Anonymous wrote:This thread puzzles me. Virtually every American woman, over the age of 22, I know has a "thickened" waist.
College, desk jobs, pregnancies, poor diet (too many of the wrong kinds of carbs), drinking habits, and so on...
The only people I know over 40 with great looking waistlines eat an enormously controlled diet and exercise hard. And that ain't most people!
Anonymous wrote:This thread puzzles me. Virtually every American woman, over the age of 22, I know has a "thickened" waist.
College, desk jobs, pregnancies, poor diet (too many of the wrong kinds of carbs), drinking habits, and so on...
The only people I know over 40 with great looking waistlines eat an enormously controlled diet and exercise hard. And that ain't most people!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm post menopausal. I had a complete hysterectomy at 38. I'm 50 years old. 5'5 and 115 pounds. 5 children. My waist did not thicken. It is not inevitable. I am not "lucky". I eat a healthy diet and exercise every day. I have a medical condition that I could easily use to justify weight gain. I just figured out a long time ago that if I eat less than I use, I can't possibly get fat. It's simple math.
However, I certainly do not have the body I had at 20. Gravity is one thing I cannot control.
Why did you have a hysterectomy (if you don't mind my asking)?
Anonymous wrote:I'm post menopausal. I had a complete hysterectomy at 38. I'm 50 years old. 5'5 and 115 pounds. 5 children. My waist did not thicken. It is not inevitable. I am not "lucky". I eat a healthy diet and exercise every day. I have a medical condition that I could easily use to justify weight gain. I just figured out a long time ago that if I eat less than I use, I can't possibly get fat. It's simple math.
However, I certainly do not have the body I had at 20. Gravity is one thing I cannot control.
Anonymous wrote:My mom's waist didn't thicken until well into her 60s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious do you all work out regularly and watch what you eat? It is inevitable even for very fit women?
I work out an hour a day (jogging, swimming, or soccer) and am a vegetarian and I've had a 10 lb weight gain.
Ive always had a thick waist (I always thought just because my legs have no fat on them so it has to go somewhere)
and now it's fatter, yes.
I used to be rail thin (and after babies and gaining 60 lbs with each - definitely ate for 2) and now more average build.
I feel strong and healthy from the exercise though.
I'm 52 and just started the menopause thing, weight change started two years ago?
Part of it is since your ovaries aren't making estrogen anymore, body fat becomes the primary source of estrogen - thus the natural tendency to add more fat.
I'm actually in Hrt (patches) but still have the 10 lbs of Perimenopause fat. Maybe you have to start really early to preven the fat gain. I read the women typically gain 20 lbs during meno.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious do you all work out regularly and watch what you eat? It is inevitable even for very fit women?
Not at all inevitable! I'm fit, not "very fit"as I need to increase my muscle tone. That said, I have always watched what I eat - and no I don't starve myself. I also made sure that when I was pregnant with my children that I continued exercising and didnt use my pregnancies as an excuse to "eat for two".
Now I'm 50. I went through menopause at 48. My weight has not changed one bit, nor do I have a thicker middle.
Part of it is genetics but a lot is lifestyle and making sure you have regular physicals to make sure your hormone levels and thyroid are what they should be.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious do you all work out regularly and watch what you eat? It is inevitable even for very fit women?
Anonymous wrote:I'm post menopausal. I had a complete hysterectomy at 38. I'm 50 years old. 5'5 and 115 pounds. 5 children. My waist did not thicken. It is not inevitable. I am not "lucky". I eat a healthy diet and exercise every day. I have a medical condition that I could easily use to justify weight gain. I just figured out a long time ago that if I eat less than I use, I can't possibly get fat. It's simple math.
However, I certainly do not have the body I had at 20. Gravity is one thing I cannot control.