darkemeralds: Manga-style avatar of DarkEm with caption Hee (cartoony me)
[personal profile] darkemeralds


It's as if my eyes--that is, my visual perception of bodies and body-shaped things--changes with my weight.

Clothes from three months ago, which I used to hold up (hang on the clothesline, fold, whatever) and perceive as "my size" now look visually huge to me. Similarly, clothes that looked tiny now seem bigger.

During the years when I was gaining-gaining-gaining weight, I once asked a significantly heavy acquaintance whether she'd lost weight, because my eyes perceived her as much slimmer than before. (In fact, her weight was stable and mine was increasing--apparently my eyes got bigger, as it were, along with my ass.) (Also: one of several experiences that taught me never to ask that question or wish it to be asked of me.)

I almost never look in a full-length mirror--haven't for years (and photographs? OMG never!)--so I don't have an external view of myself to account for it. It seems to be a phenomenon of some internal, how-far-is-my-skin-from-my-core type of perception, projected outward.

Em Is the Measure Of All Things.

And I've lost almost 35 pounds - 16 kilos - about two and a half stone.

Pie chart showing 35% of weight loss accomplished

(no subject)

4/2/11 22:04 (UTC)
karen_jk: Melissa (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] karen_jk
...but are the other writers as talented and insightful as you?

(no subject)

4/2/11 22:14 (UTC)
karen_jk: Melissa (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] karen_jk
You are welcome! I would not say it if I didn't believe it. There are tons of dieting books and, at the same time, tons of people wanting to read them, I imagine. You could write about your life experiences with gaining weight and being at a certain weight, your struggle with that, your thoughts.

Kinda philosophical and about body image, as well as about what gets in the way of people, including really smart people, losing weight.

What's getting in the way of me doing it? A fear of actually biting the bullet. Committing myself to a regime. Maybe failing.

(no subject)

4/2/11 22:41 (UTC)
ravurian: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] ravurian
Sorry to butt in, but I was particularly struck by the 'biting the bullet' and 'regime' and 'failure' in your comment, and I tend to find that thinking in those terms automatically makes things harder than they need to be for me. They're all common phrases associated with dieting and exercising, but they're psychologically negative, too - they indicate that this is something undesirable, an imposition, something externally imposed, requiring a brute force no-prisoners approach, and frankly, that sounds too tiring to be sustainable. No wonder people get fed up or dispirited and give up. The battle's over before it's begun, and it's because of the confrontational language.

Like [personal profile] darkemeralds, I just felt that the time was right, and I lost 56lbs in just over four months, I think, and it was easy*. When people asked what I was doing, whether I was on a diet, my reply was always, honestly, no. I just told people I'd given up being fat, and there was some truth to that. I told people I was just being more conscious of my body, and there was truth in that, too. I don't know if either of those approaches might be of use to you, but sometimes these things can be fun, and silly, and you can feel great while losing weight. You literally get lighter.

I'm... going to shut up now.

* By which I mean, in comparison to previous attempts at 'diets'.

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