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Originally Posted by : Humans come in a wide spectrum of sizes, shapes, and builds. And they have a wide variety of preferences on how they'd like to look, which may or may not be based on what men/other people find most attractive. |
There's so much disagreement on where "healthy" lies, and also where "beauty" does. There's also alot of disagreement over how a person should feel about themselves if they lie outside health and/or beauty lines (Whether they should dislike their body, how much they should dislike their body, when they have a right to stop disliking their body)... it all gets sort of muddled and crazy.
I've gotten flak for liking myself and thinking I'm pretty attractive now (and 80 lbs ago). It's just not RIGHT for a very fat gal to actually like herself and consider herself and her very fat husband attractive and dare I even say it [GASP OF INTENSE HORROR] SEXY! Yep, I (and my hubby) think I'm sexy. My husband (and I) think he's sexy - and if anyone else disagrees, well we're not having sex with them, so it's not our problem. We're social deviants, I suppose. By societal standards I guess we're supposed to be grossed out by the site of each other nekkid (or clothed for that matter), and should be vomitting at the site of each other's and our own unclothed bodies. If we have sex at all, it should be with the lights off and it should only be possible by each of us fantasizing that we're with a more attractive (buff) partner. Ok, I'm being sarcastic and exagerating, but unfortunately the reality isn't that far off. I get to decide when I'm happy with myself (I'm pretty ok with me now) and whether or not that has anything to do with my weight at all (not so much for me). I don't know when I'll stop trying to lose weight... whether that will be a clothing size or a weight reached, or a point at which I decide "this is as much as I'm willing to diet and exercise so whereever the scale is now will have to be good enough." I don't know whether I'll maintain that weight and then later decide I want to lose more - or for that matter decide that the weight I chose isn't realistic and alow myself a little more leeway (I'm thinking I'd like to reach 150, but maybe if I get there and think it's too difficult to maintain 150, but 160 works better, well that's ok too). You can't tell by looking at any of our goal weights, whether we have healthy attitudes about our bodies, or generically our self-worth - what's "realistic," what's "attainable," and how bad (or not) we may feel if we never reach our stated goal - it's not written on our faces (and sometimes we may not be all that sure ourselves). I think it's a great topic to discuss, but I think it's important to be a bit cautious in assigning any great "meaning" to goals that we might not pick for ourselves. Even the doctors and obesity and health "experts" disagree on the "optimal" weight and body composition. There is no number on the scale that will reflect optimal physical health, mental health, and beauty (especially beauty as one person's "too skinny" can be someone else's "too fat.") |
kaplods, that's a beautiful attitude, and I can tell it's served you well! Thanks for (yet another!) great post... your posts are always so sincere, informative, and fun to read, to boot! :D
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kaplods, your post is a great example of why you were the first one on my "buddy" list. :D
ETA, now that the nightly Olympic coverage is over and I can get back to this post: And thank you, mandalinn, for your insight about outliers. I'm one too, and so is my daughter. In fact, even before she joined this site with a goal weight 20 pounds higher than mine, I had been considering raising mine. And both of us would still be considered "overweight" at our stated goals. :) That's the family bone structure. I remember when my grandfather began his decline and lost quite a bit of weight. When he was skin and bones, those bones were still quite big, so he never looked as gaunt and frail as other elderly men. And an aunt--one of the very rare never-battled-an-obesity-problem-in-her-entire-life members of our family--also has heavy bone structure. Even she, downright *thin* as she is, might weigh more, or wear a larger size, than someone else of the same height, with a daintier musculoskeletal structure. So we'll never be ballerinas, figure skaters, gymnasts, or other professions that depend on tiny, limber bodies for optimum performance. We're not built that way. We're built like milkmaids. That's OK. |
I feel the original post was actually asking many different things that are/ are not necessarily related:
1. The before and after photos of many women on the forum are impressive, the women appear to be thin enough, yet they want to lose another 20 lbs. Why is this? 2. Why is it that some people will never be happy when they reach goal and they will continue trying to lose weight? Why will some never be happy with themselves? 3. Why have the 'official' body fat standards been dropped? And is this a problem particular to our culture? Anyway, to the first question - in my opinion, losing a large deal of weight becomes somewhat of an addiction, it is part of your identity. You are constantly congratulated for looking better. You have positive reinforcement to keep going. You also feel VERY powerful and in control of your body for the first time in your life. It is nice to exert that control and lose more, push yourself a little bit harder - because you can. You had obviously at one time in your life lost all control, and now you have it again. I suppose the power is exhilarating. I would like to again repeat "just a personal opinion". As far as 2. and 3. - why will people never feel happy at their ideal weight and why have our cultural body fat standards changed...... I think to 2. we are always striving to be better - in all aspects of our life. That seems to be a human characteristic, why should it be any different with weight loss? Or, Psychologists suggest that people with eating disorders (yes, dieting is considered an eating disorder in the scientific world) have uniquely internalized a particularly strong mental image of an ideal body that is quite powerful in influencing decisions. Possibly, we are continually trying to achieve this image - and its a hard fight that is not easily achieved (if it can be achieved at all). And 3., why do we seem to have stricter cultural standards now? I don't know, but I did read an interesting article in a journal on evolutionary psychology on why women lose weight - According to this theory (based on evol. biology), if the competition for males were high, women would lose weight and become very thin. They were 'unconsciously' stopping their ability to reproduce UNTIL the appropriate healthy male with a high social status came along. The female would then resume eating after she "has him" in order to start her monthly cycle again. Okay, maybe that little theory has nothing to do with our cultural body fat standards, but its interesting nonetheless! And I hope that there are no arguments in this thread - there are important issues raised here. |
At my high weight, 198 at 5'3", my body fat percentage was 44% as measured by one of those electrical-resistance scales. So no, not everyone at the same weight and height has the same body fat percent.
However, everyone at the same weight and height does have the same BMI, because it is merely a calculated ratio. It is just a ballpark idea someone had for definitional purposes. I think that many people, or maybe it's many women, get into the idea of 10 pounds more to lose (or whatever the number is) because they don't like what is actually loose skin, or they still have belly fat or arm fat or big hips, and they think that another 10 pounds off would solve that. At the lower weight, some folks appear too thin in the face and other visible parts of the body like wrists and hands, and that can cause comments about having lost "too much." For some, losing weight takes on the glow of being the solution to all one's problems. Of course, it isn't. It sometimes sounds as though women have nothing better to do than worry about how they look and whether they can wear a bikini. But that can be a misleading impression. 3FC is a weight loss site, so folks are going to talk mostly about weight loss. I have no answers to the "why" questions. Jay |
This whole conversation reminds me of a commercial/ad campaign from a couple of years ago. The one where there would be really glamorous, attractive (according to our society's standards) and fit/thin people doing things like walking the red carpet and they would suddenly collapse. Then the voiceover would be to "know your numbers", meaning your cholesterol, bp, etc. I would laugh everytime!
I feel like a goal weight is a very personal decision. For me, I focus on eating well, exercising, drinking lots of water, getting plenty of sleep and my body decides what weight it wants to be. I try not to get worked up over the numbers, both the scale and clothing sizes. To the OP, I love the milkmaid reference! Some of us are sturdier stock than others. Am I healthy? Well according to my dr I am. I feel good. Do I want to lose any more weight? No, I feel good at my current weight. Do I want others to tell me what weight I should be, with the exception of my dr? No. |
I can only answer the question from my own perspective.
First off, I haven't heard about any lowering of the BMI thing. Secondly, this has been a true journey for me. I like a leaner look on me (not skinny, drawn or unhealthy) but fit, strong and fab. I have come this far, why not achieve what I REALLY want? Why limit myself to satisfactory? Why limit myself to mediocrity when I want and can achieve more? Is has nothing to do with me being dissatisfied with my accomplishment. It has nothing to do with trying to please men when they look at me. It has EVERYTHING to do with me and reaching a point in my life that I want nothing less than my personal best. |
I think everyone has the right to set their own goal and see how they feel in terms of getting to that goal and how they feel at that goal. Often people may lose weight and get to a healthy weight range but be 'skinny fat' and think it is really fat they need to get off their body when instead it may be that they need to focus on something else like building muscle and shaping their body.
Overall, this is a support site and we try to support everyone in their weight loss goals. If someone asked about their goal or was having trouble losing weight and I saw they personally were at a healthy weight, I think I would step in and ask what are their real goals? Is the goal a number on the scale or is it a certain look/size? Often it is a certain look/size and there have been plenty of people on this site who have readjusted their goals along the way. Overall, you can't judge someone's body type by their screen name and if someone is losing weight in a healthy way, then I will support them in their goals whether that goal is 120 or its 200. |
Here is a snippet from www.life123.com that was sent to me with regard this thread.
Therefore, in 1998, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute published a BMI guide in its "Clinical Guidelines on the Identification, Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and Obesity in Adults." It identified five BMI ranges, including underweight (BMI less than 18.5), normal weight (BMI 20-25), overweight (BMI 25-30), obese (BMI 30-35) and morbidly obese (BMI 35+). These ranges are still the standard today One of the most wonderful things about "weight loss" (and yes, I put that in quotes) is that there are so many different facets to it. For many people it is so much more than simply dropping pounds. Cholesterol, blood pressure, pulse, joint strain ... Stronger, faster, more endurance ... Appearance, clothing selection ... BMI, body fat percentage, waist to hip ratio, inches, pounds, sizes ... We can never know which of this vast selection has been forefront in a poster's mind. We cannot assume to know what they want or what they're after. And it is certainly not our job to judge, this thing that we do not know, by appearance. Or rather our perception of her appearance, which is fraught with our preferences. I think Thighs Be Gone said this very well .... It has EVERYTHING to do with me and reaching a point in my life that I want nothing less than my personal best. |
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