Anonymous wrote:I'm in the same boat, although a bit taller. I've concluded that I am going to eliminate calories from places where I don't enjoy them (instead of getting the crappy sandwich at work at lunch, I get the crappy vegetable soup or something like that with half the calories), but I'm not going to cut pasta or dessert out of my life. Maybe if I did, I'd have a body like Courtney Cox. But my livelihood doesn't depend on fitting into a size 2, so I'm going to eat pasta. I now treat calories like money -- I'm not going to spend a bunch on something that I don't enjoy, and if there are two things that I'd enjoy equally, I go for the "cheaper" one. But I'm not going to cut out everything I enjoy just to "save."
Anonymous wrote:How are you carrying the extra weight? My answer to whether you should accept being heavier depends on how unhappy you are with how your clothes fit, not the change in the number on the scale since it sounds like you are active and aren't experiencing any health issues.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you walk two hours a day! I am impressed. I would decrease rice and flour-based carbs. Have no bread/flour after breakfast. Try it for a few weeks, and see if that helps. Any chance you’d stop being a vegetarian?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello - it is me, the typical DCUM poster.
I was a smug pretty thin person through my 20s and 30s. Five feet tall, a healthy and fit 115 pounds - kept myself that weight by not drinking much and not eating a lot of sweets, and otherwise more or less eating what I wanted. I walked then - and now - about two hours a day. Sometimes went for long hikes or bike rides, but walking is and has been my standard exercise.
In my late 30s I put on five pounds. I tried to take it off but found it did not want to budge. In my mid-40s it's another five pounds. Used to be I could take off extra weight with a little less food and a little more walking, but these 10 pounds are very stubborn. I'm a lifelong vegetarian. I don't drink alcohol or soda. I don't eat a lot of sweets. I do eat carbs - but not excessively so, I don't think. I still walk about two hours a day.
Are my options either radical changes to my diet, or accepting being heavier?
My sister is an endocrinologist so I’ve heard her talk a lot about weight. One thing I’ve learned from her is that height makes a huge difference in terms of how many calories someone should consume. Her general rule of thumb is 100 calories an inch - meaning a woman who is five eight can eat 800 calories more than you can. You are probably eating more calories than you should but don’t realize it because taller women (or men) around you may be eating more but staying skinnier.
Anonymous wrote:Hello - it is me, the typical DCUM poster.
I was a smug pretty thin person through my 20s and 30s. Five feet tall, a healthy and fit 115 pounds - kept myself that weight by not drinking much and not eating a lot of sweets, and otherwise more or less eating what I wanted. I walked then - and now - about two hours a day. Sometimes went for long hikes or bike rides, but walking is and has been my standard exercise.
In my late 30s I put on five pounds. I tried to take it off but found it did not want to budge. In my mid-40s it's another five pounds. Used to be I could take off extra weight with a little less food and a little more walking, but these 10 pounds are very stubborn. I'm a lifelong vegetarian. I don't drink alcohol or soda. I don't eat a lot of sweets. I do eat carbs - but not excessively so, I don't think. I still walk about two hours a day.
Are my options either radical changes to my diet, or accepting being heavier?