Trying Times - Words of Wisdom - POSTED ON: Feb 27, 2017
See Video Below DietHobby has more of these short videos under the heading: Words of Wisdom
Dieting as Suffering - POSTED ON: Feb 24, 2017
Due to my 11+ years of maintaining a large weight-loss, I consider myself to currently be a “dieting success”.
For the past 63 years, I’ve spent lots of time thinking about, reading about, and actually participating in a great many Diets that were designed to produce weight-loss.
Every Diet that I’ve ever been on involved my ability to withstand the physical, mental, and/or emotional hardship of living with various eating restrictions. Although we can successfully put our primary focus on the positive aspects of a particular diet, or dieting in general, negatives still exist; and, on occasion, these thoughts will fill our minds. What does “suffering” mean? Suffering is bearing, or enduring, pain or distress, which can be either physical, mental or emotional. Pain is the feeling. Suffering is the effect the pain inflicts. What is “dieting”? Dieting is when a person gives their body less food than it needs to survive in the hope that it will eat itself, and thereby become smaller. Call it a diet, call it a lifestyle change, when a person starves their body hoping that it will eat itself to achieve the result of intentional weight loss, they are on a diet. Most people perceive Dieting …a restriction of one’s food intake… to be a form of suffering, and weight-loss is considered the reward for enduring that suffering. Successful dieting depends on the ability to make sacrifices. A sacrifice is something you give up for the sake of a better cause. When dieting, a person continually sacrifices by eating less-food-than-their-body-wants-and-needs-to-maintain-its-status-quo, in order to make that body’s physical size smaller, i.e. to lose weight. When the weight-loss payoff for that sacrifice, which involves suffering, is reduced or disappears, …. people tend to fail in their efforts to restrict their food intake. Great loves affairs have a honeymoon period and dieting is no exception. A great many people do very well during the first two or three weeks of a diet. It doesn’t matter how extreme the effort might be, how much restriction is involved, or how much hunger we might be facing; if the scale is moving, especially if it’s moving quickly, it’s easy to deny that we are suffering. People who have come off the most extreme diets will often ...
Happily Ever After & Neuroscience - POSTED ON: Feb 20, 2017
Once upon a time, there was a fat woman who wanted to become thin. She began eating less food than her body used day after day, and eventually her body became a size “normal”.
After she crossed the “finish line” to her weight goal, she slightly relaxed her rigid eating behaviors, but in order to maintain her weight-loss, she paid close attention to the hunger signals from her body, working to eat only when she felt hungry, and to stop as soon as she stopped feeling hungry. And she lived happily ever after….. …........... NOT exactly .......…. I advise anyone struggling with - or interested in - maintenance issues to go to DietHobby’s BLOG CATEGORIES, Research - Science and read the articles that have been scrapbooked there. The following article was written by Sandra Aamodt, a neuroscientist, author of “Why Diets Make Us Fat: The Unintended Consequences of Our Obsession With Weight Loss” (2016). It was posted in the New York Times in May 2016. Dr. Aamodt makes the point that the problem with Dieting is not Willpower. It’s neuroscience. I found her book to be well researched, and I believe she accurately states the basic problem. Dr. Aamodt’s information is extremely valuable, and I recommend her book for people working to maintain weight-loss. However, although the “solution” to the dieting and maintenance struggle that she proposes could be effective for some people, it is not one …. for various reasons … that I find personally acceptable or one that I’m willing to adopt.
Why You Can’t Lose Weight on a Diet by Sandra Aamodt SIX years after dropping an average of 129 pounds on the TV program “The Biggest Loser,” a new study reports, the participants were burning about 500 fewer calories a day than other people their age and size. This helps explain why they had regained 70 percent of their lost weight since the show’s finale. The diet industry reacted defensively, arguing that the participants had lost weight too fast or ate the wrong kinds of food — that diets do work, if you pick the right one. But this study is just the latest example of research showing that in the long run dieting is rarely effective, doesn’t reliably improve health and does more harm than good. There is a better way to eat. The root of the problem is not willpower but neuroscience. Metabolic suppression is one of several powerful tools that the brain uses to keep t...
Status Update - February 2017 - POSTED ON: Feb 13, 2017
Occasionally, I share my numbers here at DietHobby to show some personal details about my years of working to maintain a very large weight-loss.
I post many of my thoughts about my Maintenance struggles here at my website, DietHobby, where I've scrapbooked a great many articles, pictures, and videos. To learn more about my personal history, SEE: ABOUT ME. Many of these are articles and videos that I've created myself, and many are those of others which I find helpful, interesting, or amusing. I named my website, DietHobby, because I've found it personally necessary to treat "dieting" as a "hobby". To learn more about how and why I do that, SEE: Dieting is my Hobby.
Today I am sharing about my own personal experience, as a small, inactive, "reduced obese" elderly woman. It is not a one-size-fits-all-world so my experience may be vastly different from your own. Even people who are the SAME size, age, and activity levels often have bodies with different metabolisms. Some bodies burn through their fuel like large luxury cars, and some bodies burn fuel like really efficient economy cars. The Metabolic Process is an involuntary one, like breathing and temperature, and .... despite what many Diet Guru's, including medical doctors, say, ... an individual's voluntary behavior can do almost nothing to change their personal long-term Metabolic Rate.
Furthermore, you might not share my personal Values. Food may not be as important to you as it is to me, or we might prefer entirely different foods and different eating styles. Your body might be capable of more physical activity, and you might even find some types of strenuous exercise to be enjoyable. Your standards of beauty might be different than mine, and you might consider Thin to be more attractive than I do, or even consider Fat to be less attractive than I do.
So that being said.... here's where I am. Below is a chart that is self-explanatory. It shows my monthly weight totals for the past 8 years. These monthly weight totals are my daily weights AVERAGED out over a 1 month period. Therefore, these monthly weight totals include both the UP-Bounces and the DOWN-Bounces that happen during each month's period.
This weight chart demonstrates an upward Trend, which is an ongoing problem that I struggle with here in maintenance. The chart shows my most recent 8 year period, however, I am now in my 11th year of maintenance. The first 3 years I was able to keep my weight mostly between 110 and 120 pounds, while eating an average of around 1300 daily calories. Then, my weight began to climb, and I began working hard to keep my calorie average lower to drop off the extra pounds or to at-least-compensate in order to...
Is It Working for YOU? - POSTED ON: Feb 06, 2017
Mar 01, 2021 DietHobby: A Digital Scrapbook. 2000+ Blogs and 500+ Videos in DietHobby reflect my personal experience in weight-loss and maintenance. One-size-doesn't-fit-all, and I address many ways-of-eating whenever they become interesting or applicable to me.
Jun 01, 2020 DietHobby is my Personal Blog Website. DietHobby sells nothing; posts no advertisements; accepts no contributions. It does not recommend or endorse any specific diets, ways-of-eating, lifestyles, supplements, foods, products, activities, or memberships.
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