OP needs to get addicted to the dictionary. |
Forgive the use of this word! I’m overtired and at a conference. There’s more immediate respect from women and willingness to go out of their way (helping with things, holding the door) on behalf of men. I went from a chubby eight to a regular size six. Not much, but apparently enough! |
| Reading your subject all I could think of is, I want some sugar/bread, sounds good! |
A chubby size 8? Delusional. |
Okay - not toned/flabby. |
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OP, I would relax. People here become overwrought about the positive aspects of dieting and restriction for the already-thin. Yes, those positive experiences can lead to anorexia in a tiny portion of people. But overeating leads to obesity at much, much higher rates and I don't see much concern when people order value meals at McDonald's, etc.
My weight/height ratio is smaller than yours, and I still put a lot of effort into weight control and working out. And I also want to lose 5 pounds, but not enough to put forth the extreme level of effort it would take me to get there (since I am already slim). So, enjoy the feelings of control and accomplishment. If you become obsessed or become underweight, then you have a problem. But not until then. |
| I am the same way. When I eat very clean and light I enjoy what I call - “ feeling empty”. I don’t like feeling full or the feeling the morning after a big restaurant meal. I dread restaurants for that reason. I Ike to eat the same thing every day. As few ounces as possible. I eat about 1400 calories a day. 5’4” and 120 lbs but I’ve gone as low as 112. |
I’m the poster who is 5’4’’ 126. I’ve been as low as 105. I'd like to be 120, but don’t have the energy to exercise. I eat 1500 calories a day. I also love that empty feeling. |
What makes you say that? Why is 8 not chubby? I mean I went from 1 to 2 and I find that I don't like it. I am 5'4". unless she is very tall, 8 is not just chubby, imo, but overweight. I post only because I am sick of people like you that propagate the idea that overweight is the new normal. I am sorry if you are very overweight and think 8 is not chubby, but your attitude spreads to your kids who then think being chubby is not being overweight. You and your ilk are part of the problem. Size 8 is overweight for an average height woman. |
OP here, and I don’t agree with this. While I was a chubby 8, it’s possible to be a fit eight. It’s a musculature, not height, issue. |
| Lolol. In your own mind’s eye, OP. A month of dieting and you think it’s changed how people interact with you? You don’t have that much power or influence over other people, or yourself tbh. |
Okay |
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Threads like this make me so glad I recovered from my eating disorder. I'm 5'4", weight always around 125, counting calories obsessively and starving to get to 120, then immediately rebounding up to 130. In eating disorder recovery I started eating a normal amount of food every day (between 2000 and 3000 calories depending on how active/hungry I am on any given day-- I don't work out but I walk a lot) and now my weight comfortably sits just below 120. I can't imagine living on 1000 or 1500 calories a day anymore.
This is just to say that the obsessiveness can actually keep you heavier. Getting back in touch with your body's hunger cues can be a really good thing. |
Same. I know the feeling OP describes SO well--it consumed me for longer than I would like, and took years and a lot of hard work to get over. I'm finally at a place where I don't count calories or micromanage what I eat and where I'm really happy with how I feel. I still work out hard, because I absolutely love it, but I also don't value skinniness the way I used to. As a mom of three, it's also VERY important to me that I set a positive example for my kids. For me, that means eating and living in a balanced way. I'll be damned if they learn to obsess about their weight from me, the way I did from my parents. It's hell. |
| I don’t think most people would notice a middle aged woman going from an 8 to a 6, sorry. |