Guest guest Posted October 7, 2003 Report Share Posted October 7, 2003 Welcome to the site & Congraduation on your Date.Your hubby will be excited about it after the pounds start dropping off My hubby was like your sightly apprehensive.But I'm down 59 lbs and he always noticing the weight coming off.I wish and pray your approval is soon.I thank God Everyday for my New wonderful life.Take care and let us know how things are going.a friend debkroll of Iowa.Down 59 lbs in 1 month 18 days out. > I just wanted to take a second to introduce myself. My name is > I'm 38 years old and I live in Wisconsin. I am scheduled for > RNY on November 12. I am in the process of waiting for insurance to > approve (crossing my fingers). I am very excited and nervous about > this, but I've decided it is the best thing for me right now. > > My husband is slightly apprehensive about it, but he says I have to > do what is best for me, and I feel this is the best thing for me. > > This site has been extremely helpful and full of information. > > Thanks > > Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 8, 2003 Report Share Posted October 8, 2003 nice to have you onboard, chris. best of luck w/ your approval. can you take your hubb to an in-person support group? lori h. > I just wanted to take a second to introduce myself. My name is > I'm 38 years old and I live in Wisconsin. I am scheduled for > RNY on November 12. I am in the process of waiting for insurance to > approve (crossing my fingers). I am very excited and nervous about > this, but I've decided it is the best thing for me right now. > > My husband is slightly apprehensive about it, but he says I have to > do what is best for me, and I feel this is the best thing for me. > > This site has been extremely helpful and full of information. > > Thanks > > Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 8, 2003 Report Share Posted October 8, 2003 hi and welcome Jill H> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2009 Report Share Posted December 26, 2009 Barbara, I suspect that you are a high energy person? (me too!) One would think that would be enough to keep 'extra' body concerns at bay, but it just doesn't seem to work that way for me at least. Welcome to the group and lurking is fine but I do hope that you will share what you find is most important for you. Not only does it help to celebrate your victories, it can inspire others too. Much as I am not shy about posting, I am not a journal type person so my hat is off to you for doing what helps you best. The one thing I have learned, 'new' to me, from IE and this group is that its ok not to push or force myself into DOing IE. Slow and gentle seems to help more than an 'accelerated' intensive course of learning. For me that was too much EXternal and I really needed to re-learn what was my own INternal reality and needs. And IE is all about NO rules, just suggested practices to help guide you as you find the need and 'place' to work on these. Happy to have you join us Katcha IEing since March 2007 > > Good Day! > I'm posting here with some trepidation... I'm new to intuitive eating, although I'm not new to Yahoo! Groups. Right at the get-go, I cannot seem to mask my old Yahoo! ID, which is based on my ex-husband's last name. I'm pretty good with online id management, having spent a couple of years helping parents in our schools with online safety, but Yahoo! has me in a swivet! Not enough of a swivet to send me to the frig, tho'! > My name is Barbara; I'll be 56 in a week; I've a classic yo-yo dieter until I read " Intuitive Eating " (Resch, Tribole) this past month. Yesterday, I recruited my nutritionist to read it and help me implement the principles in my life. I'm giving him the same three months to read it that I'm giving myself to journal through all 10 principles and make them part of my life. I'm pretty far along in implementing; a little less far along on the journal. My " fiendish plot " is that I have put the principles in an email, and since I have access to my email everywhere I go, I can drop and journal most any time what's on my mind on that particular principle. I've gotten a lot of benefit out of this method in other endeavors, and I like to write (can you tell? > When I was a kid, I looked roughly like a stick insect. I have photographic proof! In my teens, I was tall, and I now realize, quite shapely, but my mother's battle with her overweight spilled into my world, and I became convinced I was fat and ugly (boy, did I resonate to that title on a recent post here!). I also got a job in the bakery at college and put on the " freshman 25#. " My first " visit " to Weight Watchers was senior year, and I was a howling success - " You look like you've been sick! " was a most memorable " compliment. " > Off to work in the Big Apple, and put it all back on sitting next to the coffee wagon. That was almost 35 years ago. I've married, had two beautiful boys, divorced, remarried, had a hip replaced, revised, and dislocated thrice, stayed at the same employer all that time, commuted longer and longer distances as I've moved further and further from the City - 2 hrs each way now, 4 days a week. And to top it all off, my lovely new husband is a disturbed sleeper, which means I've added sleep deprivation to my " collection. " > I've been to WW now, I think it's 5 times, and the last time achieved lifetime membership, a hollow honor now. I've done Suzanne Sommers, Weigh-in (the origins of WW), Atkins, and a few original creations. Nothing works. Love what my husband said the other day: " WW worked! You reached your goal! " Right! But I didn't stay there! > When I read IE, I had that " what are they doing in my head? " reaction that tells me I've found the right book. In a moment of ironic blessing, I chose Thanksgiving as my starting point, and am working on the first through fourth principles as my " phase 1. " The hardest thing is not getting on the scale. So I did. And I regretted it. And my weight has gone up and down over the month since I began my return to intuitive eating, where we all started as babies. The one day I hopped on the scale and saw the highest number I've ever seen, it did ruin my day. So I soothed myself all day with the kindest words I could muster, and went back to the principles. > One " home field advantage " I think I have in this new phase of my " life with IE " is that I am a Focuser, which is a method, if you don't know it, for accessing my inner life and connecting it to my outer life. It's based on relating to body sensations in a new way, and forming something called a felt sense in the body, which is how the body is dealing with " something. " In terms of IE, it's a fabulous way to assess hunger, and I've learned a great deal in a short time by combining Focusing with assessing hunger, noticing emotional reasons to eat, and relating to my insides with compassion and support, instead of judgment and condemnation. > I hope something here feel familiar, makes a connection, let's you know a little about me. My one fear is that I'll be more of a lurker on this list than an active voice - life gets in the way, you know! But I'll give it my best shot, and use that sense of where is right for me to respond that comes from Focusing. > Right now, where I live on the East Coast, it's storming outside - blustery, rainy, trees swaying, like the nor'easter kept it's promise and came back around, wet and wild. Yet, I feel content to embrace the day and do the things I've planned as kindly toward myself and others as I can muster. Wishing you kindness in your day, and perhaps just a bit of bluster! > Barbara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2009 Report Share Posted December 26, 2009 WELCOME, Barbara! I'm glad you like to write so that I'm not the only one here writing long posts. LOL I also gained the 'freshman 25' (although at that time the average was a freshman '10'). I later bought the original WW diet book, although I never attended a WW meeting, because I had lost my 25# and didn't look like I needed to diet. However, that weight loss was followed by years of restriction and/or bingeing. I think you can certainly use your 'focuser' characteristic to your advantage to master IE, because IE teaches us to obey our body sensations of hunger and fullness, as well as observing which foods feel best in our bodies. I never experienced the IE 'legalizing food' weight gain, which commonly occurs for newbees, probably because I focussed on eating only when hungry and stopping when I felt full. However, that focus also meant I didn't completely legalize foods for many years. So I hung onto my bingeing habit with average once a month binges, until a year ago, despite wholeheartedly embracing other IE principles. Your progress with " combining Focusing with assessing hunger, noticing emotional reasons to eat, and relating to my insides with compassion and support, instead of judgment and condemnation " sounds FANTASTIC to me. I'm impressed that you found a way to personalize the IE principles so that they feel like your own 'ideas', rather than following suggestions from a book. Good for you! Keep focussing on what's working for you and other aspects of IE will fall into place. SUE > > Good Day! > I'm posting here with some trepidation... I'm new to intuitive eating, although I'm not new to Yahoo! Groups. Right at the get-go, I cannot seem to mask my old Yahoo! ID, which is based on my ex-husband's last name. I'm pretty good with online id management, having spent a couple of years helping parents in our schools with online safety, but Yahoo! has me in a swivet! Not enough of a swivet to send me to the frig, tho'! > My name is Barbara; I'll be 56 in a week; I've a classic yo-yo dieter until I read " Intuitive Eating " (Resch, Tribole) this past month. Yesterday, I recruited my nutritionist to read it and help me implement the principles in my life. I'm giving him the same three months to read it that I'm giving myself to journal through all 10 principles and make them part of my life. I'm pretty far along in implementing; a little less far along on the journal. My " fiendish plot " is that I have put the principles in an email, and since I have access to my email everywhere I go, I can drop and journal most any time what's on my mind on that particular principle. I've gotten a lot of benefit out of this method in other endeavors, and I like to write (can you tell? > When I was a kid, I looked roughly like a stick insect. I have photographic proof! In my teens, I was tall, and I now realize, quite shapely, but my mother's battle with her overweight spilled into my world, and I became convinced I was fat and ugly (boy, did I resonate to that title on a recent post here!). I also got a job in the bakery at college and put on the " freshman 25#. " My first " visit " to Weight Watchers was senior year, and I was a howling success - " You look like you've been sick! " was a most memorable " compliment. " > Off to work in the Big Apple, and put it all back on sitting next to the coffee wagon. That was almost 35 years ago. I've married, had two beautiful boys, divorced, remarried, had a hip replaced, revised, and dislocated thrice, stayed at the same employer all that time, commuted longer and longer distances as I've moved further and further from the City - 2 hrs each way now, 4 days a week. And to top it all off, my lovely new husband is a disturbed sleeper, which means I've added sleep deprivation to my " collection. " > I've been to WW now, I think it's 5 times, and the last time achieved lifetime membership, a hollow honor now. I've done Suzanne Sommers, Weigh-in (the origins of WW), Atkins, and a few original creations. Nothing works. Love what my husband said the other day: " WW worked! You reached your goal! " Right! But I didn't stay there! > When I read IE, I had that " what are they doing in my head? " reaction that tells me I've found the right book. In a moment of ironic blessing, I chose Thanksgiving as my starting point, and am working on the first through fourth principles as my " phase 1. " The hardest thing is not getting on the scale. So I did. And I regretted it. And my weight has gone up and down over the month since I began my return to intuitive eating, where we all started as babies. The one day I hopped on the scale and saw the highest number I've ever seen, it did ruin my day. So I soothed myself all day with the kindest words I could muster, and went back to the principles. > One " home field advantage " I think I have in this new phase of my " life with IE " is that I am a Focuser, which is a method, if you don't know it, for accessing my inner life and connecting it to my outer life. It's based on relating to body sensations in a new way, and forming something called a felt sense in the body, which is how the body is dealing with " something. " In terms of IE, it's a fabulous way to assess hunger, and I've learned a great deal in a short time by combining Focusing with assessing hunger, noticing emotional reasons to eat, and relating to my insides with compassion and support, instead of judgment and condemnation. > I hope something here feel familiar, makes a connection, let's you know a little about me. My one fear is that I'll be more of a lurker on this list than an active voice - life gets in the way, you know! But I'll give it my best shot, and use that sense of where is right for me to respond that comes from Focusing. > Right now, where I live on the East Coast, it's storming outside - blustery, rainy, trees swaying, like the nor'easter kept it's promise and came back around, wet and wild. Yet, I feel content to embrace the day and do the things I've planned as kindly toward myself and others as I can muster. Wishing you kindness in your day, and perhaps just a bit of bluster! > Barbara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2009 Report Share Posted December 26, 2009 Hi, I am so curious about the "Focusing" which you mentioned. I think it sounds like something very important if it gets you in touch with your innner life. I was wondering if you can elaborate on what it is? Oh and of course I want to say welcome to the IE board; glad you posted here. Wow, that's awesome that you started IE on Thanksgiving!! I'm glad that it resonated with you when you read the book. I'd been in weight watchers a few times, but that was a long time ago. I love IE and would not return to dieting again. So good luck, glad you are here. Laurie To: IntuitiveEating_Support Sent: Sat, December 26, 2009 9:34:18 AMSubject: New to the Group Good Day! I'm posting here with some trepidation. .. I'm new to intuitive eating, although I'm not new to Yahoo! Groups. Right at the get-go, I cannot seem to mask my old Yahoo! ID, which is based on my ex-husband's last name. I'm pretty good with online id management, having spent a couple of years helping parents in our schools with online safety, but Yahoo! has me in a swivet! Not enough of a swivet to send me to the frig, tho'! :)My name is Barbara; I'll be 56 in a week; I've a classic yo-yo dieter until I read "Intuitive Eating" (Resch, Tribole) this past month. Yesterday, I recruited my nutritionist to read it and help me implement the principles in my life. I'm giving him the same three months to read it that I'm giving myself to journal through all 10 principles and make them part of my life. I'm pretty far along in implementing; a little less far along on the journal. My "fiendish plot" is that I have put the principles in an email, and since I have access to my email everywhere I go, I can drop and journal most any time what's on my mind on that particular principle. I've gotten a lot of benefit out of this method in other endeavors, and I like to write (can you tell? :)When I was a kid, I looked roughly like a stick insect. I have photographic proof! In my teens, I was tall, and I now realize, quite shapely, but my mother's battle with her overweight spilled into my world, and I became convinced I was fat and ugly (boy, did I resonate to that title on a recent post here!). I also got a job in the bakery at college and put on the "freshman 25#." My first "visit" to Weight Watchers was senior year, and I was a howling success - "You look like you've been sick!" was a most memorable "compliment. " Off to work in the Big Apple, and put it all back on sitting next to the coffee wagon. That was almost 35 years ago. I've married, had two beautiful boys, divorced, remarried, had a hip replaced, revised, and dislocated thrice, stayed at the same employer all that time, commuted longer and longer distances as I've moved further and further from the City - 2 hrs each way now, 4 days a week. And to top it all off, my lovely new husband is a disturbed sleeper, which means I've added sleep deprivation to my "collection. "I've been to WW now, I think it's 5 times, and the last time achieved lifetime membership, a hollow honor now. I've done Suzanne Sommers, Weigh-in (the origins of WW), Atkins, and a few original creations. Nothing works. Love what my husband said the other day: "WW worked! You reached your goal!" Right! But I didn't stay there!When I read IE, I had that "what are they doing in my head?" reaction that tells me I've found the right book. In a moment of ironic blessing, I chose Thanksgiving as my starting point, and am working on the first through fourth principles as my "phase 1." The hardest thing is not getting on the scale. So I did. And I regretted it. And my weight has gone up and down over the month since I began my return to intuitive eating, where we all started as babies. The one day I hopped on the scale and saw the highest number I've ever seen, it did ruin my day. So I soothed myself all day with the kindest words I could muster, and went back to the principles.One "home field advantage" I think I have in this new phase of my "life with IE" is that I am a Focuser, which is a method, if you don't know it, for accessing my inner life and connecting it to my outer life. It's based on relating to body sensations in a new way, and forming something called a felt sense in the body, which is how the body is dealing with "something." In terms of IE, it's a fabulous way to assess hunger, and I've learned a great deal in a short time by combining Focusing with assessing hunger, noticing emotional reasons to eat, and relating to my insides with compassion and support, instead of judgment and condemnation.I hope something here feel familiar, makes a connection, let's you know a little about me. My one fear is that I'll be more of a lurker on this list than an active voice - life gets in the way, you know! But I'll give it my best shot, and use that sense of where is right for me to respond that comes from Focusing. Right now, where I live on the East Coast, it's storming outside - blustery, rainy, trees swaying, like the nor'easter kept it's promise and came back around, wet and wild. Yet, I feel content to embrace the day and do the things I've planned as kindly toward myself and others as I can muster. Wishing you kindness in your day, and perhaps just a bit of bluster!Barbara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2009 Report Share Posted December 27, 2009 Thank you Laurie! I am delighted to elaborate on Focusing! Three years ago, at the end of a relationship with a therapist, he quickly mentioned " something I might like, " and directed me to http://focusing.org. I found a teacher in NJ where I live, and I have never looked back! Focusing is a method developed by Dr. Eugene Gendlin, a philosopher, therapist, and national treasure, which connects body and mind in a manner that is both ancient and revolutionary. Many Focusers I know, including me, try (hard) to put into a few words what Focusing is. I never seem to get the whole sense of it! On the site, it says, " Focusing is direct access to bodily knowing. " For me, the essence of Focusing is what my body knows that my brain wouldn't otherwise benefit from without Focusing. There are so many instances in life where we just " know " what's the right thing - for us, to do, for a child of ours. Where does that knowing come from? Some say " spirit. " I agree! Some say " God. " I agree. Some say " inside. " I agree! To me, they are all one - a " something " so hard to define, I give up! Yet it is there, and it holds information for my life that I cannot always get by thinking. Focusing is enormously helpful in the realm of difficult emotions - it is THE solution to managing my emotions without using food. The most important revelation to me is the change in my thinking about my feelings. I used to say, " I am angry! " and the anger became who I am. Now I say, " Something in me is angry! " and I get in touch with part of me that is connected to the feeling of angry that needs to be heard. Focusing provides the means for everything in me to be heard in that meaningful way everyone knows who has ever known a 5-year-old. These young people are magnificent in their persistence until they are heard. Ever had a conversation with one who hasn't heard the answer s/he needs to hear? Something in me that is angry, scared, anxious, etc. is just like that. Focusing allows me to " hear " what's going on inside and provide gentle attention until resolution - living forward - occurs. Similarly, in the realm of intuitive eating, many of us have lost the connection to our real hunger and satiety. The process of pausing, checking, assessing, and deciding - Am I hungry? Am I full? Am I just right full or too full? - is accessing bodily wisdom. You see? Like right now - stomach gurgling, tightness in my gut - am I in need of fuel? Or am I anxious about the trip I'm about to take? Not sure! I can pause for just 5 minutes - check the time since I last ate, sense all that my body has to " say, " and make a mindful decision about what to do next - about food and everything else. That's all I have time for now, but I hope it helps explain what Focusing is, and I am always happy to write on this topic, especially as it relates to Intuitive Eating! Cheers! Barbara > > Hi, > I am so curious about the " Focusing " which you mentioned. I think it sounds like something very important if it gets you in touch with your innner life. I was wondering if you can elaborate on what it is? > > Oh and of course I want to say welcome to the IE board; glad you posted here. Wow, that's awesome that you started IE on Thanksgiving!! I'm glad that it resonated with you when you read the book. I'd been in weight watchers a few times, but that was a long time ago. I love IE and would not return to dieting again. > > So good luck, glad you are here. > > Laurie > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: IntuitiveEating_Support > Sent: Sat, December 26, 2009 9:34:18 AM > Subject: New to the Group > >  > Good Day! > I'm posting here with some trepidation. .. I'm new to intuitive eating, although I'm not new to Yahoo! Groups. Right at the get-go, I cannot seem to mask my old Yahoo! ID, which is based on my ex-husband's last name. I'm pretty good with online id management, having spent a couple of years helping parents in our schools with online safety, but Yahoo! has me in a swivet! Not enough of a swivet to send me to the frig, tho'! > My name is Barbara; I'll be 56 in a week; I've a classic yo-yo dieter until I read " Intuitive Eating " (Resch, Tribole) this past month. Yesterday, I recruited my nutritionist to read it and help me implement the principles in my life. I'm giving him the same three months to read it that I'm giving myself to journal through all 10 principles and make them part of my life. I'm pretty far along in implementing; a little less far along on the journal. My " fiendish plot " is that I have put the principles in an email, and since I have access to my email everywhere I go, I can drop and journal most any time what's on my mind on that particular principle. I've gotten a lot of benefit out of this method in other endeavors, and I like to write (can you tell? > When I was a kid, I looked roughly like a stick insect. I have photographic proof! In my teens, I was tall, and I now realize, quite shapely, but my mother's battle with her overweight spilled into my world, and I became convinced I was fat and ugly (boy, did I resonate to that title on a recent post here!). I also got a job in the bakery at college and put on the " freshman 25#. " My first " visit " to Weight Watchers was senior year, and I was a howling success - " You look like you've been sick! " was a most memorable " compliment. " > Off to work in the Big Apple, and put it all back on sitting next to the coffee wagon. That was almost 35 years ago. I've married, had two beautiful boys, divorced, remarried, had a hip replaced, revised, and dislocated thrice, stayed at the same employer all that time, commuted longer and longer distances as I've moved further and further from the City - 2 hrs each way now, 4 days a week. And to top it all off, my lovely new husband is a disturbed sleeper, which means I've added sleep deprivation to my " collection. " > I've been to WW now, I think it's 5 times, and the last time achieved lifetime membership, a hollow honor now. I've done Suzanne Sommers, Weigh-in (the origins of WW), Atkins, and a few original creations. Nothing works. Love what my husband said the other day: " WW worked! You reached your goal! " Right! But I didn't stay there! > When I read IE, I had that " what are they doing in my head? " reaction that tells me I've found the right book. In a moment of ironic blessing, I chose Thanksgiving as my starting point, and am working on the first through fourth principles as my " phase 1. " The hardest thing is not getting on the scale. So I did. And I regretted it. And my weight has gone up and down over the month since I began my return to intuitive eating, where we all started as babies. The one day I hopped on the scale and saw the highest number I've ever seen, it did ruin my day. So I soothed myself all day with the kindest words I could muster, and went back to the principles. > One " home field advantage " I think I have in this new phase of my " life with IE " is that I am a Focuser, which is a method, if you don't know it, for accessing my inner life and connecting it to my outer life. It's based on relating to body sensations in a new way, and forming something called a felt sense in the body, which is how the body is dealing with " something. " In terms of IE, it's a fabulous way to assess hunger, and I've learned a great deal in a short time by combining Focusing with assessing hunger, noticing emotional reasons to eat, and relating to my insides with compassion and support, instead of judgment and condemnation. > I hope something here feel familiar, makes a connection, let's you know a little about me. My one fear is that I'll be more of a lurker on this list than an active voice - life gets in the way, you know! But I'll give it my best shot, and use that sense of where is right for me to respond that comes from Focusing. > Right now, where I live on the East Coast, it's storming outside - blustery, rainy, trees swaying, like the nor'easter kept it's promise and came back around, wet and wild. Yet, I feel content to embrace the day and do the things I've planned as kindly toward myself and others as I can muster. Wishing you kindness in your day, and perhaps just a bit of bluster! > Barbara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 27, 2009 Report Share Posted December 27, 2009 Hi Barbara, Wow, thanks for explaining Focusing! It sounds like something really great for people who tend to eat over emotions; I think I'm going to look at that website and I feel quite sure that I will learn some of these Focusing principles/ideas because it sounds just like what I need to compliment what I'm already doing. I also live in NJ, which is great because if he offers any workshops in NJ, I'd be able to attend. thanks for the great info! Laurie To: IntuitiveEating_Support Sent: Sun, December 27, 2009 10:19:06 AMSubject: Re: New to the Group Thank you Laurie!I am delighted to elaborate on Focusing!Three years ago, at the end of a relationship with a therapist, he quickly mentioned "something I might like," and directed me to http://focusing. org. I found a teacher in NJ where I live, and I have never looked back! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2009 Report Share Posted December 30, 2009 Hello all, My name is , I'm 32 and have a soon to be 6 year old daughter and live with my boyfriend of 7 years. I gained almost 80 pounds while pregnant and did lose most of it with exercise and well, I guess diet lol, but then soon put it back on. I've been yo-yo-ing for about 3 years now. This last year has been so bad for me. I've started at least 4 different plans, ranging from low carb to eating all raw foods for a month. I'm down overall 15 pounds this year but it was at one point 15 more pounds than that. I have realized that I just don't want to do it anymore. I don't want to diet. I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing and I am finally facing up to the fact that I have to just make my peace with food and drink. I want to just live life, without constantly being obsessed with food and what I should or should not eat. I have only made this revelation a couple of days ago but I'm really looking forward to this journey of finding my way to living an intuitive life. I have ordered the book Intuitive Eating but don't have it yet, I've been reading on another diet forum about the idea though. I just can't bring myself to go to a diet forum anymore!! So I'm looking forward to the support I hope I'll find here Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2009 Report Share Posted December 31, 2009 Welcome Good to read that you have ordered the IE book as that will help you understand lots soon too. Meanwhile, I am sure that you will get a pretty good idea about what we all are doing along these lines. For sure I bet you find that a lot of what you read here 'clicks' with you too. Do share your reactions, questions and comments when you are able and inclined to do so. Glad to have you join us here - Katcha IEing since March 2007 > > Hello all, > > My name is , I'm 32 and have a soon to be 6 year old daughter and live with my boyfriend of 7 years. I gained almost 80 pounds while pregnant and did lose most of it with exercise and well, I guess diet lol, but then soon put it back on. I've been yo-yo-ing for about 3 years now. This last year has been so bad for me. I've started at least 4 different plans, ranging from low carb to eating all raw foods for a month. I'm down overall 15 pounds this year but it was at one point 15 more pounds than that. > > I have realized that I just don't want to do it anymore. I don't want to diet. I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing and I am finally facing up to the fact that I have to just make my peace with food and drink. I want to just live life, without constantly being obsessed with food and what I should or should not eat. I have only made this revelation a couple of days ago but I'm really looking forward to this journey of finding my way to living an intuitive life. > > I have ordered the book Intuitive Eating but don't have it yet, I've been reading on another diet forum about the idea though. I just can't bring myself to go to a diet forum anymore!! So I'm looking forward to the support I hope I'll find here > > Thanks! > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2009 Report Share Posted December 31, 2009 Hi and welcome! I am pretty new to the group myself. I really like what you say about just wanting to "live life" I totally agree! It's really not all about food. Tonight after my husband gets back from work we are having a salsa party - several different kinds of salsas, mostly new ones we haven't tried, with a couple old stand-bys thrown in for good measure. I like it when we have parties like this because I feel free to enjoy tasting different things but don't feel the need to gorge myself like I sometimes would if it were heavier cream/mayo/cheese based dips. We thought it was a good compromise and should be fun. Happy New Year all. - GeorgiaI have realized that I just don't want to do it anymore. I don't want to diet. I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing and I am finally facing up to the fact that I have to just make my peace with food and drink. I want to just live life, without constantly being obsessed with food and what I should or should not eat. I have only made this revelation a couple of days ago but I'm really looking forward to this journey of finding my way to living an intuitive life. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2010 Report Share Posted January 2, 2010 Hey Georgia, A salsa party sounds really fun - my husband is a huge fan and we are already planning our party =) thanks for the idea =) ~ > > Hi and welcome! I am pretty new to the group myself. I really like what you say about just wanting to " live life " I totally agree! It's really not all about food. Tonight after my husband gets back from work we are having a salsa party - several different kinds of salsas, mostly new ones we haven't tried, with a couple old stand-bys thrown in for good measure. I like it when we have parties like this because I feel free to enjoy tasting different things but don't feel the need to gorge myself like I sometimes would if it were heavier cream/mayo/cheese based dips. We thought it was a good compromise and should be fun. > > Happy New Year all. > - Georgia > > > > > ________________________________ > > I have realized that I just don't want to do it anymore. I don't want to diet. I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing and I am finally facing up to the fact that I have to just make my peace with food and drink. I want to just live life, without constantly being obsessed with food and what I should or should not eat. I have only made this revelation a couple of days ago but I'm really looking forward to this journey of finding my way to living an intuitive life. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2010 Report Share Posted January 3, 2010 "I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing ......" YOU didn't fail; it was the diet! Happy New Year and all the best, Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2010 Report Share Posted January 3, 2010 I've been slolwy learning that. It's hard to look at the people around me who lose weight with the old " diet and exercise " routine and don't seem to have problems. I wonder why they have the " self-discipline " to do it that way and i don't. I just have to remind myself that this is what is right for me and also that i couldn't bear to be in my 50's and reading the calories off the side of a box - too much else to be doing with life! =) ~ > > " I have been making myself crazy with dieting and failing ...... " Â YOU didn't fail; it was the diet! > Â > Happy New Year and all the best, > Jeanne > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2010 Report Share Posted January 3, 2010 I have been reading another perspective on what its possible that dieting may be doing to one's body. If you are not in the PEAK of health, what could be more healthy to do - decrease nutrition and exercise like crazy or eat what you feel is best for you(r body) and give it some rest/gentle movement?!? I have been looking at 'thin' people in a whole new way - asking myself are they really as healthy as their looks would have us all believing? I do hope so, but I also would not want to risk my own health by doing what is likely to be depleting rather than increasing its health. 'Self discipline' and will power both hook into 'you are flawed' type thinking for me. Don't see how I can be loving and positive if I start from that point either. Take care. Katcha IEing since March 2007 > > I've been slolwy learning that. It's hard to look at the people around me who lose weight with the old " diet and exercise " routine and don't seem to have problems. I wonder why they have the " self-discipline " to do it that way and i don't. I just have to remind myself that this is what is right for me and also that i couldn't bear to be in my 50's and reading the calories off the side of a box - too much else to be doing with life! =) > > ~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2010 Report Share Posted January 3, 2010 Hi Katcha: GOOD POINT! Lots of people want to BELIEVE that 'thin people' can eat anything they want and not gain weight. However, I know many 'thin people' (myself included) who have celiac disease, food allergies and/or intestinal infections which limit what and how much they can eat. I'm very sensitive to 'full', because I feel PAINFUL discomfort when I overeat. I also reflux more easily when I overeat. Many celiacs, who complain about not being able to gain weight, really don't eat that much because they fear painful reaction symptoms when they eat. I'm not saying that people should not lose excess weight. I'm not saying that we shouldn't honor our body cues about when to eat (when hungry), how much to eat (until comfortably full) and what to eat (foods that feel good in our bodies). I'm not saying that people shouldn't move their bodies in pleasurable ways (rather than 'exercise') like dancing or walking or yoga. I'm just saying certain conditions (OTHER THAN EATING DISORDERS) explain why some people are 'thin'. SUE > > I have been looking at 'thin' people in a whole new way - asking myself are they really as healthy as their looks would have us all believing? I do hope so, but I also would not want to risk my own health by doing what is likely to be depleting rather than increasing its health. > Take care. Katcha > IEing since March 2007 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2010 Report Share Posted January 4, 2010 , good for you on learning the lesson while you're young!! Dieting may work for some people but not me. I am 59 and have starved myself (to the point of illness), taken diet pills, and dieted (restricted) over the years, chasing that elusive carrot of slimness. I thought if I were slim, my life would be perfect! The longest I was ever able to keep the lost weight off was about a year and then I would start bingeing and hating myself for "falling off the wagon." I made one more attempt at dieting in 2007 (guess I also may have needed a little more structure in my life too because I retired in 2006). But history once again repeated itself. I lost weight but maintenance only lasted about a year. Then I came across an old copy of Tribole and Resch's "Intuitive Eating." Guess I'd saved it all these years because I knew some day I'd better ready! I finally realized that my body wasn't the problem, it was my brain!! Didn't mean to go on so, but I hope this helps someone stop the madness! Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.