I remind myself "Hmmm what would Lauren, Jo do?" or "Oh, gosh if I slip, I'll have to explain myself and I'll get scolded by my MF buddies!"
Hyperion wrote:Lauren, let me answer to this thread as I think it applies to me too!
Gotta love running too! I bought a dog last year, Jack Russell breed (those things are FAST), and I run with him a few times a week. I even do rollerblade and he keeps up with me. Those beasts never are tired. I have to learn from them
Lauren wrote:Biks, you most certainly weren't one of the folks I was worried about...you're hardly a head in the clouds chick, and you haven't romanticized any part of this process, including maintenance! That's why I KNOW you'll be successful!
Lauren
Lauren wrote:Thanks, LA Woman! Yeah, it's all such a head trip, right? There are very few women here in the US who don't have issues surrounding food, even the thin ones. I always figured they just didn't think about it - turns out, they do! Some of them only had to start thinking about it when they became adults, but now that I've entered the "secret society of the thin" (ha!), I am SO suddenly aware that EVERYONE is disfunctional! All this time I thought my thin friends and family were confident and comfortable in their bodies and their eating, but they compare themselves to everyone!
You know what's really odd and slightly amusing? Because I struggled with my weight my whole life, I never bothered comparing myself (physically) to any other women. I am competitive in spirit, in my career, in my success in education, in leadership roles, but I never compared myself to my peers in terms of my body, because that would have been, well, traumatizing. So, it turns out, now I actually have a HEALTHIER body image than my friends? I've become a witness to how they actually think (they didn't include me in talks of people's bodies like this when I was fat), and while they're all comparing, I'm still not! Amazing how things happen, huh?
Just a funny side note, I guess.
Cheers!
Lauren
Lauren wrote:Hype, you are totally right, women are cruel to one another, but more importantly, are cruel to ourselves! And while certainly I hated that my obesity made me stand out from an aesthetic standpoint, the fact that I couldn't climb the stairs or keep up with my friends while going out, or even just EXIST without breaking a sweat, these were the true reasons I wanted to lose the weight. But to be fair, all the reasons are valid, if the only reason someone wants to lose weight is to feel better amongst other women, that's truly okay. We have the right to want to feel pretty and desirable, and the power to make it happen. And while our self esteem should not be entirely wrapped up in our appearances, it is only natural that some of it is, that's our society, and we exist in it. So don't judge the lovely ladies, Hype, who just want to be lovelier, instead help them to see the qualities that ALREADY make them beautiful, and support them in their efforts to complete the package! :-)
Lauren wrote: Only you can figure out what those terms are, so while we all have paths that you can draw from, you will figure out what works for you. Maybe it is a slice of cake every day. Maybe, like me, you'll decide you want absurd amounts of brussel sprouts (yeah, some weird phase I'm going through, don't ask, ha!). You're so close, I can taste it!
Lauren
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