It has been more than a month since my last update on my weight loss journey. I am still using the Lose It app and website, so that is where my updates occur more frequently.
Since mid-June:
I lost 22.8 pounds.
BMI went down 2.9 points which means I went down a class of obesity.
In my last post about this (see last update, above) I spoke about the stages of obesity. Sadly, the previous link I had used to show this is no longer working. Even sadder? The CDC website has no information about the stages of obesity. I am glad that I have been demoted, so to speak, to a lower stage. I still have a long way to go. My weight loss in September has been slower than I would have liked. Considering I have gained in September, historically speaking, I am grateful for the losses I have seen. I lost 3.4 pounds this month. I could have gained; I could have stayed the same. I lost! Even with a plantar fasciitis/heel spur flare-up. (ouch) Oh, and I have had some very serious life events happening that also would have sent me to the bakery/fridge/you-name-it in the past.
I am changing my eating patterns. I am changing how I view food. I am changing my emotional response patterns. I am showing myself respect and love by doing so. See? It all ties together!
Showing posts with label obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obesity. Show all posts
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Friday, August 17, 2012
More on weight loss...
Yesterday I wrote a blog post on weight loss. Later that afternoon I happened to catch 15 minutes of Dr. Oz. It was the episode about kicking your carb addiction. He had on the stage three women who had all struggled with weight loss and carb addiction. He showed them the fat that surrounds our organs and what a healthy and and an unhealthy pancreas looks like. Dr. Oz then told them about a 28 day plan to kick the carb habit. Seeing the organs and actual fat motivated me that much more to continue losing this weight. It also helped me appreciate what I have done so far.
On another part of the weight loss spectrum I saw an article (of sorts) on iVillage entitled Why I Quit Dieting! I say another part of the spectrum and not the opposite end because these women were not against losing weight, just against dieting. I totally get that. I need to make life changes, not quick fixes.
Reading about the journeys of the featured women led me to the website Health At Every Size. I do agree with the movement's standpoint. If you take their pledge, this is what you agree to: Accepting and respecting the natural diversity of body sizes and shapes. Eating in a flexible manner that values pleasure and honors internal cues of hunger, satiety, and appetite. Finding the joy in moving one’s body and becoming more physically vital.
I agree with all of that, for sure. I also believe that I need to see cold, hard facts sometimes. I was reading another article linked from the Dr. Oz show page about Treating Morbid Obesity through gastric bypass. I am not going into that whole issue, but it did have some interesting information about the stages of obesity linked to BMI. I copied the pertinent paragraphs below:
At this point, you have to ask what do the numbers mean? You are underweight if your BMI is less than 18.5. You are normal weight if your BMI is 18.5-24.9. You are overweight if your BMI is 25-29.9. You are obese if your BMI is over 30. Now, it does not end there.
All obesity is not created equal. There are different levels or stages of obesity. Stage I is 30-34.9, Stage II is 35-39.9 and Stage III is 40-49.9, and a BMI of 50 or greater is considered to be super obese. To put this in context, there is an obesity elevator and each stage is a new floor. An alarm bell should ring as you go up each floor to warn you that you are in danger. The higher the floor, the higher the stage, and the more your life is in danger.
I don't know about you, but I had never heard of those stages of obesity. It was actually very helpful for me to see this. Even when I was thinner I was considered overweight, BMI-wise. I have been considered obese medically-speaking for ages. It was rather easy for me to just see the obese label and not think about how obese. I went to a website to calculate both my BMI before I lost the 15 pounds and now. I have reduced my BMI by 2.1in 8 weeks. That is awesome news! I need to see those numbers. I need that dose of reality.
Using the Lose It! app is necessary for me right now. I know how to eat healthily. I know what to eat and what a portion is. But I was not doing it. It is like any habit...once you get out of a good habit, it is hard to get back into it. Bad habits are easy to stick to! :) I was not choosing the correct foods to fuel my body. I was eating a lot of food but I had no energy.
What is my point after all this? We all do what we need to do. I am doing what I need to do. I am so appreciative of the support I receive from everyone. I am remembering to not judge foods. Chocolate cake is not bad and salads are not good. They are foods with different nutritional values. I know that there will be days when I am in the mood for grilled chicken over salad and there will be days when I want chocolate chip cookies. All of it is okay. Only I can decide what is okay for me.
p.s There is a an option to be "friends" on Lose it. I don't really know what that entails but let me know if you are interested!
On another part of the weight loss spectrum I saw an article (of sorts) on iVillage entitled Why I Quit Dieting! I say another part of the spectrum and not the opposite end because these women were not against losing weight, just against dieting. I totally get that. I need to make life changes, not quick fixes.
Reading about the journeys of the featured women led me to the website Health At Every Size. I do agree with the movement's standpoint. If you take their pledge, this is what you agree to: Accepting and respecting the natural diversity of body sizes and shapes. Eating in a flexible manner that values pleasure and honors internal cues of hunger, satiety, and appetite. Finding the joy in moving one’s body and becoming more physically vital.
I agree with all of that, for sure. I also believe that I need to see cold, hard facts sometimes. I was reading another article linked from the Dr. Oz show page about Treating Morbid Obesity through gastric bypass. I am not going into that whole issue, but it did have some interesting information about the stages of obesity linked to BMI. I copied the pertinent paragraphs below:
At this point, you have to ask what do the numbers mean? You are underweight if your BMI is less than 18.5. You are normal weight if your BMI is 18.5-24.9. You are overweight if your BMI is 25-29.9. You are obese if your BMI is over 30. Now, it does not end there.
All obesity is not created equal. There are different levels or stages of obesity. Stage I is 30-34.9, Stage II is 35-39.9 and Stage III is 40-49.9, and a BMI of 50 or greater is considered to be super obese. To put this in context, there is an obesity elevator and each stage is a new floor. An alarm bell should ring as you go up each floor to warn you that you are in danger. The higher the floor, the higher the stage, and the more your life is in danger.
I don't know about you, but I had never heard of those stages of obesity. It was actually very helpful for me to see this. Even when I was thinner I was considered overweight, BMI-wise. I have been considered obese medically-speaking for ages. It was rather easy for me to just see the obese label and not think about how obese. I went to a website to calculate both my BMI before I lost the 15 pounds and now. I have reduced my BMI by 2.1in 8 weeks. That is awesome news! I need to see those numbers. I need that dose of reality.
Using the Lose It! app is necessary for me right now. I know how to eat healthily. I know what to eat and what a portion is. But I was not doing it. It is like any habit...once you get out of a good habit, it is hard to get back into it. Bad habits are easy to stick to! :) I was not choosing the correct foods to fuel my body. I was eating a lot of food but I had no energy.
What is my point after all this? We all do what we need to do. I am doing what I need to do. I am so appreciative of the support I receive from everyone. I am remembering to not judge foods. Chocolate cake is not bad and salads are not good. They are foods with different nutritional values. I know that there will be days when I am in the mood for grilled chicken over salad and there will be days when I want chocolate chip cookies. All of it is okay. Only I can decide what is okay for me.
p.s There is a an option to be "friends" on Lose it. I don't really know what that entails but let me know if you are interested!
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