Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think there is something horribly wrong with other people's bodies?
Being overweight and obese isn't healthy and is not the way humans were meant to be. I'm not saying everyone should be skinny little supermodels, but healthy is something you owe yourself if not your family.
Anonymous wrote:Was there not some point you looked in the mirror and realized something was horribly wrong with your body?
Looking at people at the beach in their suits makes it so clear the way the human body was meant to be shaped and the way the majority of people actually are. Do you really miss the early stages when you can just scale back and drop 5 pounds? Do you just reach a point where you don't care? I don't mean this in a snarky, judgemental way. I am truly curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was a college athlete from a family of athletes with a dietician mother. I was never really around overweight people until I began my career and my job is to help people lose weight and get in shape. I understand that once you're at a certain point it is difficult to lose the weight and I also understand how much the extra weight can inhibit your life. That is my greatest motivation to keep myself lean and healthy. I don't want to lose my breath walking up stairs or chasing the kids. I don't want to stress about my dress for my sisters wedding. I don't want to stress about heart attacks, heart disease, or anything else that would take me away from my kids early. By the time I begin interacting with overweight and obese people we have a huge journey ahead of us. I'm just wondering how it gets that far before someone tries to catch it. It's truly not a judgement thing. It's about understanding so I can help my clients better.
No offense but unless you become less ignorant and judgemental you are in the wrong profession.
You can be overweight yet fit and healthy. Even when I was 30-40 pounds overweight I had no trouble walking upstairs. In fact, I could easily walk miles. My only vice was chocolate and occasionally coffee. I ate fairly healthy. In fact,
I still eat the same things now that I ate then.
You can also be at a normal weight and horribly unfit and unhealthy. And you can be overweight or at a target weight and stress about wedding wear or swimsuits.
There are many reasons why some people are overweight or obese. Sometimes it is psychological. Sometimes it is physical. Or both.
And your goal in your profession is not "make everyone like me physically and mentally".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was a college athlete from a family of athletes with a dietician mother. I was never really around overweight people until I began my career and my job is to help people lose weight and get in shape. I understand that once you're at a certain point it is difficult to lose the weight and I also understand how much the extra weight can inhibit your life. That is my greatest motivation to keep myself lean and healthy. I don't want to lose my breath walking up stairs or chasing the kids. I don't want to stress about my dress for my sisters wedding. I don't want to stress about heart attacks, heart disease, or anything else that would take me away from my kids early. By the time I begin interacting with overweight and obese people we have a huge journey ahead of us. I'm just wondering how it gets that far before someone tries to catch it. It's truly not a judgement thing. It's about understanding so I can help my clients better.
No offense but unless you become less ignorant and judgemental you are in the wrong profession.
You can be overweight yet fit and healthy. Even when I was 30-40 pounds overweight I had no trouble walking upstairs. In fact, I could easily walk miles. My only vice was chocolate and occasionally coffee. I ate fairly healthy. In fact,
I still eat the same things now that I ate then.
You can also be at a normal weight and horribly unfit and unhealthy. And you can be overweight or at a target weight and stress about wedding wear or swimsuits.
There are many reasons why some people are overweight or obese. Sometimes it is psychological. Sometimes it is physical. Or both.
And your goal in your profession is not "make everyone like me physically and mentally".
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was a college athlete from a family of athletes with a dietician mother. I was never really around overweight people until I began my career and my job is to help people lose weight and get in shape. I understand that once you're at a certain point it is difficult to lose the weight and I also understand how much the extra weight can inhibit your life. That is my greatest motivation to keep myself lean and healthy. I don't want to lose my breath walking up stairs or chasing the kids. I don't want to stress about my dress for my sisters wedding. I don't want to stress about heart attacks, heart disease, or anything else that would take me away from my kids early. By the time I begin interacting with overweight and obese people we have a huge journey ahead of us. I'm just wondering how it gets that far before someone tries to catch it. It's truly not a judgement thing. It's about understanding so I can help my clients better.
Anonymous wrote:In my experience some people at the beach have too perfect of a body, if you know what I mean. If they are buying their looks, does it really count?
this is me as well. I definitely can and shouldlose at least30 lbs but more than that would be a worthless battle that would make me feel worse. I was very very active in high school and never weighed less than 164. I tried starving myself to fit the weight guidlines of what I "should" weigh and became very anemic which ultimately caused a downward spiral with my weight when I was 17. I was so unbelievably tired that all I wanted to do was sleep and excersise which I had always loved, was a huge challenge. I have battled my weight ever since.Anonymous wrote:As a kid I was very active. I have ALWAYS been overweight. So has my mother. When I look at pics of her mother (who died before I was born) she is what one would call "big-boned."
I am female, about 5'5" and about 230lbs. I could spend all day working out and eating nothing but fish and veggies and fruit and if I got down to 130 I'd have passed out. If I got down to 170 I'd be THRILLED.
Haven't owned a bathing suit in about 15 or more years. So to answer your question, if I lost a shit-ton of weight THAT would make me know something was horribly wrong.