I read all the posts about how we handle compliments (and the ones about snide remarks, too) with great interest. It never occurred to me to see it as a bad thing when someone else noticed I was losing weight and complimented me. I was surfing around the different forums and read a post from a year or so ago where someone said they wished they would lose so slowly that no one would even notice and then the memory of them being a former fat person would just cease to exist. That intrigued me because I would have hated that! The slow pace - not the fact that no one would remember me as fat!
I was not a heavy child. I was raised without fast food and there was never junk in the house because that's just the way it was in the 50s and 60s. I gained some weight (about 35 pounds - not a lot by my later standards) in my mid 20s. I lived on my own in a different town from where I was raised and no one but me was making the choices. I took it off when I turned 30 and kept it off for several years, even with a pregnancy thrown in. Then I started gaining in my mid to late 30s and got to be over 250 pounds. I stayed there until I turned 60 last year. Does all this - not having been overweight as a child/teen/young adult - serve to change my perspective? I read posts where people say they can't see themselves as thin even though they've lost lots of weight. I don't think I ever saw myself as fat! In my mind, I was still the same as I was at 30. Yes, I'd see photos. I'd see my reflection. I KNEW I was fat. I just didn't THINK I was fat, if that makes any kind of sense.
Now when people notice, I just think I'm back to normal and thank them for noticing. Someone stopped me on the way out of church tonight. I don't even know her name. She said she had been meaning to tell me for a long time that I looked wonderful and she had noticed. How could I take that as anything but a genuine compliment? To negate that uplifting feeling by thinking that for someone to comment on the fact that I lost weight, they first must have noticed that I needed to lose weight, makes no sense to me.
I wish there was a way to make sure that everyone who is losing weight (or not gaining weight) sees it as an accomplishment. And that every compliment is earned and deserved. I know there are a few who criticize. I'm not talking about them today. Just the people who notice and say something that was meant to be kind and encouraging. We need to accept those comments for the help and support they are. When someone says they like your new haircut or new hair color, for example, it doesn't mean they thought your old hair was bad. Though not exactly the same, I think this really is very close.
Let's try to accept compliments for what they are. Let them carry us through the rough spots. And remember how difficult it might have been for someone to comment, especially like the woman at church tonight who doesn't even know me. I try to make a point of telling parents of young children who are behaving exceptionally well in adult situations (restaurants, department stores, waiting at the bank, etc.) that I think their children are very well behaved and that they must be very proud of them. Most thank me and agree that the kids are very good, The kids usually smile from ear to ear. One time, though, the father shot the compliment to pieces by saying, "But you should see what horrible brats they are the rest of the time. You'd never say that if you knew." The 3 little girls looked crushed. I had to come back with something and said, "Then all the more reason to be proud of them right now." I never want to make someone else think their compliment to me was trivial or undeserved. We DO deserve to have people notice. I just hope we can all learn to accept that.
Lin


