minerva wrote:minerva wrote:Oh, my dear --
You pose a question that has dogged the best minds of our species for the better part of this century.
I will tell you that, when I finally gave up dieting for good, my weight stabilized, and I began to eat better. The cost? I had to accept my existing weight. I'm not obese, but I'm not at what the insurance charts say I'm 'supposed' to weigh either. I have had to be satisfied with that.
The only thing that diets do is make you fatter. Give them up is my advice, and learn to accept your weight where it is now. Start learning how to eat from body hunger and not according to any sort of external plan, or in response to emotional issues. That's what has worked for me.
I wish you luck, let us know how it goes.
Minerva
I totally, totally disagree with the first part of what you said, in terms of accepting my existing weight.
When I left graduate school, I was 25 and weighed 220 lbs. I had about 8-10% body fat, could run 30-45 minutes at under 8 minutes a mile comfortably, and could bench press 250 lbs and squat close to 400. And I was closing in on a six pack, which given my body type is excellent.
WOrking in the real life has precluded me from exercising to that extent, for sure. But I have also fallen into eating unhealthy foods, and not exercising on anything approaching a regular basis, no matter how light or hard.
I now weigh 270 lbs. I have weighed this since 2003 so my weight has stabilized given my food choices and lack of exercise. I gained 12.5 pounds per year over 4 years. Given that 1 pound is 3,500 calories, this hardly counts as rapid weight gain.
According to what you have said, I should accept my existing weight since it is stable? I dont' think so. I can tell that my body is not functioning the way that it should be. I do not have anything close to a good "wind". My joints suffer from carrying too much weight. There is no way that this weight is acceptable.
I have come to learn that part of the cause of this lifestyle has been my Apnea. Not all of it, and probably not even a majority of it, but when you want to exercise and have no energy, that does't help.
I don't agree that all diets do is make you fatter, but I would agree in principle in saying that they are not a solution that will cause result in a healthy weight for the long run. For me, the CPAP therapy is the first step back toward a much healthier lifestyle. This lifestyle MUST include exercise and a better "diet", meaning better food choices.
Also, to address your point regarding the insurance charts: I'm 6'2" and at 220 lbs, the charts would have me tending toward the obese side of life. As I noted above, my body fat was 10% or below, and I was pretty well "ripped". My grandmother even said I was too skinny and that I had too many muscles.
Now at 270, you'd look at me and say...yeah, he's got a little paunch, but he's certainly not fat. I carry it well. Point being, I have always been much heavier than the "charts" , but that's because of my build and body type. I haven't weighted under 200 lbs since 7th or 8th grade.
The moral being that yes, there is an ideal out there that few of us can, or even should really, reach. But just because my weight is stable given my current lifestyle doesn't mean that it's healthy for me to be this weight.