Diets and other Bad Ideas
Jul. 30th, 2008 10:02 pmNever, EVER go on a diet with your husband.
I've been eating junk food (and dark chocolate, which is healthy!) for about a month now, until my body finally rebelled. So I went on one of those "cleansing" programs that are supposed to fill you with energy while removing 3 pounds a day.
It doesn't. Either.
I have suffered along while my body demanded fruit, vegetables, and essentially nothing else. Total weight loss: 2 pounds.
My husband, who has never been a heavy man, and who is supplementing this diet with decent portions of protein, lost 14 1/2 pounds in 2 days. And a full waist size. Had to make another hole in his belt to keep his pants up.
There's a lesson in here somewhere....
I've been eating junk food (and dark chocolate, which is healthy!) for about a month now, until my body finally rebelled. So I went on one of those "cleansing" programs that are supposed to fill you with energy while removing 3 pounds a day.
It doesn't. Either.
I have suffered along while my body demanded fruit, vegetables, and essentially nothing else. Total weight loss: 2 pounds.
My husband, who has never been a heavy man, and who is supplementing this diet with decent portions of protein, lost 14 1/2 pounds in 2 days. And a full waist size. Had to make another hole in his belt to keep his pants up.
There's a lesson in here somewhere....
no subject
Date: 2008-07-31 11:44 am (UTC)My parents had a really really fat dog; she did nothing but sleep and eat, and she was given table scraps, so of course she was fat, right? But I currently have a dog who also sleeps all the time, dislikes exercise, gets table scraps, and is generally 2-5% above her ideal weight. The neighbors have a dog (mutt, possible greyhound mix) that's skeletally thin no matter what they feed her, and otherwise in good health. I find it helpful to consider dogs because there's no point in blaming them for laziness or greediness or lack of control; that's just the way they are.
It's still worth trying to lose weight, but recognize that it's simply a lot tougher for some than for others, and cut yourself a break.