Quote:
Originally Posted by SparklyBunny
Weight is such an arbitrary number. You don't need that information for anything, unless you are a competitive boxer or planning to tranquilize yourself.
Best quote of the day!
I used to weigh daily when I lost about 100 pounds a few years ago. Loved it. Swore by it.
Then, I restarted weight loss for serious in June 2012 and found that daily weigh-ins made me absolutely nutty, and I attribute that as at least part of the reason for my backslide and regain of about 30 pounds. (I had lost 70 pounds from June 2012 until January 2013, then maintained for several months).
Now, I refuse to get on the scale. I really want "this time" to be the last time in my life I have to lose a significant amount of weight. And in order for me to do that, I feel like it's important to not focus on the small steps and small (artificial) rewards. Rather, I am focused on integrating the healthy decisions into my life and doing those things for their own sake. Do I want to lose weight? Of course. But I am lifting weights and running so I can be stronger and better able to keep up with strenuous physical tasks. Those are inherent rewards. I also want to have control of my food so that I am not suffering "binge sweats" when someone brings something to work and I can't stop thinking of it in the break room and wondering when I can do an attack on the break room without anyone seeing. Those suck.
Like so much of weight loss, when to weigh is an intensely personal decision and there's a huge variety of reactions to it. For me, for now, hiding the scale is my best answer. Sometimes, I still crave it, especially after I've had a really good streak of staying strictly on plan. But I know that weighing invites my OCD behavior and my "this is temporary" mindset. So, my scale is staying out of sight until my "official" weigh-in day on January 11. And I desperately hope my reaction at that time isn't "How can I have only lost this much weight in the 2.5 months that I have been fairly consistently on plan?"