made – or gourmet food.  So, there was some weight creep from that – and I was aware when it was happening.

I also find that I have trouble in the summers when I am doing tons and tons of biking trying to balance calories in and out.  That seems to be where I struggle the most and that season is pretty much here now.  When you burn 1200 calories in biking and need to take that back in on top of your daily – that can be hard. Then the next day if I am not biking, my stomach is like a bottomless pit.  It’s hard to balance.  I am hoping to do better this year.

While the black pants in the middle photo are a pair that this year I said I was going to wear again, the work that it takes to get there (and STAY there) could be more than I want to do.  I have made some progress this year so far, which is good, but it’s extremely slow. I’m not totally comfortable where I am, but then again, I am not really uncomfortable, either.

Yeah, I could drop my calories really low and exercise like a demon and cut out more of my favorite things and get a lot smaller, but at what cost?  Food is enjoyable to me.  I love to exercise, but I don’t want to spend more than an hour or so doing that a day – unless we are talking a cupcake bike ride on weekends!  I have a full-time job and I don’t want to spend all my free time trying to burn calories off.  Exercise is fun to me and I want to keep it that way.

I guess I am just a bit more relaxed about the whole thing as long as I am not gaining more.  Then I tighten things up again.  Then I relax. I don’t want to be someone who white-knuckle rides on the scale and is paranoid about eating.  I finally am in a pretty good place  with food, other than over snacking at times, and I do not want to ever associate food with guilt again.

One blog I love to read is by Dr. Yoni Freedhoff called Weighty Matters.  He really has a great way of viewing weight loss in the context of real life and not a weight loss bubble.

He recently had a post about all or nothing thinking.  The title is pretty awesome in itself and if I was a quote person, I would probably hang it on my wall.  All Or Nothing Thinking Will Always (Eventually) Get You Nothing

Ain’t that the truth?

The other thing he has stated a few times is this: “Life is about the healthiest life that you can enjoy, not the healthiest life that you can tolerate.”

I think that plays a role in my maintenance journey.

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Make sure you read about “Through Thick and Thin,” at my fellow AIMers’ blogs for their thoughts on this topic!

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs in

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Lynn, Lori, Debby, Shelley, and Cammy, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you’d like us to address!

AIM: What’s Different Now?

 

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AIM: Adventures in Maintenance is Shelley, Lori, Cammy, Debby and Lynn, former weight-loss bloggers who now write about life in maintenance. We formed AIM to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. We publish a post on the same topic on the first Monday of each month. Let us know if there is a topic you’d like us to address!

This month’s topic is What is Different Now?  I really gave this a lot of thought and while a lot has changed, a lot has stayed the same.  I am sort of an accidental maintainer.  I had a different number in mind than where I have been at for the last few years, so I never really did hit a goal number and then try to maintain. I sort of slid into maintenance, so to speak, which means I approached maintenance differently.  The number is not as important to me now as being healthy and active and being happy.

Of course, there are the obvious physical differences, like smaller clothing sizes, bones that are palpable which used to be buried under fat.  It takes a long time to get used to a new body, too.  For such a long time I would automatically twist my body to maneuver through aisles or narrow spots when I didn’t need to.  I took a long time for my mind to see the physical changes in my body.  It still doesn’t always see those changes.  That hasn’t changed.

I love to move now, too.  That’s a big difference.  Anyone who has read this blog for a while knows how much I  love to cycle.  It wasn’t always that way.  When I first tried biking, I really didn’t like it.  I just wasn’t using the right equipment.  It was a cheap heavy mountain bike, which isn’t good for road riding.  Once I found the right equipment, everything changed. I think exercise will have to be a post for another day because I could go on forever about that. 😀

Probably the biggest change is my relationship with food.  I have always loved food, but put it into categories of good/bad, diet/non-diet.  Not banning any foods from my life or considering anything to be a ‘cheat’ really helped change my thinking about food.  It’s nourishment for the body and sometimes nourishment for the soul.  I think it is okay to be comforted by ice cream once in a while – as long as you aren’t using it to hide from your problems.  I do find that I have to pay attention to my food most of the time.  I used to only pay attention when I was ‘dieting.’ Now I realize that I will likely have to pay attention for life.

Something that hasn’t changed has been the struggle with body acceptance.  I am much better about it now, but it is still hard.  It’s hard not to compare to others and it is hard not to compare to the airbrushed famous people as well.  My body isn’t perfect, but it’s mine and it does many wonderful things for me.  That is certainly deserving of acceptance and I try to remind myself of that daily.  I have a scale now that does not tell me a number, which is good because I don’t fixate on a number.  It just tells me where I am at compared to when I first set the scale. A voice says “You are X pounds above/below your starting weight.”  When you lose (or gain) 10 pounds, it resets that as your starting weight. That’s kind of nice and very freeing to have a measurement without number stress.

I get asked the question fairly often about “How did you know this was the last time?”  To be completely honest, I don’t know if this is the last time.  There were other times where I was sure it was going to be the last time down the scale – and it wasn’t.  I know I am not the only one this has happened to. However, the differences in how I live my life and approach food now give me a lot of confidence that I can keep the weight off or catch the slide before it gets too far.

Feel free to weigh in with your thoughts and, if you haven’t already, check out the other AIM bloggers’ thoughts:

Lynn @ Lynn’s Weigh

Debby @ Debby Weighs In

Shelley @ My Journey to Fit

Cammy @ The Tippy Toe Diet

Adventures In Maintenance

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During weight loss, we’re rock stars. The scale goes down and people notice. But when the scale stops moving and the compliments wane, we’re more like the roadies, the people who work long after the music stops and the fans go home. No one pays us much attention, but we’re imperative to the success of our former rock star selves.

Adventures in Maintenance (AIM) is Shelley, Lori, Cammy, Debby and Lynn, former rock star weight-loss bloggers who now write as roadies of weight maintenance. Collectively, we have lost 528 pounds and have been maintaining for 24.5 years. We formed AIM because we know what it’s like to take aim at maintenance. The perfect shot is really hard, but you can get close with practice.

As bloggers, we want to work together to turn up the volume on the issues facing people in weight maintenance. Although we will continue to write independently, on the first Monday of each month, we will post a blog on the same topic.

One subject, five voices. And you, our readers. There’s a larger conversation to be had about weight maintenance, so we encourage you to add your voice. Let us know what topics you’d like us to address, and when you read our posts, add your comments. Together, we can dispel myths, encourage each other, and take a blogger’s AIM at the heart of maintenance. Look for our first AIM post on Monday, March 4 and the topic is: “What’s Different This Time.”

Allow us to introduce ourselves:

shelley Shelley

For those of you new to my blog, My Journey To Fit, I’m Shelley and I’m a mom to two grown sons, Sam and Max, and wife to Jeff. We’ve been married for nearly 29 years.

I’ll be turning 50 in a few months, and quite honestly, I’m pretty dang excited about that…losing my excess weight has allowed me to BE and DO so many things that I never thought would be “me.” And while I don’t know what is in store, I’m happy to be physically able to take on whatever catches my fancy (and yes, I realize I sounded like a 90-year-old with that phrase).

My blog has evolved over the years, starting with my diet adventure and grudging acceptance of exercise, to the discovery that I liked running (I was the one who said I’d never run…lesson learned, never say never!), along with shopping for clothes (so much more fun now that I’m not relegated to the plus-size department), and my hobbies – I learned to knit last year and have been torturing treating my readers with updates and pictures of my knitting projects. Who knows what’s next?!

Why am I participating in AIM? Well, I stumbled onto a couple of maintenance bloggers – coincidentally, one was Lynn – before I lost my first pound. What struck me right away was that not only had these women, who were as big as me, lost weight, but they were keeping it off. Bingo – that made me realize that this time, if I truly wanted this to be my last diet, I was going to have to do things differently so that I didn’t regain the weight like I did every other time I dieted. Making changes with the idea that they were going to be on a permanent basis, instead of temporary cutbacks, was the key to my success. While I haven’t kept off every single pound I lost, I’ve managed to keep nearly all of them at bay, and I’ve finally realized that I don’t have to eat my way through life to be happy.

posing Lori
My name is Lori and I write the blog Finding Radiance. I chose that name because that ended up being what I was striving for. Not a specific goal weight or size, but being happy within.
I had struggled with my weight for most of my life. Lost and gained several people throughout my adult years. LOL! I have done many weight-loss programs and most were successful to a degree, but something was missing since I kept putting the weight back on. That something was really learning to love myself and develop a better relationship with food. Also important was discovering exercises that I love. I turned into quite a biker and love strength training!
My blog talks a lot about food because – quite frankly – I love food. The biggest thing for me was learning to let go of guilt about food or feeling like I only had to eat carrots and cottage cheese in order to lose/maintain my weight.
You also will see a lot of the general things in my life. I often post about whatever is in my head, my latest home improvement projects, and my cat (she is very popular) because as a maintainer, life is more than just the scale – and that is how it should be. I do struggle with maintenance at times, but it really never is a perfect road.
I was thrilled to be asked to be a part of AIM because of the deep respect and admiration I have for these wonderful women. There is definitely a hole in the weight maintenance world. It’s like once you lose weight, you disappear from the blog world. Kind of like the Bermuda Triangle for weight-loss bloggers. That needs to change because there is a ton of support for when you are losing, but not much when you are maintaining, and not much is written about what to expect or how to handle some regain or when you start having body acceptance issues. (What? You mean I won’t look like a supermodel once I lose weight??). I look forward to where this journey takes us!

cammy Cammy

I’m Cammy, of The Tippy Toe Diet. I started out trying to lose weight at the “chubby” level and eventually dieted myself to the edge of morbid obesity. I spent years (and years!) cycling through one diet plan after another, but I could never maintain any of them for the long term. The repeated failures battered my self-esteem and part of me wanted to just give it all up, but thankfully, some little spark of hope remained.

In 2007, I adopted a different approach. Instead of trying to follow other people’s diets to achieve other people’s ideals, I spent some time thinking about what comprised my ideal. In doing so, I realized that I didn’t really care about being thin or skinny or any of the other media-defined measures of success. What I really wanted was be healthier, more vibrant, and yes, a smaller size. More importantly, I wanted to do it in a way that I could sustain for the rest of my life. And, by golly, I wanted it to be FUN!

Recognizing that the completely-overhaul-your-entire-life-starting-this-Monday approach had never worked for me in the past, I implemented changes in my lifestyle slowly, sometimes in teeny little steps. My blog, The Tippy Toe Diet, chronicles those changes – the ones that worked and the ones that didn’t – and continues to serve as a journal of my new explorations. I might have lost 100 pounds, but no way am I through changing! It’s too much FUN trying new things to stop now!

I’m honored and excited to be an AIM blogger because I admire and respect each and every one of the other bloggers and appreciate their points of view. I’m looking forward to learning from them and to sharing my own thoughts, all in hopes that this scattershot approach might be of service to others who are either in the maintenance realm or striving to get there. Our stories, our paths, and our struggles might be different, but our “aim” is generally the same: a healthier and more vibrant life. At a smaller (or, at least, not a larger) size!

 

debby Debby

I’m Debby, from debby weighs in. When I started my blog, the byline was “thoughts on weight loss and life.” Recently, I decided I knew nothing about weight loss, and changed my byline to “on living a whole and healthy life.”

Like most overweight people, I have a LOOOONG history of mostly being overweight, with many forays into attempted weight loss, some more successful than others, but all of them with one trait in common: I gained back all the weight PLUS some. And so, when I was about 30, I decided that I would never diet again. And I didn’t, for a long, long time. Until one day in 2005, shortly after my 50th birthday, a friend asked me to go to Weight Watchers with her.

At first I turned her down, and said, “But we can be accountable to each other.” After a miserable two weeks of starving myself, I realized I needed a little help, and agreed to go. But this time was different. This time I knew it had to be for the rest of my life.
This time I had the help and support of many friends. I sought out women at work who just lived a healthy lifestyle, and quizzed them on what they ate. I read everything I could find about maintaining weight loss. I read science journals and the latest research, and when I hit a little snag, I hired a personal trainer, who taught me more about eating healthy whole foods than she did about exercise (and she taught me a LOT about exercise!)
It took about two years to lose 100 pounds, and it was only then that I discovered the world of blogging! There was Lynn, in People magazine, and the little box at the bottom of the page said to check out Lynn’s blog on the internet. A whole new world of friends opened up to me.
Since then, maintenance has definitely been an adventure, and these four women have been constant traveling companions. As everyone eventually does, I had a couple of years that were extra stressful, and I regained 25 pounds. It only took two years for me to figure out how to start losing weight again(!) and that is where I am in my journey now. I never stopped working on living a whole and healthy life. And now I have added “aging gracefully” to that work. Its an adventure, that’s for sure!

lynn Lynn

I’m Lynn and I blog at Lynn’s Weigh. When I began this last trek down the scale in 2005, no one but my doctor and I knew what I weighed. Three hundred pounds sounded intangible and scary. But I grew tired of that albatross and so I launched my first website, Lynn’s Weight-Loss Journey, complete with numbers and photos, and immediately I felt lighter. My weight was no longer a secret. It was, and still is, what it is: a number. It’s not who I am.

Like my AIM partners, I realized this last time IS the last time because I approached weight loss differently. I finally understood that if I wanted a permanent change in my body, I had to make a permanent change in my attitude. Head before body. And no celebratory Dairy Queen blizzards once I met goal!

On Lynn’s Weigh, I write about life as a nearly 50-year-old mother to four grown children, grandmother to three (almost 4!) grandchildren, writer, foodie, and exerciser, all through the lens of a person maintaining a 150-plus weight loss. There are more than 1 billion websites out there, but our little AIM consortium is just what the ‘net needs.