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losing weight

National Hug Your Scale Month

by Claire on January 8, 2010

I’m declaring this National Hug Your Scale Month. Who’s in with me? If there isn’t already such a thing, then there should be. So many people are starting – or restarting – their weight loss program this month after a month or six weeks of food binging from Thanksgiving to New Year’s. And for many of us – me included – we have, or have had, a love/hate relationship with the scale.

There are the camps of “I won’t be a slave to the scale” and those that say, “There are other indicators of weight loss rather than the scale”. There are those that say all you need to do is lift weights, eat only vegetables, cut out all sugars, fats, and caffeine, or any number of variations on self-limitation and restrictions.

I say that many of these are valid when done in moderation but not exclusivity and will lead to positive results. However, the one main tool of my weight loss and ultimate maintenance of a healthy body and lifestyle – the one that never lies to me and the one that I can’t manipulate – is the scale.

I used to hate the scale. I doubt I’ve ever loved it in the past. In fact, I righteously refused to have a scale in my house citing many of the same reasons as above. Truth was, I really didn’t want to know what I weighed. And when my pants got tighter, it was obviously because my dryer was shrinking them. Didn’t matter that they never stretched out during the day. And I had a million lies I told myself as to why the size of my clothes kept increasing, why my health was getting worse.

One such example was when I saw pictures of my mother, who is now nearly 90, and me. I kept remarking how my mother kept looking smaller and smaller. She was shrinking! It never occurred to me that I was expanding and she was staying the same.

I still don’t have a scale in my house. Instead, I go once a week and weigh in. I may not literally hug my scale, but I embrace stepping on it. As for manipulating the scale – believe me, I try. I wear the lightest clothes possible, even in the dead of winter and freezing temperatures. I eat the same menu on weigh in day and  weigh in at the same time every week. I try to be as consistent in everything as possible so when I do step on the scale, the only variable is my weight. Why? Because then I can get honest feedback about how I did the prior week, up or down. And I can get honest with myself.

How my clothes fit, how I feel health-wise, my body measurements, and my esteem are all equally good indicators of my progress but they aren’t as objective as the scale. I can stretch that tape measure to have it say what I want it to say. I can buy clothes that are sized for vanity. I can lie to myself in a number of ways that hides the fact that ultimately what goes in my mouth counts. Cause and effect.

Today, I no longer have hate or animosity toward the scale, nor does it wield any power over my emotions. It’s feedback. Pure and honest.

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Why I love the scale

by Claire on September 14, 2009

I haven’t owned a set of scales at home in at least a twenty years. I refused to have them because I didn’t want to know what I weighed. I wanted to gauge my body by how my clothes fit, plus I wanted to bury my head in the sand and not care how much I weighed. Yeah, we all know how well that worked.

Now that I’ve been going to Weight Watchers for 18 months now, I no longer dread the scale. In fact, I often look forward to stepping on it regardless of whether the results show a loss or a gain. I haven’t missed a weigh-in or a meeting since I started, except for when my regular meeting time was closed due to holidays or weather.

I view the scale sort of like a performance review. It’s feedback telling me how I did the prior week, if my actions and choices were effective, and if not, where I need to change course. Perhaps I wasn’t quite as diligent at tracking and choosing my foods as I could have been. Perhaps I didn’t get in enough exercise. Perhaps I was stressed or didn’t drink enough water, both of which can help you hold on to weight.

One week, we had extremely hot temperatures and I knew I was retaining water (ankles swelling) and I was under stress plus PMS. The scale showed that I gained 4 pounds. Unheard of for me in one week. But I didn’t deter or give up because I kind of knew why the weight gain. Sure enough, within a couple weeks, all that was gone, plus more.

I’m eager for tonight’s weigh in. It’s been a tough last couple weeks (location was closed last Monday for holiday) and I’m eager for the feedback. My mom’s been hospitalized and I’ve been extremely busy taking care of her needs and getting her situated in a nursing facility. That means my regular routine has been completely disrupted. I’ve been driving more, sitting more, eating from cafeteria salad bars and menus, and not getting enough sleep (also a factor in weight loss). I know people can gain weight when life happens like this, so I’m eager to see if the countermeasures I took worked. I chose mostly salads for my meals, and even if my dressing wasn’t low fat, I used it sparingly. I tried to take the stairs whenever I could, and walk around the outside of the hospital to my car, instead of through it indoors. Essentially, I looked for every opportunity to add steps to my route because I didn’t have time to bicycle or go for a run.

I no longer fear or hate the scale. It makes me anxious sometimes, yes, but overall, it has become my friend. Gains one week don’t deter me any more because I’ve kept at this long enough to know that overall, I’m going in the right direction. image

Chart above is my actual weight loss progress as tracked at Weight Watchers online eTools.

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My Running Route

September 4, 2009

I was commenting over on Run 4 Change (My Angle on Weight Loss) blog about how I did three miles in thirty minutes the other day. I didn’t think this was so impressive because I didn’t have anything to measure it against. However, according to Jason, “doing your three miles in 30 minutes is major [...]

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