Getting back with the program is
HARD.
IMHO, it is always best to go all the way to your goal before taking a side-trip.
When one is faced with a lot of weight to lose, it can feel like the end will never come.
The task can seem too BIG. It looms above us larger than life and then there is that
creepy snarly voice in our head that says,
“Huh, uh. It’s way too big a job for YOU. Too big. You can’t do it. We ALL know that you can not do it.”Then if the lies of
Negatory Norton are not enough to push us over the edge,
Bore Dumb sets in.
Lemme tell ya, folks,
BORE DUMB is a reality of life and yet, we do not allow boredom to make us stop being a Dad, or a Mom, or a friend.
Boredom with our salary is not a license to steal from others; it can become an impetus to work smarter or to get a different job.
Boredom with our mate is not a reason to dump her/him and go and get a new one when we have committed to be with them through thick ‘n thin (whew! Terry could have left me a LONG tome ago if our commitment to one another was to stick it out only during times of thinness and to take off during fatness!), but we committed to one another for a life-long term - for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health, etc.
We go the distance because it is the right thing to do.
I suppose that some people DO need to take a break in their weight loss journey but I know that would not have worked for me. It would have been too easy for me to rationalize and to boing right back up the scale, up and over the two hundred and sixty-five pound mark and beyond.
It would have been “To infinity and be-yon-n-n-nd!” for me.
I am a foody. I was out of control. Food controlled me.
I took a stand, I took control and food is now merely my fuel. It makes the machinery run.
Linda Spangle writes an excellent explanation of the problem that occurs when we do a little Medifast here and also do a little (or a lot!) or our own thing with Medifast. We enter, what Linda describes as "No Man's Land."
Again, check out her book,
Success in a Shaker Jar, pages 100-102.
I have a writing in the works that I was going to use in a future Newsletter about this very issue – of pausing along the path.
Trust me, it is merely a WIP, not quite ready for prime time and yet I feel compelled to write some of my “thinkings” now because so many of you are struggling.
Bear with me now as I write this. It is to you who are struggling and it is right from my
heart. Please know that I write it because I want to help you.
I am
not Mother Sternfinger standing before you with a freshly ironed apron, a furrowed brow, tapping my pointy-toed high-topped shoe and lecturing you with a voice that makes your arms feel like I just scritch-scratched the chalkboard with my gnarled fingernails…
Rather picture that I am beside you, in the sitting room of the MakeMeThinner Cottage on a comfy Victorian settee with a pot of aromatic tea steeping in a porcelain teapot on the old Duncan Phyfe coffee table.
Remember, I am
Not Mother Sternfinger but I am Nancy, your in-the-flab-trenches Friend.
I care about you and I know how you feel because I have experienced the same weight and food issues as you have or are experiencing right now.
I have done every kind of rationalizing that my very imaginative mind can come up with to end previous DIEts and I have thunk up all the juicy reasons why I should not, could not and will not begin another
dreaded DIEt ever again.
With that in mind, I write on…
We either do Medifast or we do not do it.
Read my previous February 2004 Newsletter about Don't Mess With Medifast. Here’s the link:
http://www.makemethinner.com/newsletter/medifast-february-newsletter.htm
Getting back with the program after a hiatus is terribly difficult. It is down-right HARD.
It is always best to go all the way to your goal before taking a side-trip. It is psychologically and physically easier.
I suppose that some people do need to take a break but I know that taking a pause would not have worked for me. It would have been too easy for me to rationalize and then I would have
boinged right back up the scale and tipped it over.
We either do Medifast or we do not do it.
I'm determined not to panic about it, and ride this out with the mindset that 'this too shall pass' and it'll get better soon.
Personally I see some danger in thinking IT (the desire to eat off program) will pass.
I don’t think it ever passes. It takes discipline and hard work to choose to eat the right things every day.
Some folks are blessed with metabolisms that burn up everything they eat. Then there are folks like me with the
metabolism of a slug.
Every single day of my life juicy donuts, rich cheesecake, fresh-baked pie or cookies or bread waft their
vicious fumes down the hall of the college and into my nasies.
EVERY day!
I went to the mall tonight to buy some awesome fishnets (Because I can.) and I was
assaulted by the sniffs of chocolate rolling out of the See’s Candy Store.
The
chocolate odor tried to grab me by my slender shoulders and drag me inside for a FREE
chocolate sample!
It took ALMOST all of my will power to say, “No thank you, Mrs. See. NOTHING, not even your excellent
chocolate-covered caramels with pecans tastes as good as thin feels.”
I kicked Granny See in the chubby shins and ran like ninety down the mall and headed for the perfume counter!
I tried several new perfumes – I sprayed a card until it was drenched with some musky scent and stuck that smelly card under my proboscis for the return trip down the mall aisle.
I crossed to the other side of the aisle on my way toward the exit of the mall. I did not look to the right or the left.
I kept my beak pressed to the perfumey card, repeated my mantra, “Nothing tastes as good as thin feels, nothing tastes…”
I practically ripped the hinges off of the car door and climbed into the safety of Buzz.
I was a Starvin’ Marvin’ - I mean a
TOTAL Starvin’ Marvin’ after work today.
I didn’t get but a 15 minute break today and I was stressed out, was training my replacement and drank but a couple of shakes, and ate a handful of broccoli and gave my NEW Fruit and Nut Granola bar to a friend to try.
I was
BARless (No, Mikey, I did NOT say that I was
BRAless!)
I was such a stupid, stupid Leopard Woman – I failed to have enough extra grub with me. I was not a good Boy Scout. I was not prepared. I always have an extra couple of RTD shakes in the trunk of Buzz (my VeeDub) and usually a few bars in my desk drawer. I was food depleted!
So I headed for the mall with a growly tummy. El-stoo-pee-doh!
I had visual and sensory overload. I was tired, hungry and not gonna cave to the rave of the flaves…
I stopped my shopping trip short (see how serious I am!), I avoided the temptations, drove directly home and fixed supper the moment I got in the back door here at the MakeMeThinner Cottage.
We always have prepared veggies and a big fat fresh green salad with tomaters and healthy stuff handy. I ate a handful of fresh shrimp while Terry fixed some grilled salmon.
I'm determined not to panic about it, and ride this out with the mindset that 'this too shall pass' and it'll get better soon.
“IT” does not pass. “IT” is always lurking.
Only you know you best. I don’t know what is best for you – taking a break, maintaining and then getting back on the train or going for the goal.
I know what is best for me and it is not taking a mini side trip along the way.
I decided that I just could not take the emotional upheaval and deal with the totally wiped out self-esteem that would occur if I failed to reach my goal once I started on the trip.
I am too fragile to go thru THAT (food control failure) ever again.
July 16, 2002 was the day that I began my LAST weight loss program. Ever. Not gonna do it again. I do not want a do over.
Again,
PLEASE, please,
please, do NOT take my comments as saying that a pause, or a break is WRONG for you.
I
love you all, I do not want any of you to be
honked at me.
I am just saying that I know me best. I don’t have it in me to ever do it again. I am choosing to stay where I am and that means daily weighing.
If I were to avoid the scale, it would mean that I was not where I should be.
I keep myself accountable. Every day I weigh and record it in my little journal.
Terry and Unca know where I am weight-wise and the people that see me on a regular basis know where I am. Believe me, people are always watching me.
If my hiney gets fluffy, Unca is honest and he tells me. I
;ove that man! He doesn’t like it when I ask him, “Does this make me look fat?” but he is totally honest. He sometimes says, “Hmm…your buns DO look a little fluffy.” I NEED that!
Terry will pinch my waist – if there is something
too pinchy, he tells me. I
NEED that! I
LOVE that.
They help to keep me in line.
I wear fitted clothing.
No stretchy waists for me except for my leopardy underdoodies and one pair of leopard jammies. That’s it. Everything else fits me perfectly. If it gets tight, then it’s shakes only for a few days.
I wear belts, my skirts have a zipper and a button closure, and I wear form-fitting shirts. I will not allow myself to ‘grow into’ an article of clothing.
Again, only you know what is best for you.
Some of you will be able to take a pause and then get right back on.
However, as we read through the MakeMeThinner Forum, we find that more often than not, it is really difficult for folks to get back in the passenger car of the train to Thinsville, once they’ve taken an
extended stay in the
dining car.
The Depot is full of people waiting for their train to be called.
Some will get on when the conductor calls their name.
Some will stay in the depot for a while, contemplating and then get on the train when they decide that they really want to get to their destination:
Thinsville.
Some will give up and go back to their old residence because it is where it seemed to be the most comfortable for them.
They may not truly want to be in that overweight residence but the journey to Thinsville seems too daunting, too treacherous, too long a journey, too difficult to endure.
Some day at a later time, they may return to the station and go for their destination.
Weight loss is a personal journey.
Sometimes we can enlist the help of others to travel with us – like we are doing with the MMT Forum Family.
Sometimes we can only go it alone. Some never leave home, some drop by the
wayside and
praise God, some of us cross the finish line.
We have encouraging words to speak into you along the way to the finish line.
Some of us have gone alone before you and we are waiting for you here at the finish line. We have a
cool drink of water and a towel to place around your weary shoulders.
We want to see you to the end and then have you join us to
encourage and to help others who are just squatting at the starting line.
There is room for all of you along the journey.
I don’t know where you are in all this but I want you to know that I know how it feels to be on the
wrong train, going in the
wrong direction.
Because of Medifast, I now know how it feels to be on the train that leads to Thinsville and I have no intention of ever getting off of it.
These are my own personal ‘thinkings’ on the topic.
You know you best. You know where you are right now.
Friends, you have to decide what will work for you and then do everything within your power to do it.
We will
not think less of you if you decide to make a stop and rest in the depot for a refueling.
We will
love ya, and
care for ya and be kind to you because we are passionately committed to helping you reach and maintain optimal health.
All aboard! The train is about to pullout of the station!