Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 44, and my 46yo sister and I have embraced what we call “Size 10 Livin’.” This is where you do exercise, you do try to eat healthfully, you do pay attention to your portion sizes…but you also live. You also enjoy yourself. You are healthy, but your goal is not to be “slim” or “skinny,” just strong and healthy, enjoying life.
Hmm I do this and wear size 2.
“Hmm,” OK? I’m 5’11 and my sister is 5’10. If you are a better person because you are a size 2, that’s great. I think my sister is the best person I know: she and her husband fostered and later adopted a girl who really need a home, and she is a grief counselor and a hospital chaplain. I really admire her, who she is, and what she does. I’m also proud that we both at one point held state swimming records. You sound great, though, what with your insistence on trying to make total strangers feel inferior to you based simply on their size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 44, and my 46yo sister and I have embraced what we call “Size 10 Livin’.” This is where you do exercise, you do try to eat healthfully, you do pay attention to your portion sizes…but you also live. You also enjoy yourself. You are healthy, but your goal is not to be “slim” or “skinny,” just strong and healthy, enjoying life.
Hmm I do this and wear size 2.
“Hmm,” OK? I’m 5’11 and my sister is 5’10. If you are a better person because you are a size 2, that’s great. I think my sister is the best person I know: she and her husband fostered and later adopted a girl who really need a home, and she is a grief counselor and a hospital chaplain. I really admire her, who she is, and what she does. I’m also proud that we both at one point held state swimming records. You sound great, though, what with your insistence on trying to make total strangers feel inferior to you based simply on their size.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if this is a struggle for, among others, past teen athletes because my spouse eats like a teen football player and has trouble eating less. The old habits are hard to change.
I read that the way we ate in the past affects our cells. That then carries forward as to whether we will struggle with weight gain or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 44, and my 46yo sister and I have embraced what we call “Size 10 Livin’.” This is where you do exercise, you do try to eat healthfully, you do pay attention to your portion sizes…but you also live. You also enjoy yourself. You are healthy, but your goal is not to be “slim” or “skinny,” just strong and healthy, enjoying life.
Hmm I do this and wear size 2.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 44, and my 46yo sister and I have embraced what we call “Size 10 Livin’.” This is where you do exercise, you do try to eat healthfully, you do pay attention to your portion sizes…but you also live. You also enjoy yourself. You are healthy, but your goal is not to be “slim” or “skinny,” just strong and healthy, enjoying life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8
Oink oink
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50. Perimenopause. Lifelong skinny person who could eat whatever I wanted. Trying to accept and comes to terms with it. Sucks to watch what you eat and leave the table hungry.
Ugh... this makes me nervous. I'm also 50, but haven't yet noticed weight creeping on. I have started working out more regularly in the past 6 months and am hoping that lifting will help keep the menopot away. My goal right now is to keep my bones strong.