Quote:
Originally Posted by canadianwoman
As long as the scale goes downward instead of upward, I'm happy.
Oh I agree, I just noticed that we seemed to be focusing in on just food and I wanted to point out that exercise is usually included in a lifestyle change as well. =)
Quote:
Originally Posted by lin43
124chicksinger, I have to agree with you. For some reason--illogical as it is---I tend to get annoyed at the insistence on using the terms "journey" or "lifestyle change." I guess the common sense/efficient part of me just wants to say, "Oh give me a break---just say diet. We all know what you mean!" The terms "journey" and/or "lifestyle change" seems too p.c. or something---I don't know. Like I said, my feeling seems illogical, even to me, but when I read your post, I had to laugh because I feel the same way.
It's not about being "P.C.", it's about what they imply for the people using the terms. For you, a diet is something that you will apparently be on until you die. For most, whether they realize it or not, a diet is something they go on until they drop the weight and then stop. The point of using the term "lifestyle change" has
nothing to do with being "P.C." but rather the notion that once the weight comes off, the changes don't disappear - they continue. When I was on a "diet", I removed a lot of foods from my menu and I only stayed on it until I lost the weight. I stopped as soon as it was gone and, well, you see how that worked out for me... I am making lifestyle changes now in the sense that they won't stop once the weight is off. I won't suddenly put down the water bottle and pick up Mt Dew again or stop eating yogurt on a regular basis and open a bag of chips. I make changes with one, much bigger idea in mind - what sort of healthy changes can I make that I can live with forever? And they get made gradually, not necessarily rapidly. The point is stability and sustainability.
I linked a webpage on Livestrong earlier up and they seem to be making the same distinction - temporary versus long term.
"According to the American Council on Exercise, or ACE, only about 5 percent of dieters successfully keep the weight off. In fact, most dieters regain a third of the weight within one year, and almost all of the weight in three to five years.
When you reach your weight loss goal on a diet, you will probably stop dieting, and the weight will slowly pile back on. But when you reach your weight loss goals through healthy lifestyle changes, those changes have become a permanent part of your life. Even if you relax a bit, you will probably maintain many of those healthy changes. If you are looking to lose weight for the long haul, you must make a commitment to permanently change certain aspects of your lifestyle.
Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/397081-diet-vs-lifestyle-change/#ixzz1lSWQdUbB"
Whether you agree with the terms or not, most people, when they hear that you are on a diet, don't expect you to still be on the diet 20 years after you have lost the weight. The term "diet" generally means the same thing to a rather large number of people. They think of you watching what you eat until the weight is off. After that, if you tell them you are still on a "diet", they don't generally understand why you, of all people, would be dieting. When friends offer me junk food, I don't say, "I'm on a diet", I say, "I don't eat junk food" - BAM, permanent, not gonna be undone once the weight goes, I simply don't eat it. They consider me a little strange for cutting out "good food" but it's just how I live now. How many times have you heard of someone going on a diet just to lose a few pounds to fit into a nice dress for an event or something? The term "lifestyle change" came up to differentiate between the two or at least that's how I understand it.
EDIT: I understand that you admitted it's illogical but I just wanted to address it anyways. xD