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.
Sorry you have to pay attention to portion sizes to remain a size 2. Some of us are able to eat and drink whatever we want to be that size or even a 0 or 00.
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: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:I don’t know about intentionally eating smaller portions, but I naturally started eating way smaller portions in my 20s (probably in part because I was paying for my own food and was motivated to be frugal lol), then huge portions when pregnant/breastfeeding, and now scaling back again as my kids get older/my hormones return to normal. I’m still bigger than I was pre-pregnancy but that’s at least partly because I don’t exercise as much any more. Trying to get that back…
This is what I was going to say. I've just generally noticed a decline in my appetite over the last 4-5 years (I'm 44, youngest child is 6). At this point I only eat one large meal a day (either lunch or dinner) and the rest of the time I'm eating what I would previously have considered a "robust snack." So I don't find I have to deny myself larger portions -- a restaurant-sized portion now just looks like two meals to me.
The flip side of this is that it's not like I always crave healthy foods -- I've always loved carbs, fats, and sweets. So when I'm eating smaller meals, I have to pay attention because my tendency will be to just eat the protein (and fat) heavy part of the meal and skip the veggies and fiber. Last year I started meal prepping on the weekend so that I could prepare easy small salads for weekday lunches, which helps me do a better job of eating something balanced in one smallish dish, instead of just eating a bagel with cream cheese and feeling too full for anything with actual nutrients in it.
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.
NP. Okay, but this isn’t a post about best person you know, it’s about weight. And you chose to participate in it. PP’s response was a little betchy, but yours was over the top. No one said you and your sister were bad people. It seems like weight is a sore spot and maybe this thread is not a healthy place for you.
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: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 str
ong 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.
Being 5'11 and 5'10 does not mean you have to be a size 10. Do you think Giselle Bunchen wears a size 10 just because she is tall? My point is that if you're actually exercising, eating healthfully, paying attention to portion sizes and enjoying life, you do not have to resign yourself to being a size 10. If you're comfortable with that, great! I would not be comfortable at that size. I had to buy size 10 jeans when I was in the early post partum phase and I did not like how I looked and felt at that size.
You seem weirdly defensive though.
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.
I want to join this club. Adopt me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50. Perimenopause. I’m beginning to eat like my grandmother did.
Also, alcohol feels like it’s poisoning my body. I can feel it the next day even after one glass. Another grandmother characteristic. 🙄
+1 on the alcohol. It's crazy.
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: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.