Quote:
Originally Posted by wormtown
What struck me, is that the calories for maintenance are really not that much more than for loosing
. Time to face facts, I guess...I'm just eating too much; and I have make some major changes for the rest of my life OR accept my size.
I noticed this thread, and the comments that everyone has made reminded me of a post of Meg's from way back in 2003 (has it been that long already??), written on the occasion of her one year anniversary of reaching her
goal weight - check it out...a brief snippet follows:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Meg
Maintenance doesn’t look any different than losing: I eat the same foods in pretty much the same quantities, work out just as intensely and often, and do as much cardio. I may eat 100-200 more calories per day — that’s it. You have to run hard just to stay in place.
I still plan and weigh and measure: I use Fitday.com and plan my meals the night before and write down everything that I eat. I weigh and measure portions simply because I know that I underestimate when I am hungry. I make lists of strategies of what to do when I am tempted to eat the wrong food. I still need this control over my eating just like I did when I was losing.
I’ve made it for 365 days. I’ve been through Christmas and Thanksgiving, my birthday, two surgeries, and a bad mammogram without turning to food for comfort or celebration.
A year later, our Meg wrote her second anniversary post -
I encourage you to read the whole thing, but here are some significant snippets:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Meg
Last year, on my first anniversary of reaching goal, I wrote a post about my thoughts on maintenance...Today I went back and re-read that post to see if maintenance looks any differently to me now that I have another year of it under my belt. I have to say that I won’t change a word of the post, but would emphasize my first two points even more strongly:
MAINTENANCE IS HARDER THAN LOSING
MAINTENANCE DOESNT LOOK ANY DIFFERENT THAN LOSING
An interesting discussion of the whole concept of maintenance developed from that post. One poster thought that “maintenance” was a failure to progress; others thought that since we can’t physically lose weight forever, at some point we have to stop and work on keeping what we’ve achieved. Karen came up with the best definition, in my mind: maintenance = living.
In the past year, I’ve come to realize that I’m not at all ashamed of simply “maintaining” my weight. Rather than being embarrassed at failing to progress further, I now am truly appreciating what a battle and challenge it is to stay right where I am. This isn't natural and intuitive, folks! It would be incredibly easy to slide right back into my old bad eating habits -- of course they're still with me. I have NO doubt that I could put every pound back on in far less time than it took to come off.
Maintenance — especially long-term maintenance, like years and years — IS harder than losing. I’ve gotten to the point where I admire someone who’s been able to lose and keep off ten pounds more than the person who constantly gains and loses and regains, over and over again. It’s sad — and educational — to find out that some of the big weight loss success stories you read about on the Internet last for about three minutes — about as long as it takes to snap those “after” photos.
And then the diet is over and the weight starts piling back on. It’s happened to all of US, right? I venture to say that every one of us has lost a LOT of weight in his or her life (undoubtedly I’ve lost hundreds of pounds). It’s the failure to KEEP it off that’s the problem...
The best analogy I’ve been able to come up with for maintenance is running on a treadmill. You have to run hard and fast just to stay in one place and not fly off the back. Likewise, we have to work hard just to keep our weight in one place. For those of us who have struggled with weight issues practically our whole lives, eating “normally” will probably never be natural and intuitive. We’ll still have to think, plan, journal, and do all the things that got us to goal in the first place if we want to stay there.
I’m OK with that. I’m sure all of you would agree that it’s a very small price to pay for all the benefits we get of keeping the weight off for life: health, energy, appearance, self-confidence — some day we should make a list! It would be quite lengthy.
As a society, we focus almost exclusively on losing weight. Hardly anyone talks/writes/thinks/posts about what happens after you reach your goal. Which doesn’t make much sense, since we’re going to spend much more time keeping the weight off than we did losing it — hopefully many decades for most of us. For me, I’ve now spent twice as long maintaining as I spent losing. And the rest of my life is going to be all about maintenance because I can assure you that I’m NEVER going to put those pounds back on...
I would encourage all of you (and everyone who is lurking) to check out the wealth of information here at 3FC, particularly in our
Maintainers Forum - even if you haven't gotten to your goal weight or are just thinking about your weight loss journey...as Meg has said - it's part and parcel of the whole deal.
