Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I’m premature in saying this as I’m “only” 40, but so far it hasn’t been an issue and I cannot fathom it will ever be. I’ve managed to have three kids with normal weight gains and able to lose it without drastic measures within a year of each baby.
I work out regularly, but more importantly, I weigh myself regularly. At least a couple times per week. Weight cannot creep on if you don’t let it. 5-10 lbs can be easily gained in you live on athleisure and don’t weigh yourself ever. Then another 10 if you don’t make changes and so on. But if you are happy with your weight and monitor it, you can adjust what you eat and your exercise as the needs of your body change with age. While a few pounds may be acceptable to gain with age, there is no reason anyone has to become overweight or obese as they age if they actively take steps to maintain a heathy weight
LOL. Send us a postcard when you hit your mid-forties.
My mother is in 70s and never became overweight with age, neither did my grandmother in her 90s. They did have to be more vigilant about what they are and cut portions down by a lot. So I pretty sure it is safe to say I’ll be the same. Not everyone becomes a blob with age
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I’m premature in saying this as I’m “only” 40, but so far it hasn’t been an issue and I cannot fathom it will ever be. I’ve managed to have three kids with normal weight gains and able to lose it without drastic measures within a year of each baby.
I work out regularly, but more importantly, I weigh myself regularly. At least a couple times per week. Weight cannot creep on if you don’t let it. 5-10 lbs can be easily gained in you live on athleisure and don’t weigh yourself ever. Then another 10 if you don’t make changes and so on. But if you are happy with your weight and monitor it, you can adjust what you eat and your exercise as the needs of your body change with age. While a few pounds may be acceptable to gain with age, there is no reason anyone has to become overweight or obese as they age if they actively take steps to maintain a heathy weight
So I used to say exactly all of this when I was 40. ALL OF IT. Couldn't understand how anyone could ever let themselves gain weight like that, always thin, easily lost all weight after my pregnancies within a matter of just weeks, could literally eat whatever I wanted, etc, etc.
I'm now 46, and I am shocked at how much this has changed for me in just the past year or so as I enter the perimenopausal stage of life. The body changes in this stage of life are very real. For the record, I'm very athletic and have been all through adulthood: competitive runner, workout 5-6 days a week, very toned. And I'm still very much in shape. However, my metabolism is nothing like what it was; it has completely tanked. In my 20s I used to eat an entire pound of pasta for dinner most nights, no joke. No way would that fly now. Just over the past year or so, I gain weight way way more easily, and it's much MUCH harder to lose, even just a few pounds. My weight management strategies of years past just don't work anymore. I read some interview recently that Heidi Klum only eats like 800 calories a day to stay thin at her age. Just a few years ago I would have thought this was nuts, but now that I'm "here", I completely believe it.
I still wear the same size, and I'm still the same healthy weight I've had all through adulthood. However, it is MUCH MUCH MUCH harder to keep it that way. I'm definitely eating crow from the way I viewed this earlier in life, even just a few years ago. More power to you and your 40 year old self, PP, but it's not nearly as easy as you think it is now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a question very specific to middle-aged (let’s say, 40 to 60) women who are significantly overweight but were thin and athletic in their 20s and 30s, and specifically women who are unhappy with this weight change.
How much weight have you gained from age 30? Was it mostly having kids, mostly menopause, both, or neither? Did you notice your body change all of a sudden, or was it a gradual weight creeping up and up? If you do wish you weighed less (and some people just accept it and that’s ok) what would you have done differently, lifestyle-wise, and at what age? What advice would you give to women under 35 who think “oh I would NEVER let my body get like THAT”?
"Gaining Weight" is not equal to "Body Falling Apart"
Yeah, agree that phrasing it that way is hyperbolic, but I think I get the point. It’s one thing to gain a couple of pounds here and there, and accept it, or not. The falling-apart thing, I often think it applies to people who used to be able to outrun the fork. For example, people who are hardcore athletes in their 20s and 30s and then obese by 50. This does happen. An injury, a child, and menopause and not significantly changing your eating habits.
To me "body falling apart" means you're suddenly getting injured often, your back hurts enough that it limits your activities, your balance is off, you have constant unexplainable aches and pains etc., NOT oh I've gained 15lbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a question very specific to middle-aged (let’s say, 40 to 60) women who are significantly overweight but were thin and athletic in their 20s and 30s, and specifically women who are unhappy with this weight change.
How much weight have you gained from age 30? Was it mostly having kids, mostly menopause, both, or neither? Did you notice your body change all of a sudden, or was it a gradual weight creeping up and up? If you do wish you weighed less (and some people just accept it and that’s ok) what would you have done differently, lifestyle-wise, and at what age? What advice would you give to women under 35 who think “oh I would NEVER let my body get like THAT”?
"Gaining Weight" is not equal to "Body Falling Apart"
Yeah, agree that phrasing it that way is hyperbolic, but I think I get the point. It’s one thing to gain a couple of pounds here and there, and accept it, or not. The falling-apart thing, I often think it applies to people who used to be able to outrun the fork. For example, people who are hardcore athletes in their 20s and 30s and then obese by 50. This does happen. An injury, a child, and menopause and not significantly changing your eating habits.
To me "body falling apart" means you're suddenly getting injured often, your back hurts enough that it limits your activities, your balance is off, you have constant unexplainable aches and pains etc., NOT oh I've gained 15lbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a question very specific to middle-aged (let’s say, 40 to 60) women who are significantly overweight but were thin and athletic in their 20s and 30s, and specifically women who are unhappy with this weight change.
How much weight have you gained from age 30? Was it mostly having kids, mostly menopause, both, or neither? Did you notice your body change all of a sudden, or was it a gradual weight creeping up and up? If you do wish you weighed less (and some people just accept it and that’s ok) what would you have done differently, lifestyle-wise, and at what age? What advice would you give to women under 35 who think “oh I would NEVER let my body get like THAT”?
"Gaining Weight" is not equal to "Body Falling Apart"
Yeah, agree that phrasing it that way is hyperbolic, but I think I get the point. It’s one thing to gain a couple of pounds here and there, and accept it, or not. The falling-apart thing, I often think it applies to people who used to be able to outrun the fork. For example, people who are hardcore athletes in their 20s and 30s and then obese by 50. This does happen. An injury, a child, and menopause and not significantly changing your eating habits.