Quote:
Originally Posted by rainydays
Question for everyone (mzKiki, sorry to threadjack, but I think this is relevant here): Let's say you weigh in officially once weekly, but you weigh a couple of times before that "official" weigh in. There's a significant difference in your earlier weigh in--let's say a pound and half or two pounds lower than your regular weigh in day. Which weight would you count?
Count for what? Who's counting and what does it count for?
Weighing yourself is like taking a photograph. Imagine that you're looking thorugh a photo album of yourself from the age of infancy to now.
Which of those photos count? Which ones are of the real you?
I think a serious problem with the way we've been taught to do weight loss is that we want to "claim" a number, we want to say we "are" a certain weight, and want to believe that we have a "true" weight, and that it can be determined. We want to believe that the scale tells us something objective and concrete - and the only thing the scale tells you is how much water, blood and other body fluids, bone, muscle, fat,undigested and digested food and solid waste we're carrying at any given point in time.
Any time you step on the scale, that is what the scale can tell you, and that's all it can tell you. And you can't by the scale tell how much of each - you just get the total picture, and you have to guess at the rest. And the specific count counts for nothing. It's the trend that counts, not any specific snapshot.
The number on the scale only counts as much as you decide it does, and for me that's not much.
I want to decrease my fat, and increase my muscle. The scale doesn't really tell me how much of each I'm doing. The scale is one of the best tools I've got, but it's far from perfect. I can hope that as I'm losing weight, I'm not losing muscle (and I try to make sure my protein intake and exercise are sufficient to minimize the muscle loss - so that most of what I lose is fat and water), but I never can know for certain (by the scale alone) how I'm doing at my goal.
I do get hints though. My weight fluctuates because of a lot of factors. Sodium is going to increase my weight by water retention. My TOM is going to do the same. Digesting and processing food and water and eliminating wastes are also going to affect my weight.
I can choose to never eat salt and I suppose I could get a hysterectomy to prevent TOM influences. I could try to eat exactly the same food and quantity every day and try to have the exact amount of exercise, and sleep each day to try to eliminate those variations as well, but that's all impossible, and unnecessary, besides because the scale measure only "counts" as a clue to what I really want to know.
If I drink a glass of water and step on the scale and see a half pound gain - I know that I haven't "gained" anything. As soon as I pee, usually in about 20 minutes, those 8 ounces will be gone.
If I weigh myself before and after I poo - which weight counts? (and again, counts for what?)
Personally, I think we're taught to spend way too much worrying about what "counts" and what our "true weight" is, when the fact is that there is no true weight. Weight is just a measure that can give us hints and clues as to what's going on with our body.
What's important (for most of us here) is reducing fat, increasing muscle, and keeping the rest in relative balance (which doesn't mean at a constant unchanging rate. We just want our bodies to be holding no more water, urine, and waste than it needs to).
In some ways, I think it's even kind of ridiculous that we talk about losing and gaining in terms of specific numbers. What does "I've gained a pound," really mean? Absolutely nothing if it's a pound of water we just drank ten minutes ago.
When I started experimenting with the scale to see just how much my weight changes during a single day, week, and month, I was astonished to see how much fluctuation there is. In a single day, my weight can vary by up to 6 pounds. In a given month (when entirely on-plan, eating on budget, not overeating) my weight can fluctate by 10 lbs or more?
Which of those weights "count?"
I used to only count the highest weight, because I used that as a measure of my success (or failure). So if I gained 8 lbs even if it was from TOM water retention, I "counted" it as failure. When I discovered that I gain those 8 lbs even if I do everything right all month, I realized that those 8 lbs don't count. I don't count them, because they don't count to me. I know that if I stay on plan, those 8 lbs will disappear on their own, so why count them for anything. They don't matter, they don't count, so I don't dispair or even feel sad or disapointed when they appear (unless hormonal mood swings are clouding my judgement and influencing what I decide to count).
Your scale's message only counts for what you decide it counts for. You and only you get to decide what counts, and what exactly it counts for.