It's been several years since I appeared in the blogosphere (other than stalking my friends' blogs) and wrote a post. So what has brought me out of the shadows and back to a screen in front of you? I've been through a transition over the last year to regain my health and during this time I've learned a lot about myself and the world of diet, fitness and health that used to be so scary for me.
My Purpose
I'm not going to force anyone in to making similar changes in their lives but I want to share my story and the journey I'm on. My first goal is to help keep me accountable to maintaining what I'm doing – create momentum to stay on this journey for myself. My second goal is to give perspective, ideas and encouragement to anyone needing to make small changes for them self.
My Story
Last March (2011) my work clothes were too tight. I knew I didn't want to buy bigger clothes, I hated how I looked in pictures (too many unflattering shots from the holidays had scared me out of having my picture taken for several months) and I was finally at a point where I wanted a change. I've lost weight before by changing my diet and I knew that I had to be ready to commit fully before deciding it was time for a change – too many depressing mornings of ill fitting clothes had put me over the edge. It was time to lose weight.
I started Weight Watchers thanks to a good recommendation from my massage therapist (informing me that they'd revamped the program to fit real life much better). Previously, I'd had a very negative view of WW, mostly because I'd been around people on the program who couldn't stop talking about it and made me feel like a dork for not being on it. When I started the program I decided that I wouldn't tell more than a handful of people I was even on the program and I wouldn't become a walking WW commercial to those around me. Hopefully the success would speak for itself.
I lost 25 pounds (17.5% of my starting weight) over the course of a year solely by following Weight Watchers and changing my diet. My BMI went from 26.5 (Overweight) to 21.9 (Healthy). I didn't increase my exercise or add in any activities – I just ate differently. My diet was full of whole grains, fruits, vegetables, lean proteins with limited alcohol. Fast food nearly dropped off my radar and if I wanted to splurge I had to make a tradeoff somewhere else in my foods for the day. I learned: what a real serving size is; to eat treats in moderation; that dieting is about tradeoffs and that there is a difference between "bad," "better," and "good" choices.
As the weight came off I felt better, looked better and started to see myself differently. The last time I lost significant weight was when I was 19 and it was all about getting thin. This time, I was 32 and the emphasis became about being healthy and taking care of myself. Funny enough, after losing the weight through diet I felt more confident about my physical self and this dedicated couch potato decided I wanted to try exercise. As a wonderful side-effect of weight loss I've added bicycling, walking the dogs, golf, snow shoeing, cross country skiing and now am about to add running to my life.
Being more aware of my overall health (weight, exercise, lifestyle) has also made me more aware of what science is saving about health, activity and the obesity epidemic. I've read studies that help give me more motivation to stay fit because of the consequences of obesity on so many areas of life.
Perspective
I came in to this place as an "outsider" who rarely cared about what I ate, hated to do activity, was turned off by health and fitness nuts and thought I was healthy enough to not worry about making any changes. Everything I've done in the last year has been slow, with small victories, a lot of trial and error to see what would work for me and from the perspective that I'm not a dieter or an athlete but that I'm ready to put health as a priority. Just a few years ago I would have laughed out load if you told me I'd be on a journey towards health and wellness today.
There is my story in a nutshell. I'll be posting about my journey - what works and what doesn't work for me, what I'm learning and how I'm doing. Please follow along!
Becky! I'm so excited about your blog! Thank you for sharing your journey. I've been going through the same transition of 30s = changes. My weight has continued to creep up and I just felt yucky. Changing the way I ate and how I thought about eating seems to be effective. I look forward to hearing more from you!
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