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Weight loss chat

A space to talk openly about weight loss journeys and challenges. Mumsnet hasn't checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. You may wish to speak to a medical professional before starting any diet.

From obese to healthy: what I’ve learnt

80 replies

treesandteas · 20/01/2025 15:55

In 2023, I was clinically obese, I had lost my periods, and felt overwhelming shame and self-loathing. My New Year’s resolution wasn’t to lose weight. It was to heal my relationship with food, get my periods back, and to feel like myself again.

I am now a healthy BMI, but most importantly, I eat well. I love to exercise, I like myself, I am active and enthusiastic about life and my periods are regular again.

I had previously always been overweight or obese. I spent my teenage years and 20s endlessly yo-yo dieting.

If you are struggling or feel like the task is too great, I thought it might be helpful to share what I had learnt.

  1. Don’t go on a diet. I’d tried Slimming World, Weight Watchers, high protein, low carb, etc. It never worked. In fact, food rules made me feel like there was something wrong with me: none of my friends had to count syns or bring salads to parties to stay trim.
  2. Eat more. This is the biggest thing for me. Moving away from the mindset of restriction (I can’t eat too much of that, I mustn’t have that) and instead think about what you can ADD to a meal. Herbs, spices, seeds, a sprinkling of feta, a spoonful of kimchi. What can you add to your meal to nourish your body?
  3. Learn about food and use this knowledge to love yourself. I listened to the Zoe podcasts to learn how food can be the most powerful tool we have to improve our health every single day. Each time I eat well, I am doing it because I love myself and want to take care of my health. Ultra processed “low calorie alternatives” are about self-loathing. I never felt good putting unhealthy food into my body to line the pockets of an industry that thrives off of my insecurities.
  4. Think long term: I lost over 20% of my body weight in 12 months. This might sound a lot, but my goal was modest: half a pound a week. I could have aimed for more, and lost the weight in a few months. But I chose to take it slow so I wouldn’t have to diet. I ate out with friends, enjoyed new foods on holiday, ate cake on my birthday - all things I would have felt bad about if I’d aimed for faster weight loss. Which in turn would have made me feel deprived, then ashamed, until I binged. All before starting the cycle again.
  5. Habit stack. I now eat 30 plants and run 15-20 km a week, but this didn’t happen overnight. For the first few months, I ate more veg and tried to do 10k steps a day. When that was a habit, I started couch 2 5k. When that was a habit, I started adding high probiotic foods to my diet. If I’d tried it all at once, I would have been overwhelmed and failed.
  6. Remember, it might take a little while, but you will look like what you do. If you build healthy habits into your life, get your steps in, and eat mostly healthy, with the odd treat here and there, you will look like somebody who does those things. Take it slow, enjoy the journey and feel yourself evolve into a healthier, happier person.

You are worthy of loving yourself whatever your size and weight. There is a world of joy to be found out there from eating nourishing food because you love your body, and exercising because it’s fun. Experiment, find what you enjoy, and never forget that you deserve it.

OP posts:
PrincessOfPreschool · 22/01/2025 15:52

treesandteas · 22/01/2025 11:46

The Zoe podcasts I listened to on Spotify. I would say scroll through and pick the ones that are most interesting to you “How to eat in 2025” is a good one to start with!

Thank you.

DeepFatFried · 22/01/2025 15:56

NigelHarmansNewWife · 22/01/2025 15:01

I acknowledged that.

Why are you so combative?

Because you seem to be going out of your way to dispute things that have not been said on this thread.

Since that list you have brought up some other ‘bollocks’ that hasn’t been brought up here.

The OP is posting about her emotional relationship with food, enabling her to eat more healthily which has caused her to lose weight. That’s it.

NigelHarmansNewWife · 22/01/2025 22:16

DeepFatFried · 22/01/2025 15:56

Because you seem to be going out of your way to dispute things that have not been said on this thread.

Since that list you have brought up some other ‘bollocks’ that hasn’t been brought up here.

The OP is posting about her emotional relationship with food, enabling her to eat more healthily which has caused her to lose weight. That’s it.

The OP and I have discussed a number of things around weight loss on this thread. No need for you to be the self-appointed thread police. Your reading comprehension needs work too.

MsAnnFrope · 08/03/2025 22:51

Fibrous · 22/01/2025 09:05

Hi OP, well done on your health overhaul.

I’ve been focussing on eating high fibre meals for the last couple of months - nothing is off limits but trying to eat three 10g fibre meals every day really makes you focus on nutritious food. I’ve not been counting calories at all. I’m very short (5-1), with thyroid issues, and middle aged, but the weight has been coming off at 1-2lbs a week with seemingly no effort at all except the meal prep (I like to eat something different every day so it’s involved a fair amount of recipe hunting).

I'm waiting for haemorrhoid surgery so this diet has been forced on me, but I feel really good in myself after two months on it, so plan to stick to this way of eating for good, now.

I used to have a really sweet tooth but as that now brings me pain in the bum, two months of cold turkey on sweet things has really got me out of the habit and now when I see my partner eating the supermarket cookies or chocolate cake, I feel a bit disgusted. I can’t say I’d feel the same if someone presented me with some home made cake but I’m hoping to get to the point where I can just have a slice of those things occasionally again but they aren’t a daily part of my diet.

Know this is quite an old post now but if you have any tips on this I’d really appreciate meal suggestions to pack in the fibre!

Fibrous · 13/03/2025 06:56

MsAnnFrope · 08/03/2025 22:51

Know this is quite an old post now but if you have any tips on this I’d really appreciate meal suggestions to pack in the fibre!

HI! Sorry I missed this at the time. The Tim Spector cook book is a good start https://www.amazon.co.uk/Food-Life-Cookbook-bestselling-gut-health-ebook/dp/B0CTCBR3VB

I typically eat overnight oats for breakfast, and every day involves beans or pulses in some form. Yesterday we have chickpeas in a kefir and avocado and coriander dressing on sourdough toast, with a side salad and toasted pumpkin seeds, and dinner was a chickpea, tomato, bread and fennel soup with wild garlic pesto. We're (mostly) vegetarian so lots of south asian cooking too, so lots of dahls, and usually try to keep the carbs wholegrain, except for bread, which I just doesn't eat very much of anymore but still prefer white sourdough.

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