NotAHenchwench
Ohhh hai der!
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Long post is long, and for that I apologize!
Except motivation should never be extrinsic. Ever. If all you have is extrinsic motivation, you will in no way retain any kind of lifestyle change once you do lose the weight, and you will gain it all back, and probably more.
Motivation must always be intrinsic. It has to come from the heart, and the decision has to be made there first and foremost.
As far as outside help? Personally, if the area I was in had a Planet Fitness, I'd be really excited. It's 10.00 a month, and they have a metric ton of equipment, and a specific no judgment policy, which makes me feel very safe. You wouldn't believe some of the comments I've gotten going to a Gold's Gym and being intimidated off of the treadmill by someone who was considerably more fit than I. I enjoy walking outside [lots of mountains here
] but once the first snow falls we're basically screwed. I could drive to the local mall and do laps, but I enjoy hills and a variance in escalation.
Also, if produce and seafood and fresh meats and organic foods were cheaper here, I'd be all over that like **** on Velcro. As it stands, the largest 'supermarket' we have is Wally world, and I cannot. stand. it. The produce is crap, everything is over processed. The upside, however, is that there is an Asian market within walking distance to the apartment. Haha, the store owner knows me at this point and she's been giving me things to buy to try out, and I've really been enjoying myself [basically add Dashi stock to Mirin, Soy sauce and Sake, and you can make anything taste heavenly
].
Things that have been giving me good motivation have been cooking my own meals completely, and when I start my new job I will be making my lunches every day [I've quite fallen in love with the Bento Box lunches they have in Japan. They use a 5-color system to ensure nutrition which I think is brilliant and they also use mostly raw, or uncooked veggies.], and will be able to actually afford fresh produce every couple of days.
It's also taking a very long time to re-write my own nutrition. I knew it would take a while, and I've been taking any small victory I can get. You have to start out small, and anyone who thinks that it's healthy losing 10 lbs or more a month, you're out of your damn mind.
I toooooootally agree with this. And to a degree, I think there are things being done to promote a healthy lifestyle, but it just isn't reaching the people it needs to reach. Somehow, I think if the nation's biggest cash crop weren't corn, we'd be in much better shape.
There are little to no farms anymore with fresh local produce [there are, however, small uprisings here and there with farmer's markets and the like]. And farms that do exist are being gobbled up [npi] by bigger companies that use low-quality feed and fertilizer because it's cheaper.
There are a lot of things that need to be done that probably wont be. Until then it's up to the individual to change. It would be great if there was a support group for weight loss that wasn't Overeaters Annonymous, because I think more people would flock to it.
You're right, I just hate the word 'diet'. It denotes that something is temporary, when it should be a lifestyle.
As far as this whole "tax dollars spent for obese people", I'd be all for some kind of program that helped with nutrition and guided exercise and ways of measuring it [the food pyramid just needs to be burned. Nutrition should be on an individual basis, imo]. I have the benefit of education, but a lot of people don't.
For those of you who are overweight and would like to drop some lbs, assuming you're seeking extrinsic motivation, what would you need to get started/keep going? Do you need a boot camp style personal trainer yelling at you, a calm partner to diet and exercise with you, etc. I'm always curious to find out why people can never seem to get the ball rolling on weight loss.
Except motivation should never be extrinsic. Ever. If all you have is extrinsic motivation, you will in no way retain any kind of lifestyle change once you do lose the weight, and you will gain it all back, and probably more.
Motivation must always be intrinsic. It has to come from the heart, and the decision has to be made there first and foremost.
As far as outside help? Personally, if the area I was in had a Planet Fitness, I'd be really excited. It's 10.00 a month, and they have a metric ton of equipment, and a specific no judgment policy, which makes me feel very safe. You wouldn't believe some of the comments I've gotten going to a Gold's Gym and being intimidated off of the treadmill by someone who was considerably more fit than I. I enjoy walking outside [lots of mountains here

Also, if produce and seafood and fresh meats and organic foods were cheaper here, I'd be all over that like **** on Velcro. As it stands, the largest 'supermarket' we have is Wally world, and I cannot. stand. it. The produce is crap, everything is over processed. The upside, however, is that there is an Asian market within walking distance to the apartment. Haha, the store owner knows me at this point and she's been giving me things to buy to try out, and I've really been enjoying myself [basically add Dashi stock to Mirin, Soy sauce and Sake, and you can make anything taste heavenly

Things that have been giving me good motivation have been cooking my own meals completely, and when I start my new job I will be making my lunches every day [I've quite fallen in love with the Bento Box lunches they have in Japan. They use a 5-color system to ensure nutrition which I think is brilliant and they also use mostly raw, or uncooked veggies.], and will be able to actually afford fresh produce every couple of days.
It's also taking a very long time to re-write my own nutrition. I knew it would take a while, and I've been taking any small victory I can get. You have to start out small, and anyone who thinks that it's healthy losing 10 lbs or more a month, you're out of your damn mind.
I think what needs to be done is promote a culture of wellness, be it exercise, eating better
I toooooootally agree with this. And to a degree, I think there are things being done to promote a healthy lifestyle, but it just isn't reaching the people it needs to reach. Somehow, I think if the nation's biggest cash crop weren't corn, we'd be in much better shape.
There are little to no farms anymore with fresh local produce [there are, however, small uprisings here and there with farmer's markets and the like]. And farms that do exist are being gobbled up [npi] by bigger companies that use low-quality feed and fertilizer because it's cheaper.
There are a lot of things that need to be done that probably wont be. Until then it's up to the individual to change. It would be great if there was a support group for weight loss that wasn't Overeaters Annonymous, because I think more people would flock to it.
Basically though it comes down to the fact that the western diet is a mash-up of crap.
You're right, I just hate the word 'diet'. It denotes that something is temporary, when it should be a lifestyle.
As far as this whole "tax dollars spent for obese people", I'd be all for some kind of program that helped with nutrition and guided exercise and ways of measuring it [the food pyramid just needs to be burned. Nutrition should be on an individual basis, imo]. I have the benefit of education, but a lot of people don't.
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