Quote:
Originally Posted by makinthechange
Is it a hinderance do you think? I was weighing once a week, but the last few months Ive found myself stepping on the scale everyday. Im thinking about telling someone to hide the scale until my weigh day, I think its making me discouraged, because everytime I see a pound go up...I get sad.
I think it depends on the individual. From personal experience, I could not handle the daily ups and downs. I used to weigh myself 2-3 times a day (sometimes more!) and it was a complete emotional roller coaster. When the scale was down, I was euphoric, motivated, happy with myself. When the scale was up, I was devastated, felt like all my hard work was useless, felt like giving up.
When I changed my life in July 2004, I very firmly made myself get off the roller coaster. I limited my weigh-ins to Sunday morning - get up, pee, strip, weigh, record weight in an excel spread sheet (and my special secret - if I didn't like the weight on Sunday, I allowed myself to weigh myself on Monday, I usually saw some positive change on one of those days).
Graphing my weight loss was really helpful to me, because although I had a few weeks where I didn't lose any weight, or "only" a pound, I really loved looking at the overall downward progression of the chart over months. I could really SEE progress and that I was really losing weight.
Other weight-loss goals are also good. Definitely get your measurements (I waited 2 months to measure, I so wish I had done it on day 1). Make some exercise goals, even if you don't lose any weight that month and the tape measure won't budge, at least you can give yourself a shiny silver star sticker for making your exercise goals for the week. Keep a pair of big pants, try them on and watch them slide down!
And definitely definitely remember all of the factors that can affect the scale that have nothing to do with the weight on your body you want to lose. A glass of water is heavy, dinner is heavy, your period might make you gain 3-4 pounds, salt can make you retain water. Try to wrap your feelings of success around non-scale related factors so you can stay positive and motivated!