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  • Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

    You know, I've always been a perfectionist.

    I'm the person who always strove hard and beat myself up if I didn't achieve what I was going for. It's killed me all this time. I'm never good enough. Never helpful enough. Never smart enough. Never pretty enough. Never clever enough. Not focussed enough. Nothing but... well... a failure.

    Why? Because when we set ourselves up with a do or die attitude, we're dying on every hill of the battle, instead of taking the occasional bullet and moving to the next hill.

    Triggers for the perfectionist and possible solutions to consider:

    1. Date goals for weight loss. This is danger Will Robinson! More dangerous than those heels with that pansuit, we're talking about setting yourself up for failure. You either set too high a goal because you know you're not going to make it anyway (thereby reinforcing the whole I'm a failure routine), or you start goofing around because you can't afford to hit your goal. It's counterproductive to your negative self-programming.

    Don't do it!

    Instead, I note I didn't have a deadline to put on that weight. What good is an arbitrary, man-made number going to do for me? Wake up, hot hootchie friend! Wake up!

    I can look at the end as justifying the means. Focus on now. The today. The saying, "OMG, maybe I don't have to be perfect!"

    I mean, the horror, right?

    2. Throw the scale out the window. I know, I know. The last time you did that, you hit Auntie Edna's ficus and she wasn't very happy about it. Again, we're talking about arbitrary datapoints for failure. You're never going to weigh less enough, lose fast enough. You're mad you ever gained so much. You're a failure, failure failure!

    STOP! Is it really worth it? I'm losing weight and I'm feeling better. I sleep better. My clothes fit better. Am I so ruled by what the numbers say and use it to gauge my worthiness?

    That's so wrong! STOP IT! Get rid of the distraction.

    3. STOP trying to be perfect. OMG! You ate an excess piece of lettuce by mistake. You didn't know the waiter put black beans in your chipless nachos. It happens! Stop looking for reasons to beat yourself up! Maybe you forgot to write down what you ate and can't remember if you had 13 net carbs or 14. Stop expecting everything has to be perfect or what's the point. Nothing magical happens because you did nothing wrong all day. You're still human. You're still losing.

    4. Emotions and bad stuff happens. I don't care if we're God's gift to muliebrity or manhood on any way of eating. The boss is still a putz and our kid might still be in juvie. Your kid's teacher still talks more about her gastric bypass surgery than polynomials, and it rained today.

    It HAPPENS! Embrace the imperfection of life with humor. Treat the emotions with a plan. Don't try to push them down. And don't internalize.

    These things don't happen to you because you deserve them!

    5. Now smell the low-carb java with me a moment. Look at the mirror and you're seeing someone who's not been a very good friend to you. She's been pretty mean. You treat everyone else better than you treat yourself, and you constantly sabotage your efforts in ways you never would anyone else.

    Notice your triggers! You have them! Embrace the fact that every Thursday you watch a show and it makes you feel fat and unsophisticated so you decide to abuse yourself and eat. Stop watching the show. Or watch it while you exercise. Be pro-active.

    Look for where you fail everytime and why.

    I'm telling you, it's been an epipheny and a half to wake up one day and have to admit I'm a perfectionist and that all I've done all this time is set myself up to fail.

    It's much easier to admit I'm human.

    And what clarity.
    ADBB Moderator Emeritus
    My blog: The Lighter Side of Low Carb: Food, fun and fidgeting
    Low Carb Lolitas: Hip low carb bloggers

  • #2
    Re: Coming our from under the blanket of perfection

    Amazing post, Cleo... that really hit me... numbers 1 and 5 especially. Number one... i've been there and that has gotten me off track on Atkins in the past. I think goals are great, however, for me personally, setting date goals for weight loss just has frustrated me in the past, leading to beating myself up over not making that goal, and then saying, "Well, i might as well just eat that pie... right?!" LOL... NOT THE WAY TO GO.

    I agree with all other points... but i am not ready to get rid of the scale just yet... I will say, however, that i had gone from a multi-time-a-day weigher to dragging my heals and doing the no-scale-challenge, and i actually made it through two weeks without the scale! So i am going to continue with that... just checking in periodically to see where i am in the grand scheme of things... i do have weight goals set for myself, just no time and date attached to them...

    Number five. That made me sad. Wow. Really sad. I've been my own worst enemy for so long, and that is just plain dumb. When it comes down to the nuts and bolts of life, i really do love myself. But you wouldn't know it from how i have treated myself. Definitely too hard on me & to critical. No wonder i have a weight problem...

    Take time to appreciate & love yourself everyday... i think the greatest gift we can give ourselves is a strong sense of a positive self.

    Female, 35 ~ 5'6"
    Start Date: 6.21.2005
    New Start Date: 4.5.2010
    Overcoming sugar addiction one day at a time.

    "The body cannot be cured without regard for the soul." Socrates

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

      I think you sound like you've made so many positive changes! I definitely agree that it's very personal and relative and that what works for some perfectionists won't for others.

      It's just so weird to think that I subconsciously embrace those things that foul me up every single time! I mean, the empirical mind knows that scale data points are good. The human mind sees an obstacle not overcome before that is a goal. The perfectionist's mind sees a number they know they'll never reach. And it's good in its very debilitatiung and destructive way, because it serves that purpose of oppressing us.

      You've said such amazing and beautiul things! They're just like you! {{{Dragonfly}}}
      ADBB Moderator Emeritus
      My blog: The Lighter Side of Low Carb: Food, fun and fidgeting
      Low Carb Lolitas: Hip low carb bloggers

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

        Wow, Cleo, what a post. WHAT A POST!

        Numbers 4 and 5 really got to me, but they all hit home -- everyone.

        If it weren't for number 4, I'd probably be at goal, now. Seriously, I'd probably be at goal. Now, of course, that sounds like I'm blaming all those bad things in life that seemed to happen all at once; when, what I really mean is that I'm blaming my reaction to them, and how I should have dealt with them, but didn't.

        Number 5 is a difficult one for me, because I do tend to put others before myself (sometimes, perfect strangers, I swear). I might have some real difficulties in changing that; however, that doesn't mean that I have to treat myself as second best, and leave myself only the leftovers.

        Thanks, Jamie, for a deeply inspiring message!

        Jamie!
        Last edited by Chris; November 2, 2006, 10:57 AM.
        -Chris



        Male, 58 5'4"
        First time around: 218/147/135 -- 71 pounds lost
        This time around: 193.5/184.5/135 -- 9 pounds lost

        Down 33.5 pounds from highest weight

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

          This is the single best piece I have read here. I think you have provoked the masses with this post...The mixture of humor and dead-aim accuracy and truth is astounding.
          I hope this is made into a sticky...
          74 8/1/06
          SW225/CW142/GW135 83lbs GONE!
          2 YEARS and 9MONTHS!!! I've been here
          Jess Female/51/5'3

          www.jdudley.blog.com blog site

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

            Whoa... I'm speechless. Everything you said is ME.. u left off the I'm such a perfectionist that if I do not feel I cannot achieve the goal I'd rather not do at all then face the thought of failure!

            I keep a stat journal.. I named it Self-Discovery because that is what I'm doing. Discovering so many things about myself and the reasons why I gained weight. Now I'm struggling with WHY am I self-sabotaging myself. Losing weight is what I want.. yet I'm holding myself back. Why? I'm working on that. Self-therapy. Your post rang true to me and so many others here. Thanks for putting it into words!


            Rachel
            SW Louisiana
            I can do it!







            October 30,2006

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

              Ah, Rachel - I do that too! I'm not going to do it right so why bother doing it at all? That's me to a tee. *sigh*

              Great post cleo!
              Female

              Reached Goal: 6/6/07 120, 27% BF
              Hurt knee: 11/08
              Restart: 5/10/10 Stats unknown as of yet!


              My journal: http://www.atkinsdietbulletinboard.c...ad.php?t=14218

              Goal Pictures - I reached it, and now I need to get back there!

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                Great thread Cleo! Points 4 and 5 are true and they can really get me sometimes. I need to be more of a good friend of that face I see in the mirror.
                ~Lisa
                -----------------------------------------
                Low-carb RULES, and low-calorie drools.
                194/165.6/140
                5'2"
                Mini-goal #3: get below 160 pounds.
                Mini-goal #2: get below 170 pounds. -- met March 18!
                Mini-goal #1 (get below 180 pounds) -- met Dec. 8!
                on my way!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                  Cleo, you've got me fired up! You're totally right! I have been avoiding the scale lately because I fear the numbers, but I've never slept better or felt as healthy as I do right now! Why let some silly number rain on my parade!!

                  Thanks for the enthusiasm!!
                  Best Wishes!
                  Saty
                  Female : 24 : 5'8" : Cleveland, OH
                  Start Day: 04/11/2006 New Start: 02/12/2007
                  HW:182/SW:180/CW:168/mGW: 160

                  Goal #1: 170lbs Goal Met on 03/05/2007
                  Goal #2: 160lbs
                  Goal #3: 150lbs

                  Living for the Rest of My Life
                  Saty's Not Too Shaby Stats


                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                    I'm utterly speechless, Cleo! Excellent post!!!

                    I caught myself looking away repeatedly as I read those points. You obviously hit the proverbial nail on the head as far as what you said applies to me. Will read over and over until it all sinks in - because I deserve to give myself more credit.
                    ~Susan
                    49/f 5'7" Start 2-27-06 SW222/11-18-09 @ 160-ish/G135-150ish??

                    Doin Miles, Flights, & Kid Ketchin'...
                    2 Ab Chal's; 6WEC#27 slug-Free; & more; 50# LOST in'06-
                    but regained ~20# in '07 in less than 3 weeks! And again early '08 ...Was in HEAVEN -got to 150, for awhile, then got too busy, and gave in too much... and... OK holding pattern "keep it together..."

                    .................OMG how did I fail AGAIN
                    (((on temporary break)))
                    Sigh ... I'll be back... life isn't always fair 10-07-09

                    "Goal: First you have to dream of it. Then you have to do it." Author unknown

                    sheesh

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                      As always, my day started with a thud and is now ending on a much happier note because of you, Cleo. Yep, it's raining. Yep, there's some emtional crappola. Yep, there will be another day, probably with the same crappola just a different time frame. But it's nice to be reminded that I'm human

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                        Wow, I'm not the only one who has hated on myself. I knew there was a reason why I keep coming back to these boards! ((((((((STACERS))))))))))) In a way it's sad that you all and myself are my only motivation on this WOL. I have no support in my family and friends. Yet in another way it is AMAZING that I have found the inspiration to keep striving for what I want by checking into the ADBB, reading such honest words of wisdom that keep my head held up high, my attitude in check, and a feeling of fitting in with people in the same boat. I don't think I would have made it as far as I have this time around without the pep talks, PM's, and encouragement that I have gotten from my newfound friends. Thank You so much STACers for all you've done so far!
                        Jamie



                        Before 9/06 During 11/06



                        October Mileage Challenge 81.5/80miles

                        Weigh, No Way! Challenge Oct 8-22 Completed!
                        Lose 5 lbs by Halloween STAC Challenge 11/5

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                          Great Thread Cleo!! I was just thinking about this very thing today. Although your entire post describes me, #3 really hit home. Just today I was thinking about how I used an extra 1/2 packet of splenda an my net carb count was 20.3. I almost felt like I failed induction today - until I put it into perspective. And I believe that it is only recently now than I can see things without my "perfectionist goggles" on. How stupid.

                          Rachael - That's totally me!! If I can't do something perfect, why do it at all!! Even my fiance knows this about me - He calls it "always wanting to hit a home run" - I've got to learn that sometimes a base hit will do. And even if I strike out, all that matters is I keep on playing.
                          ~ Kristi ~

                          5'3 Female 25yrs


                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                            That's what I like about you cleochatra, you always keep it 'Real'. I can definitely relate to all of what you said and I commend you. We truly need to be real with ourselves and stop being dillusional. I know for myself I have issues with the scale (this is my second time around). That scale dictated my entire day. If I lost a pound I was on top of the world, God forbid I should gain, that was my whole day. My personality was greatly altered, and not for the better. One day I just threw that *&#@ scale away and settled for the numbers only when I went to the doctor and let my clothes speak for themselves. I don't throw myself a 'pity party' anymore. I'm an Atkineer for life; so one pound at a time, one glass of water at a time, one exercise video at a time, one walk at at time and last but not least, one day at a time.



                            Originally posted by cleochatra
                            You know, I've always been a perfectionist.

                            I'm the person who always strove hard and beat myself up if I didn't achieve what I was going for. It's killed me all this time. I'm never good enough. Never helpful enough. Never smart enough. Never pretty enough. Never clever enough. Not focussed enough. Nothing but... well... a failure.

                            Why? Because when we set ourselves up with a do or die attitude, we're dying on every hill of the battle, instead of taking the occasional bullet and moving to the next hill.

                            Triggers for the perfectionist and possible solutions to consider:

                            1. Date goals for weight loss. This is danger Will Robinson! More dangerous than those heels with that pansuit, we're talking about setting yourself up for failure. You either set too high a goal because you know you're not going to make it anyway (thereby reinforcing the whole I'm a failure routine), or you start goofing around because you can't afford to hit your goal. It's counterproductive to your negative self-programming.

                            Don't do it!

                            Instead, I note I didn't have a deadline to put on that weight. What good is an arbitrary, man-made number going to do for me? Wake up, hot hootchie friend! Wake up!

                            I can look at the end as justifying the means. Focus on now. The today. The saying, "OMG, maybe I don't have to be perfect!"

                            I mean, the horror, right?

                            2. Throw the scale out the window. I know, I know. The last time you did that, you hit Auntie Edna's ficus and she wasn't very happy about it. Again, we're talking about arbitrary datapoints for failure. You're never going to weigh less enough, lose fast enough. You're mad you ever gained so much. You're a failure, failure failure!

                            STOP! Is it really worth it? I'm losing weight and I'm feeling better. I sleep better. My clothes fit better. Am I so ruled by what the numbers say and use it to gauge my worthiness?

                            That's so wrong! STOP IT! Get rid of the distraction.

                            3. STOP trying to be perfect. OMG! You ate an excess piece of lettuce by mistake. You didn't know the waiter put black beans in your chipless nachos. It happens! Stop looking for reasons to beat yourself up! Maybe you forgot to write down what you ate and can't remember if you had 13 net carbs or 14. Stop expecting everything has to be perfect or what's the point. Nothing magical happens because you did nothing wrong all day. You're still human. You're still losing.

                            4. Emotions and bad stuff happens. I don't care if we're God's gift to muliebrity or manhood on any way of eating. The boss is still a putz and our kid might still be in juvie. Your kid's teacher still talks more about her gastric bypass surgery than polynomials, and it rained today.

                            It HAPPENS! Embrace the imperfection of life with humor. Treat the emotions with a plan. Don't try to push them down. And don't internalize.

                            These things don't happen to you because you deserve them!

                            5. Now smell the low-carb java with me a moment. Look at the mirror and you're seeing someone who's not been a very good friend to you. She's been pretty mean. You treat everyone else better than you treat yourself, and you constantly sabotage your efforts in ways you never would anyone else.

                            Notice your triggers! You have them! Embrace the fact that every Thursday you watch a show and it makes you feel fat and unsophisticated so you decide to abuse yourself and eat. Stop watching the show. Or watch it while you exercise. Be pro-active.

                            Look for where you fail everytime and why.

                            I'm telling you, it's been an epipheny and a half to wake up one day and have to admit I'm a perfectionist and that all I've done all this time is set myself up to fail.

                            It's much easier to admit I'm human.

                            And what clarity.
                            ~ Chris


                            Re-Started on 1/2/008, F 5'3, 47
                            SW 229/ CW 229/ GW 150



                            "Some Things Are About to Change"

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Getting real with yourself could be your ticket to success this time around

                              You guys so ROCK!

                              I love reading what you wrote, because it gives me even more to think about! I can so relate to obsessing over weight, to thinking "I won't be any happier when thin, so why bother", or thinking, "OMG! I ate a piece of processed cheese food!!!"

                              Being able to treat us like we'd treat friends make so much sense. I mean, if my friend ate a piece of processed cheese food, I'd tell her to shrug it off and that she is doing awesome to now know. I mean, it might sound dorky, but why do we treat ourselves like absolute crap?

                              Aren't we the best and only thing we really have? We have to treat us better! With more respect, more understanding, and more patience. And, especially, as Harlem pointed out, more diligence!

                              You can keep it real and still be positive about it. It's hard sometimes, but focussing less on the little things and more on the overall picture keeps us from superfocussing on every little obsessively bad thing over which we have no control!

                              We do have control over how we allow ourselves to feel, act, and stay successful with this way of eating. That we do control.

                              Thank you so much for adding your experience and thoughts to this! Knowing I'm not the only one who feels this way is sooo much less lonely.
                              ADBB Moderator Emeritus
                              My blog: The Lighter Side of Low Carb: Food, fun and fidgeting
                              Low Carb Lolitas: Hip low carb bloggers

                              Comment

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