Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you have a healthy/super healthy metabolism staying thin is easy.
I even drink alcohol a few times a week and keep my abs near a six pack.
It takes a while to get your body firing on all cylinders (by eating healthy and exercising a lot) but pretty easy to maintain after it gets there.
I am not trying out for an Olympic team or anything- just above average physical condition.
Just curious, do you have kids at home and do you have a paid job? My eating is so so and I manage to exercise three times a week which is ok for maintenance but not for losing any weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you have a healthy/super healthy metabolism staying thin is easy.
I even drink alcohol a few times a week and keep my abs near a six pack.
It takes a while to get your body firing on all cylinders (by eating healthy and exercising a lot) but pretty easy to maintain after it gets there.
I am not trying out for an Olympic team or anything- just above average physical condition.
Teen boys and I have to be in person 3x a week now. Telework 2 days. Lawyer.
Just curious, do you have kids at home and do you have a paid job? My eating is so so and I manage to exercise three times a week which is ok for maintenance but not for losing any weight.
Anonymous wrote:Once you have a healthy/super healthy metabolism staying thin is easy.
I even drink alcohol a few times a week and keep my abs near a six pack.
It takes a while to get your body firing on all cylinders (by eating healthy and exercising a lot) but pretty easy to maintain after it gets there.
I am not trying out for an Olympic team or anything- just above average physical condition.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone who's easily thin truly like food?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine caring that much about what people think of me --a middle aged mom-- to be miserable and hungry every day when I could be a comfortable, normal weight.
No one is looking at you. No one cares or even notices if you can squeeze into your pre-covid clothes. You are making yourself miserable for actually no reason at all.
I don't get it.
OP. I don't really agree with this. As a middle aged mom, I definitely look at my fellow moms and admire those who are slim and beautiful. I'm talking women 35-55. DH also appreciates that I've lost weight and compliments me. I know what you mean that people don't look at women our age in the same way that we were gazed upon in our youth, but most definitely, appearance matters. It's nice that you don't care what people think about you. I really do care, and being heavier makes me feel miserable and slovenly and unhealthy.
But...it sucks to be hungry.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone who's easily thin truly like food?
Anonymous wrote:Just wondering, for all you thin people. Does it take work to maintain your weight? Do you experience hunger daily? I'm 5'7 and 139; just lost 10 pounds and hoping to lose 7 more to get back into my clothes. Sort of went on a binge since Covid and became heavier than I'd ever been. I'm finding that to lose the weight, I have to be willing to endure hunger every day. Not all day, but certainly, for periods of every day - I go to bed a bit hungry and I spend much of my morning (like right now) hungry. I've been able to power through it because I'm seeing progress on the scale and it's motivating. But generally, I love the feeling of being full, even stuffed, and it's rather depressing to think that if I want to be at my goal weight, I'm going to have to eat less for the long term and thus, maybe, be hungry for a good portion of my life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that I’m mid 40s yes. Before that I could eat whatever I want which was mostly deli sandwiches and pizza and cake and stay 125 5’6”.
I’m mid-40s and I still eat all of that, just smaller portions than before. And I run a lot. Works for me.
Do you have children who are teens and does your job stress you out?
I wonder about this too. My job stresses me out, my teens stress me out. My default mode is stressed out. So I overeat. On the rare occasions I have a low stress week, eating well is a lot easier. If I were a lady of luxury with no job, tons of money, someone handling college stuff...I'm sure I'd be thin.
Do you think as a middle age person with wisdom and experience you could find ways to manage your stress that doesn’t involve overeating?
No because there is no time. You are crushed by work, housework, kid events and parental care.
My friends who shipped their kids off to college lost weight because there was finally time for healthful meals and exercise.
+1. I only have so much time, energy, and executive function, and it gets spent on work and parenting with not much left over by dinner time. I've started skipping breakfast and only having a drink on the weekend, so there's not that much besides portion control that's in easy reach.
I lost weight as an empty nester because I was able to remove all the food from my house that I shouldn’t eat.
Also the foods my very large boys needed to eat to maintain their weight was very fattening and it was hard to not eat food. I was cooking for dinner.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder about this too. My job stresses me out, my teens stress me out. My default mode is stressed out. So I overeat. On the rare occasions I have a low stress week, eating well is a lot easier. If I were a lady of luxury with no job, tons of money, someone handling college stuff...I'm sure I'd be thin.
This was me when I was in my early/mid-40s. My DD put us through a LOT during her teen years. Not only could I not get through the stress while being hungry, I needed some sort of vice. It was sugar, but I supposed it could have been drinking or something else. I made my peace with it and didn't feel bad about myself at the time. I was unbothered by the extra weight.
Fast-forward to age 48, both kids in college. I was ready to make a change and it only took 7 or 8 months to lose the weight I had put on over a decade (and then some). I have exercised 6 times per week since then, eat way better and have kept all the weight off for several years now. I just needed enough time and energy to make it a routine and I just didn't have it when my kids were teens. Kudos to the perpetually size 00 4 am exercisers who haven't had carbs for 25 years, but that just wasn't me. I had to let something go.
One upside of letting things go - because I never did any yo-yo dieting over the years, I didn't mess up my metabolism. I can eat 2000+ calories a day for maintenance which is enough to keep me from going hungry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 36 and thin; 5’4 110. I’m lucky in that I don’t diet or watch what I eat but don’t have issues with weight. I think I have really good hunger cues or something, it’s easy to eat just when I’m hungry and stop before I feel full. Tbh I hate the overly full feeling, it’s uncomfortable for ne.
You are 36. It's still easy.
Maybe, but I think there are plenty of people my age younger that struggle with weight.
My mom is also slim and we have similar eating patterns. Now that I’m thinking about it, in both our cases, we eat for pleasure but not with the goal of feeling “full” as often as possible for as long as possible. For me, I can easily wait 5-6+ hrs to eat dinner and look forward to a delicious meal. I’d prefer to have an appetite when I sit down to enjoy something I love eating.
So maybe there is something to thin people being hungry, but people experience that differently. I enjoy the anticipation leading up to savoring good food, there’s no way I’m chomping at celery and cottage cheese or whatever else at my desk all afternoon for fear of not feeling full all day every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that I’m mid 40s yes. Before that I could eat whatever I want which was mostly deli sandwiches and pizza and cake and stay 125 5’6”.
I’m mid-40s and I still eat all of that, just smaller portions than before. And I run a lot. Works for me.
Do you have children who are teens and does your job stress you out?
I wonder about this too. My job stresses me out, my teens stress me out. My default mode is stressed out. So I overeat. On the rare occasions I have a low stress week, eating well is a lot easier. If I were a lady of luxury with no job, tons of money, someone handling college stuff...I'm sure I'd be thin.
Do you think as a middle age person with wisdom and experience you could find ways to manage your stress that doesn’t involve overeating?
No because there is no time. You are crushed by work, housework, kid events and parental care.
My friends who shipped their kids off to college lost weight because there was finally time for healthful meals and exercise.
+1. I only have so much time, energy, and executive function, and it gets spent on work and parenting with not much left over by dinner time. I've started skipping breakfast and only having a drink on the weekend, so there's not that much besides portion control that's in easy reach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that I’m mid 40s yes. Before that I could eat whatever I want which was mostly deli sandwiches and pizza and cake and stay 125 5’6”.
I’m mid-40s and I still eat all of that, just smaller portions than before. And I run a lot. Works for me.
Do you have children who are teens and does your job stress you out?
I wonder about this too. My job stresses me out, my teens stress me out. My default mode is stressed out. So I overeat. On the rare occasions I have a low stress week, eating well is a lot easier. If I were a lady of luxury with no job, tons of money, someone handling college stuff...I'm sure I'd be thin.
Do you think as a middle age person with wisdom and experience you could find ways to manage your stress that doesn’t involve overeating?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now that I’m mid 40s yes. Before that I could eat whatever I want which was mostly deli sandwiches and pizza and cake and stay 125 5’6”.
I’m mid-40s and I still eat all of that, just smaller portions than before. And I run a lot. Works for me.
Do you have children who are teens and does your job stress you out?
I wonder about this too. My job stresses me out, my teens stress me out. My default mode is stressed out. So I overeat. On the rare occasions I have a low stress week, eating well is a lot easier. If I were a lady of luxury with no job, tons of money, someone handling college stuff...I'm sure I'd be thin.
Do you think as a middle age person with wisdom and experience you could find ways to manage your stress that doesn’t involve overeating?
No because there is no time. You are crushed by work, housework, kid events and parental care.
My friends who shipped their kids off to college lost weight because there was finally time for healthful meals and exercise.