Quote:
Originally Posted by Rikku
Kaplod:
I'm just tired. I'm so very tired of this battle I've been fighting since I was 8 years old.. and I do not need some person (not you) telling me that they gurantee I am going to binge. How disrespectful. Have they no tact at all? Surely there is a better way to reach out to people.
While I appriciate Kaplod, your experiences, please try to remember that sometimes people can still get hurt behind these screens. Because yes, I struggle every day. I will take your words of experience and study into consideration, but it takes a lot for many people to open up, even to strangers.
Believe me, I understand the struggle and the difficulties. We all do, because we've been there, and sometimes we don't use the best words, because we don't know what they are, and even if we did we wouldn't always use them, because we're human.
Some people are going to come across as whiny, angry, bossy, arrogant, judgemental, lazy, excuse-making... you name it, you're going to see it on this board and all the rest. Tact isn't everyone's best suit, and sometimes "tough love" really is what someone NEEDS to hear (maybe you're not that person, but it doesn't change the fact that no one here can guess what you need - you're going to find the same on all the boards).
If you're not strong enough to have a VERY thick skin when asking questions of strangers, then you may not be ready to be here. I'm trying to be gentle with this, but there's no way to say gently that if you care much about what strangers think of you, this is not the place to be (nor is the internet in general).
This is a public forum, and you're going to get every kind of response, and people are going to usually respond in the way THEY'VE found most helpful.
Personally, I don't find "tough love" very supportive, but I'm not hurt by seeing it, because I've been told by many here that it was the blunt, no-nonsense, and even tough and angry posts that got their attention and their motivation fired up. They may be giving you what THEY needed when they were in your spot. You can't fault folks for doing what worked for them.
So if you're not strong enough to face ANYTHING that someone might say, you might want to shore up that strength. I can't guarantee that you'll never be hurt by a comment people make here (or anywhere) - because there is never a guarantee of that whenever honest opinions are involved. Sometimes the truth hurts.
You need to be prepared for that here and on any weight loss site, because not everyone is going to agree with you and some people are going to believe that the path you've chosen is doomed to failure. I am one of those people, and while I don't want to hurt you emotionally, if it means you take me seriously I'm willing to hurt you emotionally to save you physically if I can - because I've destroyed my health and I know people who have died doing what you're doing. If my post helps you stop before you jeopardize your life and your health, I'll gladly accept the blame for your feelings being hurt.
I understand your desperation, and know where it comes from. I've been battling my weight and severe morbid obesity since KINDERGARTEN - that's more than 41 YEARS, and by the time I was 13, I was so tired of fighting the battle, so frustrated and desperate that even though I knew even then that it wasn't a "good" way to lose the weight, my mother and I (for she was as desperate about my weight as I was) agreed to amphetemine diet bills - in 8th grade! (I'd already been on dozens and dozens of crash diets by then).
Even when I KNEW for sure that the crash dieting was a recipe for failure - knowing that I ALWAYS gained more than I lost (and by always I mean HUNDREDS of attempts at crash dieting) - even though I knew that the ultimate price would probably be MORE weight gain - I still had to "take a chance" on the crash diet, because I didn't think slow, and sensible would or even COULD work for me. I was so wrong, but I didn't have the patience to give it a sustained effort. I was too panicked.
It's like those people who burn to death in a fire, because they're pushing against a door that opens inward. Every instinct says "push, and push harder" and they don't think to pull.
"Slow and gradual," was the one method I never could stick with, because I'd get too impatient and panicky about getting the weight off. I wanted it off yesterday (if I could survive the chain-saw method, I would have tried it).
I could take any pain or torture in the short term, if rapid weight loss was the potential reward. Every hair-brained scheme and stupid way to diet - I've done it - more than once, and more than a dozen time each in most cases (sometimes hundreds of times choosing the same path that failed the prior hundreds).
It's hard to believe that crash dieting isn't the best way to lose weight, because it IS the fastest. It's also the hardest to sustain. It's also so dangerous that no one should undertake it without a medical supervision (and yet almost everyone who does it, doesn't take that step. They don't even get a normal checkup first). And because of that, many people die or are seriously injured every year by crash dieting - from heart damage and cardiac arrest, hyponatremia, gallbladder issues, nd other illnesses and horrible side effects (hair loss isn't dangerous, but it sure is embarassing).
If crash dieting worked in even a small, but significant minority, you would be hearing that. You will find a few cases if you search hard enough, but for every success story, you'll hear thousands of failure stories, so which do you think is more likely?
This would be so easy to say if I were just trying to hurt you. I'd call you some nasty names (probably get kicked off of this site), insult your heritage or intelligence and that would be the end of it. Telling someone something they don't want to hear is gut-wrenching, especially when you suspect it's information that could save their life. I know where I'd be if I'd continued with the crash dieting, 200 lbs heavier or dead (and dead is probably more likely, because I was inches away from it, and even diagnosed with a terminal illness before I was willing to really go out on a limb and try the last thing on earth I wanted to try - healthy, sensible, slow weight loss).
Thank God I did, or I would STILL be fighting the hopeless battle, because biochemistry (especially neurochemistry) tries to prevent us from choosing starvation. It's much like holding you're breath. You can do it for a long time, but eventually your hindbrain forces you do what you don't want to do. You probably won't pass out and eat while unconscious, although people on starvation diets have sleepwalked to the kitchen and binged during their sleep only to find the wrappers in the morning. It's virtually impossible to fight biochemistry on this, and that's why the failure rate is so high.
I wish you the best really, but I'm not willing to do any more than I've done. It's too painful for me to watch someone self-destruct and refuse to see it (or at least acknowledge that there could be a problem). Lashing out at people trying to help is normal, and I can accept that, but I can't help where the help isn't wanted. You have every right to make any decision you want. I do suspect though that some day, maybe in a few years, you'll be exactly where I and other posters are - trying to deter someone from making this mistake out of fear and desperation. We all literally have been there, and most of us realize we have no idea how to stop it, so we try anything we can think of - even rudeness and meanness to "shake" sense into someone (I personally don't understand how or why that works, but I've seen it work, so I can't be too judgemental of it).
I've hurt myself trying to help others, and that's something I'm not willing to do, so this will probably be my last post in this thread. I wish you the best, really and hope you find a sustainable path that doesn't harm your mental or physical health. If you want to do this, at least do it right and get the medical supervision that can catch the deadliest of side effects before they become fatal.