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  • How we look at it

    Do you look at your WOE as a burden? Do you fret and worry everytime you go to the grocery store? Do you hee-haw around everyday and try to think up reasons not to exercise? Do you come to the ADBB and feel like everyone here doesn't understand or have the problems that you have?

    THINK AGAIN. I was in that UGLY thinking once. I had to re-program my thoughts and attitude. Through a lot of self analysis I changed the way I thought about this WOE. I am not being punished for being fat. I always thought I was. I had to diet because I was fat. I had to exercise because I was fat. (However when I did go out exercising...I would see thin people running or exercising and think they were nuts) Now, I see that they were in a WOL that kept them thin and feeling great.

    What I'm trying to say here is that we all need to re-program the little voices in our heads. Be thankful for Dr. Atkin's WOE. It works. Use your exercise time as your YOU TIME. Exercise releases the pressures and stress that we all have. Learn to look forward to walking, running, going to the gym, doing that workout tape. Its all how you look at it. Doing it everyday with zest will begin making it a habit and soon you won't feel like you are being punished because of your weight.

    Get some affirmations and tape them up in your bathroom or bedroom or kitchen. If you see positive quotes or phrases and read them everyday, you will begin to live up to those positive images they create in our minds. It took me a while to learn this lesson - but repeating this step everyday makes it easier and comfortable.

    Know what foods you can eat on your WOE. Take the induction list or the OWL list with you. Learn it, and what recipes you can make. Soon, you'll buzz throught the store and not even think about stopping at the aisles that contain foods you can't eat. If your family needs potatoes and bread, thats fine. You can pick up a few items that aren't on your list without going nuts and jumping off the wagon. Its not so much willpower as the DESIRE to change. The only way to lose the weight is to make changes in your life. The only way to change things that you aren't happy with is to create new habits. ADBB can help us as we create those new healthy habits.
    Starting Date 3/12/04 285/165/145 - F



    Dedication gives wings to our dreams and keeps them in flight! In One Word...COMMITTMENT.

  • #2
    Re: How we look at it

    You know, you are right. Years ago, I used to think of what I couldn't have on it. What better diet could I have than one that allows me to eat as many pizza toppings as I wanted to satiation? My mother used to yell at me for that ..... What diet would allow me to eat all the fatty pieces on the steak if I wanted to? Or have salami and cream cheese with onions and olives? The answer is: the only WOE that I can lose weight on - Atkins. Funny how I naturally wanted to eat this way as a kid - I wanted all the goodies between 2 slices of bread, pizza toppings, etc. and was retrained to eat the bread with it . Sometimes parents can be wrong.....
    27 F 5' 7"
    Before baby: HW:230/195 after 6 months on Atkins
    After baby and current restart: 210/207/120

    I'm too sexy.....for this bod; WAY too sexy for this bod

    Phase: Restarting a clean Induction as of 7/29/2007.

    Minigoals:
    To get thru my first week clean: (8/05/2007) Done! Yay! and 3lbs down :/ but at least it's a loss.
    To get thru my second week clean: (8/12/2007)
    199lbs:
    189lbs:
    179lbs:
    169lbs:
    159lbs:
    149lbs:
    139lbs:
    129lbs:
    Goal!:

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    • #3
      Re: How we look at it

      Slimdown - my dd is the same way. She doesn't want bread or potatoes too much. I just give her leftovers and stuff, the same as I do for dh and myself. If she doesn't want it, why force it.

      Dream - you are so right. As I posted elsewhere this morning, instead of looking at what you can't have, look at what you can have. If it weren't for this woe then I wouldn't have discovered the joys of sauteed cauliflower, sauteed cabbage, oven fried turnips, mashed cauliflower with garlic and butter (I don't call them faux-potatoes - they are so delicious they deserve to go by their rightful name - garlic mashed cauliflower). So many yummy foods to eat. And exercise is a great stress reliever and, you're right, the time I spend doing that is time that I spend taking care of myself - me time.

      There are lots of things we can't have in life - Brad Pitt, Donald Trump's house (any one), a yacht....what I do have is a nice happy home, a wonderful, loving supportive dh, and a wol that makes me feel healthy. So why would I want to focus on the stuff I can't have? Who says I want it just because I can't have it?
      Female, 46yrs, 5'3"

      Restarted Atkins 09/19/05
      Re-restarted Atkins 03/12/07

      SW198.5/CW215/GW150







      Slug Free 6WEC#21 & 22 & 23

      "Superhuman willpower is not required to do Atkins, only the wisdom to put yourself into a position where you won't need it."

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      • #4
        Re: How we look at it

        My whole family has come to really enjoy this way of eating. There are hardly ever processed foods that come through my front door anymore. And while it might seem more expensive bringing in the whole and organics, it really ends up evening out: we eat less because we are not as hungry as we used to be when we ate the processed foods!

        My family has slimmed down, has more energy, and my heretofore kids with ADD in school are performing better!

        I never look at this way of eating as a burden. What burden saved my life? What burden frees me from hunger? What burden has me hiking 5 miles a day on my treadmill?

        The burden is in the change. Change is tough for anyone. Once we get there it's not a burden but a privelege we have afforded ourselves for better health, longer life, and immense success!
        ADBB Moderator Emeritus
        My blog: The Lighter Side of Low Carb: Food, fun and fidgeting
        Low Carb Lolitas: Hip low carb bloggers

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        • #5
          Re: How we look at it

          This WOE has not become a burden for me, but rather has given me a very healthy and physically and mentally active existance. Not only to me, but to my entire family, friends, and even those that don't know me, but they are referred to me by their friends and family who know me. I feel good about me, and it shows, so others tend to want to know more about my changes in life, and I don't mean menopause either, I'm still waiting for that! Eating low carb is habitual for me now, I don't really have to think about it anymore, it comes naturally. When I am in doubt, I just don't eat it! I don't reward myself with food anymore, but I do reward myself. I don't plan to cheat, I plan to eat right! Exercise has become an integral part of my life, and when I injured my shoulder and could not workout, I was antsy and miserable! So this WOE might've started as a burden, but within time, education, and understanding, it has definately become an ASSET for me and my dh!

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          • #6
            Re: How we look at it

            I agree thoroughy. This way of life has become very liberating for me.
            Bran (M) 575/470/220
            ----------------------
            Restarted on: 3-24-06
            Weight dropped since restart: 5 lbs
            ----------------------

            ----------------------

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            • #7
              Re: How we look at it

              I totally agree, it is how you look at it. I developed a positive way of thinking, becasue of this WOL and I am positive that I will eat this way forever. Just how ever long forever is.
              I love to see people that I haven't seen in a couple years. I can see it in their face and I can read their mind, as they are smiling at me. It is a wonderful feeling.

              Just today at a quick stop in goodwell, I saw a guy that was my classmate. Hadn't seen him in 2 years. He came up to me and said what have you done, changed your hairdo, because something is different. I smiled and said," i lost over 90 pounds." He almost hollered, "That's it!" "That is why you look different." We had a nice visit.

              this WOL has given me back my respect for myself. I never ever look at this WOE as a burden.

              Happy Low Carbing!



              Size 24/ ? / size 14

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