In the beginning - were you ever afraid to wake up and have all the pounds back??

You're on Page 1 of 2
Go to
  • This might sound really neurotic....but I wake up every morning afraid that all my weight will have come back since yesterday's morning weigh-in.

    I have just started this way of eating. I can't tell much of a difference, but I have lost 16#. Sometimes I'm worried that it was all water weight, and that I'll weigh-in one day and it will all be back. I try to tell myself that I probably couldn't gain 16# in one day....even in water.

    Crazy, yes??
  • I didn't do that exactly, but the first few times the scale went down I assumed it was just a fluke. It probably wasn't til I'd lost ten lbs that I realized it was really working.
  • While I never woke up worried it would come back, I did fear the creep of pounds back or of the scale moving uncontrollably upward and me not knowing why. Fortunately, after doing this for a few months I figured out neither of those things could happen so long as I was honest with myself and stuck to my plan. So that took the fear out of it.
  • I still felling worry ... it is like a dream come true. Enjoy it
  • i'm still afraid i'll do that
  • When I was too scared to weigh-in for a long duration (1-2 months), I thought I undid all I did but thankfully I maintained. I've learned now not to avoid the scale... when I do, I'm not accountable and it's super hard to summon up the courage to step on it again.
  • I was more afraid I was going to wake up one day and lose all the motivation to keep going.
  • I'm less worried about suddenly waking up and finding all the pounds have come back as I am about slowly creeping into old habits and waking up one morning, months later, only to realise I've undone all the progress I've made.
  • Thanks for your replies!

    I guess our fears reflect what mental stage of the weight loss we're in. I still don't really believe it's real.

    Looking forward to truly believing this is possible!
  • I dreamed last night that I ate some off plan things that aren't even in my house. I swear I could even taste them. I woke up and was upset with myself. I realized it must have been a dream and had to tell myself OK it was a dream...It was a dream.... I'm not even that fond of the food I dreamed about. When I weighed myself I saw a loss.
  • Oddly enough, I haven't had nearly as much fear this time around, but mainly I think because I told myself the number wasn't as important as the lifestyle (initially I decided to commit to changes whether or not they resulted in any weight loss at all - and for two years that's exactly what happened - healthy changes, but no weight loss).

    Still, even the no weight loss years were productive. I managed to keep off the first 20 lbs (that were lost without trying after being prescribed a cpap for sleep apnea - when the doctor said I'd probably lose some weight without trying I though he was crazy - I've never - or rather had - never lost weight without trying.

    I also regained a great deal of mobility and strength, so no-loss wasn't no-progress.

    From decades of weight loss attempts, I knew that my food plan wasn't going to be my problem. The only way I could regain was to stop trying. In the past, I did that whenever the weight loss slowed down. When it seemed that the efforts weren't worth the pitiful results.

    It was not because I was failing, but because I was interpreting slow success as failure. Even not-gaining is success. That's what I didn't understand.

    Now I weigh every day, but I celebrate no-gains just as much as I do losses. My first priority is to the healthy habits themselves (eating a balanced diet and exercising are important no matter what I weigh), my second priority is to weight maintenance, and my third is weight loss.

    Weight loss is slower this way, but I've taken "giving up" off the table as a possibility. Even if I were to start inexplicably gaining, it wouldn't give me a reason to give up, because maintenance is still a high priority, and the habits themselves are even more so.

    My motto has become "maybe just one more pound." I don't look at the 150 lbs to go, but at the success of 88 lbs gone, and "maybe just one more."

    I've been on a downward trend for six years now (actively losing the last three) and it's dawned on me that I've never before had a downward trend of more than two years before, and I've never had a no-gain (not counting small fluctuations) trend of more than four years. I've broken all sorts of prior "records."

    I know that I could go back to my old habits if I chose to, but that doesn't just happen, it's a choice. As long as I choose to weigh daily and keep maintenance/loss as a priority, I don't have to worry about backsliding. Before I'd done it, I might have said it was impossible, but doing it has proved it very possible.
  • Quote: I dreamed last night that I ate some off plan things that aren't even in my house. I swear I could even taste them. I woke up and was upset with myself. I realized it must have been a dream and had to tell myself OK it was a dream...It was a dream.... I'm not even that fond of the food I dreamed about. When I weighed myself I saw a loss.
    I had the same thing happen when I quit smoking. It was very upsetting for those few minutes until I realized it hadn't happened. Hopefully I'll be able to be as strong willed about my food choices as I have with cigarettes.
  • me too! please tell me it eventually goes away! lol
  • Quote: I dreamed last night that I ate some off plan things that aren't even in my house. I swear I could even taste them. I woke up and was upset with myself. I realized it must have been a dream and had to tell myself OK it was a dream...It was a dream.... I'm not even that fond of the food I dreamed about. When I weighed myself I saw a loss.
    That exact thing has happened to me! I had a dream once that I just ate and ate and ate mounds of junk food but couldn't stop. And then felt sooooo bad after. I woke up and almost cried because I was so happy it was just a dream. Then I was super good with my food the rest of the day.
  • I think that fear will sink in when I hit goal... I fear getting to goal and having the pounds come back for whatever reasons. I actually think this fear stops me from getting to my goal sometimes!