Guest guest Posted August 20, 2004 Report Share Posted August 20, 2004 Have you tried cutting carbs? Not only does it help you lose weight but it keeps BGs lower too. Don't cut out all of 'em -- just the high glycemic ones, such as anything made with grains (cereals, breads, pasta) and rice. For a complete explanation and list of GI (glycemic index) foods, see Rick Mendosa's site (now Mendosa). I think there's a link to it connected with this site. Vicki > Came from the doc today. He says cholesterol is excellent. sugar control is great (6.0), > blood pressure was high last time, and now is much better. I did my time with a > nutritionist and got great tips and ways to improve my eating. I've been walking a mile a > day on the treadmill in my basement, and doing yoga, so my confidence, and flexibility is > good. signed up with a food co-op so i can get more organic fresh fruit n veggies in the > house. > BUT > my weight is still the same as last time he weighed me, which is 3 months ago. > WWWWWWHHHHHYYYYYY!? > he suggested a formal diet, like weight watchers. attend meetings and get on track to lose > weight. I've never done it, never thought about it, wary about paying my money for it, and > wanna know if something like that will really help. but i ned to take a new step to lose this > weight. > > anyone here on, or have been on a formal plan like weight watchers? does it help? ive got > to pinch my pennies for the rest of the year and i want this program or any like it to be > worth my money and time. any advice? > > bee. > (t2 since 2001, actos/glyburide) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2004 Report Share Posted August 20, 2004 I personally have not been, but know folks who are and who have really had it work for them. Their one comment is that programs with prepared meals tend to be high-carb. On the pinching pennies thing, tho... at least if it's prescribed it's tax deductible these days. SulaBlue > anyone here on, or have been on a formal plan like weight watchers? does it help? ive got > to pinch my pennies for the rest of the year and i want this program or any like it to be > worth my money and time. any advice? > > bee. > (t2 since 2001, actos/glyburide) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2004 Report Share Posted August 20, 2004 anyone here on, or have been on a formal plan like weight watchers? does it help? Bee, Yes, Weight Watchers works... you weigh in (in private) at the beginning of each meeting, and you talk about ways to lose weight, problems, challenges, etc. I lost over 30 lbs. on it years ago, and so I'm a lifetime member. That said, I've been low carbing to control my blood sugar, so last time I went to WW I found it difficult to do both low carb and WW. My sister lost 75 lbs. on WW and has kept it off for 2 years. ive got to pinch my pennies for the rest of the year and i want this program or any like it to be worth my money and time. any advice? You can pay at each meeting, but if you decide you like it, you can buy books of tickets at a savings. I think Weight Watchers is a great program. Here is their website, where you can get an idea of what they do and find a meeting near you. http://www.weightwatchers.com/index.aspx Sandy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2004 Report Share Posted August 21, 2004 bee wrote: >anyone here on, or have been on a formal plan like weight watchers? does >it help? ive got >to pinch my pennies I have had my greatest weight loss success with the WW plan (based on " points " ) but I don't respond well to the " meetings " part so I just used their materials and plan. When I first started, I bought the latest WW materials on Ebay, read the stuff and started. After a couple weeks, I decided maybe I should try " the real thing " and paid my money to participate locally via their WW meetings . . . I hated it and did not feel as if it helped me at all, actually hindered me. But then, I am most successful when I do things " on my own " and sitting in a " meeting " listening to others' situations (that didn't apply to me) or getting answers to questions that I already knew just didn't do a thing for me. (For instance, I remember sitting through an hour long meeting on the sole topic of how to read labels on popcorn to determine which popcorn you could eat the most of for the least " points. " Since I had no trouble reading/understanding such labels, and made my own decisions re: popcorn, I felt it was a waste for me.) So, I continued, quite successfully with the WW " points plan " (choosing my " points " for lower carb and a tad more fat to feel full) but quickly stopped paying their dues/fees to attend a group as I found it counterproductive for me so the $ spent there was, for me, as waste. For some folks, it really helps to do things in such a " group " but I didn't find it helpful. The WW " plan, " however, I found most satisfactory. My husband and I both did it successfully, just independently at home. Good luck! A different Sandy T1 - 1979 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 > WWWWWWHHHHHYYYYYY!? Since your physician appears to be convinced that you have no medical reason for not losing weight, Bee, then there is really only one possible explanation: You are taking on more energy than you NEED. The real question then is why you are doing that and the answer lies in the psychological area to a great extent in the sense that why you start to eat, what you decide to eat and what not and when you decide to stop eating are all controlled by your mind in one way or another. I understand that Weight Watchers address some of the reasons but not others. If you have the problems they address then they could help you, if you have other problems then they probably won't but nobody is going to be able to tell you that in advance. My guess is that the only way would be to risk a few dollars and see if their procedure suits your problem. Losing weight itself does not cost a cent, you just consume more low-energy foods and less high-energy foods but overcoming psychological reasons for not doing that can cost real money. > ive got to pinch my pennies for > the rest of the year and i want > this program or any like it to be > worth my money and time. any advice? Bee, it seems to me that everything hinges on the words " got " and " want " . Assuming that you are not living completely alone then if you spend money on Weight Watchers, you will be taking it away from somebody else, like your family. I would have trouble not seeing Weight Watchers as something of a luxury and I bet that they will too. There is no way you can eliminate the risk that WW won't do you any good and the money will have been thrown out the window - unless they give you a cast-iron money-back guarantee, which I doubt somehow. The other word you use is " want " , and if you really mean it, and by that I mean if you are prepared to reconsider all your eating habits and cut out some of the high-energy foods regardless of whether you miss them or not, then you are going to be able to do it without Weight Watchers or any other mental crutch of that kind. My guess is that you are one of the vast majority of us and, although you think you " want " to lose weight more than anything else in the world, if you made a list of the things that are most important to you, weight loss would not be at the very top of the list. I believe that if you are going to be able to lose weight in a healthy way and keep it off for ever then that has to be at the top of the list of your priorities otherwise it just ain't gonna fly! I recently read a posting on another list by a young, hopelessly overweight, girl who claimed that she would even be prepared to lose an arm if she could only lose some weight, it was the most important thing in her life by far, and asked for advice on how to do it, adding however that she wan't prepared to give up chocolate-coated candy or count calories. It is really all a matter of your priorities! Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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