Exercise Anxiety

Fitness can be a great source of anxiety for some and definitely happened to me at the beginning of my journey.  I didn’t even know what my body could do with all those extra pounds packed on.  Would people laugh when they saw me trying to run? Would everyone look at me funny like “She’s too fat to exercise?” When I look back at it now it seems silly but felt very real at the beginning.

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Set Goals! 

When you begin working out, even just walking, make sure you set goals for what you would like to be able to do.  They can be as simple as walking to get the mail everyday to start.  I set a goal for myself at the very beginning to be able to run a mile without stopping.  I have painful memories from my school days of running a mile and being one of the last ones to finish everytime.  Every adult should be able to run a mile right? Well tomorrow is the day!  My loving friend who has been on her own journey to health adopted running right away.  She promised to run with me and not allow me to stop.  I feel like I still can’t do it on my own, but I think it’s fine to rely on others.  She’s confident that I can do it.

Anxiety……..

I consider myself and anxious person and I often think I’m much more naturally anxious than most people.  I thought that when I would run in the neighborhood, people were probably watching.  I felt anxiety when I joined the gym that I wouldn’t be able to keep up with everyone else and they would wonder what the heck I was doing there.  I still get anxious some days before class because I’m just not sure I can do it.  BUT what I’ve proven to myself over and over is that I can at least try.

 

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No One Cares!

What I quickly discovered is that no one cares! When I see overweight people exercising now, I want to shout words of encouragement to them.  I want them to keep going and know that they can do it too!  When I started at the gym, no one judged me (at least on the outside).  They were very welcoming and encouraging as I got stronger. I couldn’t do what they could do but that only makes sense.  I’m a NEW member for  a reason.  Truth is, everyone has things they are working on and most people are too busy doing their thing to notice you.  You won’t be able to do what you did in high school.  You won’t be able to do everything you wanted to do.  BUT THAT’S OK.  After dedicated work, you will be able to do those things again.  I discovered that there was an athlete inside.  That athlete can’t get enough and can do amazing things that I never knew I could do.  Now, when I look for workouts online, I think I could do that with some practice instead of just laughing and searching for memes.

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So tomorrow I will run a mile.  What if I fail? What if I can’t do it? What if I die? Well, not matter what at least I can say  I tried.  If I don’t make it, I will try again, and I probably won’t die.  Maybe I’ll make it and it will be the best feeling ever.  That to me is worth the risk.

 

Know Yourself

When starting any kind of diet or life change don’t forget to consider the emotional side of change as well as the physical.  Today’s topic is about knowing yourself and triggers that may lead you to success or disaster along your journey.

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When I asked a friend who has been losing weight with me what her number one piece of advice would be for people starting a journey.  She without hesitation said, “You have to know Yourself.” At first I thought this was a strange response, but the more I thought about it, the more it made sense.  At my core I am a very controlling person.  Sometimes I feel like a puppet-master guiding all of the pieces in my life to where I think they belong. I am also very impatient with myself and hold myself to very strict set of expectations.  So how did this transfer to my weight loss?

Every morning I am excited to get on the scale.  I reflect on the good choices I’d made the day before or maybe ponder some poor choices I’d made.  Before I get on the scale, there’s a number I’m hoping to see.  Usually I don’t see it but sometimes I do.  However, I have to pep talk myself that whatever I see is fine.  Half a pound gained is not a failure.  30 pounds gained would be a failure. All through my weight loss I had to adjust my expectation of success and failure.  Would success be 3 pounds a day? NO! Is failure anytime the scale goes up? NO! I had to learn that I could mostly control the number I saw but I had to let go when I didn’t see what I was expecting.  I had to learn forgiveness!

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Some people have told me I have amazing will power through this process.  However, I’m not sure that’s true. I hold myself to high expectations in all areas of my life.  I push myself and consider it failure if I’m not the best. When I decided what I wanted to do with my health, that was the end of the discussion.  If I decided no chips for a month, I ate no chips for a month.  If I decided that a certain food was awesome, I’d eat it all the time.  It’s not just discipline, it’s who I really am to the core. While this might sound like a blessing, it created problems as well.  Sometimes I would hold myself too accountable and would then get depressed for a whole day if I didn’t see the results I wanted.  I still have to remind myself, it’s a process.

So as you are on your own journey, you will discover things about your self.  Maybe you get really close to a goal and then pig out for three days and sabotage yourself. Do you do this in other areas of your life? Maybe you struggle with a meal plan because it feels like too many rules.  Do you struggle with rules in general? If you know yourself well, you can tailor your eating habits to what your pit falls may be.  If you know for sure that you need ‘rewards’ in your diet, schedule them.  If you need one meal a week to eat whatever you want, factor that in.  Knowing who you really are and your natural habits will help you be successful in losing weight.

Does Fat and Happy Exist?

photoToday’s post is brought to you by the free wi-fi and air conditioning of a local Starbucks!  It’s hot out there folks; remember to get lots of water to stay hydrated and aid your weight loss!

Today’s topic is one that I’ve been pondering for a while and still haven’t found the answer to.  Comments and thoughts are appreciated.

Does Fat and Happy Exist?

When I was 125 pounds overweight, I thought I knew what happiness was.  I thought my life was fine and I really didn’t notice the inconveniences of being overweight. Even though I wasn’t happy at the base of my life, I thought I was fine with how I looked.  I’ve always been a confident person who experienced lots of love and success. BUT I was fooling myself.  It bothered me that I weighed more than my 6 foot tall husband.  It bothered me to ask if there are any 2x’s in the back.  It bothered me when men would hold doors for other women but not me.

I can say that for me, fat and happy will never exist.  Some people might think this is narcissistic but I don’t think that’s the truth.  The world runs on healthy and beautiful people.  I might not agree with it or support it, but that won’t be changing any time soon.  I believe that being thinner has advanced my career, changed how strangers see me and makes the world generally more accessible to me.  I recently took a flight and didn’t have to worry about the size of the seat.  I’ll be going to an amusement park in a few weeks and will be able to ride any ride I want. When I go to restaurants, I never have to worry about where they might seat us and if I will fit. Why? Because the world is built for the average size person who is healthy and active.  We are not meant to be so overweight. Our bodies don’t want to carry all that around, we just force it to.

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When you’re overweight, life is much different for you.  Some of these habits I hadn’t even noticed until I didn’t have to do them anymore.  I can get in and out of stores so much faster simply by being able to squeeze through small spaces.  Men hold doors for me now (more on that later) and people never look at me weird in health food stores or regular clothing stores.  To the everyday public, I just look like a normal girl.

I am now a firm believer in “You’re outsides match your insides.” I’m still dealing with my feelings and reactions when I see morbidly obese people. (again….more on that later) However, recently my gut reaction is DEATH. I think this is because dying early or developing a serious illness from obesity was a huge fear of mine and my biggest reason for getting healthy. I want them to know the risks and get fired up about it.  NO ONE should have to die early from too many cheeseburgers.  When I see someone that is healthy weight and clearly a runner or active person it leads me to believe the are also mentally healthy.  When I see someone severely overweight, I wonder what else is happening in their life that doesn’t allow them to value themselves.

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Now, I’ve made some bold statements in this post that were meant to make you think or even argue with my opinion.  PLEASE DO!  I’m still sorting all of this out and am genuinely curious what everyone thinks!

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REALLY?!? Are those my only options? What about healthy and happy! I’d like to punch whomever made this meme in the face.

Happy Denver Day!

995660_474269999314042_107887170_nToday marks the two year anniversary of my hubby and I arriving in Denver to chase our dreams of a different life.  In the past two years I have gained so much in my life.  I’ve found independence, confidence, my marriage is stronger, my mind is stronger and definitely my body is stronger.

Two years ago we knew it was time to make a change.  We were very unhappy with our life in Illinois where we were living.  I loved my students and coworkers but hated my job.  My hubby was scared of getting fired every single day.  Our marriage was suffering and we rarely went out with friends or family.  The Illinois life style is much different than Colorado.   Walking or getting physical activity is definitely not the norm.  Foods are always fried and ranch dressing is considered a side dish.  Now, I could have changed my life in Illinois.  I’m sure if I looked harder at menus and nutritional facts I could have accomplished the same weight loss.  However, I don’t think I would have DONE it.  We were very stuck in our life there.

I was terrified to move several states away from my family and everything I had known.  We had a small safety net waiting for us in Denver and we just hoped for the best.  It was the best decision we’ve ever made.  We are now happier and stronger than we’ve ever been.

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So why put this on my blog?  I know not everyone can or will just up and move.  However, such a drastic change in my life allowed me to see what else I wasn’t happy with and take control of it.  Is there someone holding you back? Why haven’t you done something about your weight whether it’s 10 pounds or 100 pounds? Is there an area of your life that needs attention that is manifesting itself in your weight? Sometimes I would look at my life and think “What’s the Point?” If I can’t change anything, why change one thing? I discovered it was a change reaction.  When I took control of small areas of my life, it lead to me taking back control of my WHOLE life and extending it for many healthy years on this beautiful planet.  Make a small change today that could change your life!

At the Start Line

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I think the hardest part about starting a diet is just that, starting.  For me there was no real start date.  I didn’t wake up one morning and decide ‘Today’s the day!”.  I made small changes through time and then realized I was dieting.  I think there are a few questions to answer before and as you begin a diet plan.

1.  Why am I overweight?

2.  What do I want from losing weight?

3.  Why am I doing it now?

For me, I didn’t want to be on a ‘diet’.  I have tried diet plans in the past like Weight Watchers, the Special K plan, and Slim Fast.  None of them worked for me because I felt like they weren’t plans for real life. I needed to learn how to eat in the real world and not be obese.  So I’ve never considered myself on a diet, just making healthier choices with the options that I have. Turns out other people make these choices naturally.  I just didn’t naturally make those choices before now.

My Answers – I’ve supplied my answers to those questions to give you a few things to think about.  Perhaps your answers are not even close to mine but I do think they are all things you need to be aware of and dealing with when starting a diet.

2014 Response:  1.  Why am I overweight? I always knew I was overweight.  I was not in denial about my health.  But I can honestly say I didn’t know it was as bad as it was.  I found a way to convince myself I wasn’t THAT bad.  I could get my mail and walk to have coffee with friends.  That’s good enough right? I finally got to a point where that wasn’t enough for me anymore.  I wanted to be able to do all kinds of things.  So, how had I got here? I think the answer was a combination of a lot of things.  Since I worked a very intensive full time job (teaching K-12 music) I didn’t have the ‘time’ to think and worry about being healthy.  Being healthy and worrying about calories takes a ton of time and energy that I had convinced myself I didn’t really have.  Another reason was I felt I wasn’t taught to care about health. (Sorry Mom!) As a child, I don’t remember being taught what was healthy and how to balance eating with activity.  My adult mind understood what calories were and I was obviously eating more than I was burning.  However, ‘a balanced diet’ was not naturally on my mind.  I think the last reason I was so overweight is because I didn’t care.  I have a husband that loves me at any size so why do I need to be thin? I would bother me if a student made a comment about my weight and I felt uncomfortable in social situations but felt like it was my ‘role’ to be the fat one.  As an adult you start to find your place in everyone’s life and I thought mine was the fat friend.  Would dropping weight change who I was? At the base of it, I was terrified to lose weight.  It seems silly to say that now because being overweight is so much more scary.  But I was SCARED.  I didn’t know if my skin would shrink back.  I knew if I got healthy kids would be much more closer to our future.  I was scared I would change who I was and I loved the person that I had become.  She did a lot of amazing things. (PS…..I was that overweight.  When I look at this picture now, I don’t even know who that is!)

2016 Response: When I read that back, it’s still all true.  And for those that are wondering, my skin didn’t shrink back.  But the overall journey was harder than I imagined but 10X more rewarding than I ever thought it could be.  Now I know though that I’ll always be overweight, in my head. I don’t mean “I’ll always think I’m fat”.  I mean I’ll always know what it was like. I’ll always have issues with food and anxiety over if I’m doing it right.  Once you’ve been in the Fat Girls Club, it’s membership for life.  Other members might not recognize me anymore but I’ll always be thankful for my new health because of where I came from. 

2017 Response: Well, that person below seems even more far away now.  I feel less and less connected to her at all.  In some ways I think that’s awesome.  My life barely resembles hers.  Most people are shocked to find out where I’ve come from.  BUT, in other ways I think that’s sad.  I don’t ever want to forget where I’ve come from.  My skin continues to heal and look better but hasn’t changed much in the last year.  I’ve continued to drop body fat in exchange for muscle, my weight mostly maintains on the scale.  I worry less about ‘doing it right’.  I pretty much know when I’m making good choices and conscious bad choices.  As I rebalance my workouts, I rebalance my diet. 

2019 Response: Wow.  Every year I just get further from the person that I used to be.  In the last few years I’ve separated what parts of myself were “Fat Kim” and “Teacher Kim” and I’m finally learning to just be Kim.  The more stable my mentality becomes the more stable my eating has been.  A more stable work environment (I’m now a full time fitness trainer) has provided a more stable mentality. All of this has lead to losing the fear that I’ll gain the weight back. For the first time ever, maybe my whole life, my world seems stable. I’m starting to dig through my trust issues, and the more I learn to trust others, the more I learn to trust myself.  While my weight loss journey is still ‘over’ the unpacking of how I got that way is still continuing.

 

0112014 Response: 2.  What do I want from losing weight? I wanted to look NORMAL.  I constantly felt judged being in stores where I couldn’t fit the merchandise.  I was tired to my hubby pulling the table towards him when we sat in booths.  I was tired of crossing my fingers for a 2X shirt when they would always be mediums or larges. I wanted strangers to look at me and think looked totally normal.  When I started I didn’t set out to lose this much weight.  I set three attainable goals in the first month.  I thought when I got to my goals that would be “good enough’. 1.  Walk the stairs in my building without having to catch my breath, 2.  Fit into normal non-plus size clothes, 3. Run the mile loop across the street.  I wanted to reach those three goals regardless of what number was on the scale.  I knew that would allow me to do other things that I wanted to do like 5k walks, hiking with friends and never having to worry about friends inviting me to events that I couldn’t physically do. 

2016 Response:  Now that all the weight is gone and then some, I realize how small and big those goals were.  They were literally life changing and life saving.  I saved my own life in the last 3 years.  I’ve now fallen in love with health and fitness so much that I consider a career change and I’m training for an amateur competition.  Those goals seem like such a small rung on the ladder that I’ve climbed.  But at the same time, crossing each one of those goals, felt just as good.  I’ll never forget running my first mile.   I’ll never forget trying on my first non-plus size pants.  It felt the same as crossing the finish line of my first half marathon.  It felt like winning my first real sparring match.  It’s all about perspective and where you go. 

2017 Response: This year I actually went through the process of gaining weight and it was glorious. 🙂  When I was fighting at 132 pounds, I was having to do every possible thing to keep my body at that weight.  It was not healthy and I quickly went back up to 140 pounds.  Now I fluctuate between 140-145.  I’m still just in love with health and fitness, if not more and I AM changing my career and life to incorporate fitness.  I had a lot of successes this last year too: I competed in the Golden Gloves State Boxing Tournament and lost.  I’ll never forget those 10 minutes.  I completed hundreds of miles in every type of weather.  I’ll never forget being called a peer by a fitness trainer I admire.  I’ll never forget learning to climb my first rope or getting my internship position.  It felt just as awesome as completing the Funky Monkey 2.0 in my 2nd Tough Mudder or running into Folsom Field on Memorial Day during the BB10K.  So many amazing memories and opportunities that I’ve experienced because of the health.

2017 Response: I don’t even know where to begin.  The memories just keep coming.  We’ve travelled the country in our little Honda Element that we named Ernie. Ernie has taken us to the Pacific Northwest, San Francisco, Mardi Gras and Santa Fe. We sleep in the tiniest places and sleep amongst our gear. We drive through the night and hike to new places. We walk through the cities while no one else is awake. I couldn’t have done any of these things before and I would have been uncomfortable the whole time. I have started a whole new career that is even more fulfilling than teaching.  I thought I would be a teacher forever; turns out being a trainer is almost the same thing.  I get to share my story, help others on their journey, and spend all my time at the gym! I feel like I’m making a real hands on difference in lives.

 

2014 Response: 3.  Why am I doing it now? I knew I was at a turning point in my life.  My hubby and I had recently moved to Colorado and were discussing the future.  I wanted to have a baby and when I was pregnant, I wanted people to know I was pregnant.  I had always feared that when I was heavy and pregnant, no one would even know.  It was time.  I was running out of my ‘young years’ and needed to make a change before I started the next step of my life.  If I couldn’t give my child a healthy environment for the first 9 months before they are even born, how am I going to give them the skills to be a healthy person? It was time to grow up and make adult decisions for my future.  I love my husband more than I can explain.  We are partners in everything and are a strong team.  I began thinking, “is carrying this extra weight worth it?”  I knew that being overweight caused all sorts of health problems that I was lucky to not be experiencing yet.  But what about the future? Would being so overweight rob me of years with my husband in the future? 5 years? 10? 15? I couldn’t be so selfish to overeat and not make healthy choices at the cost of a future with the man I love.

2016 Response: And I could not be more happy that I did.  In the last three years since I’ve started this journey I’ve been given so much and I’ve been able to give so much.  I’ve met people I would have never known.  I’ve done things I never thought possible.  I SAVED MY LIFE. And it just gets better.  Do it.  Do it now.  The 2012 me wouldn’t believe the 2014 me.  The 2014 me wouldn’t believe the 2016 me.  What will the 2018 me be like? I can’t wait to find out. 

2017 Response: Here’s 2017 me checking in.  In the last year I’ve been changing so much.  I’ve made a lot of great changes and hard changes. I’ve met new friends and let old ones go.  I feel like this will be a transition year for me and  I’m still just as eager to know what the 2018 me will be like.  Maybe she will be a mom 😉

2019: I honestly wasn’t going to update this post today, and then I read that last line.  My how times have changed.  For many reasons, only some of which I’ll share here, we have decided not to have kids. I love this new life that I’ve created for myself and I don’t want to be stuck to a biological clock of what/when/where I can enjoy this new life.  Kids are still in our future; just not out of this body. Having kids was one of my original reasons for losing the weight and I’d never be sorry I did. Every choice has created a domino effect in my life and sometimes you’re allowed to remove some of the dominos.

Hello World!

Wow……my first blog on my first website!  SO EXCITING!

This is a site for anyone that is thinking about losing weight and getting on with living!

Hopefully you will find my own journey both inspirational and attainable.  To be clear, I conquered my obesity without the use of a ‘diet’, pills, surgery, support groups, personal trainer,  or an eating disorder.  This is a blog about the real deal of losing weight and everything that goes with it.  I won’t censor my feelings (but maybe the language!) or my experience along my journey.  Please explore the ‘About Me’ tab if you are interested in where I started and where I am now.

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When I look back at my journey, the weight came off in five different ‘phases’ by which I will organize my posts:

Prephase – Before I started losing weight

Phase One – My first thirty pounds

Phase Two – Fall of 2013

Phase Three – Adding Fitness

Phase Four – Maintenance (Not there yet!)

That way you can see what you need and not what you don’t.

 

Hopefully this blog will be a place where you can ask questions, hear the truth about losing weight and get healthy!