So, when I got back to school-home after being at home-home for a month and a half, I felt pretty awful. I mean, yes, part of that was loneliness and being sad to leave my family and home-friends, but what I physically I felt gross.
I initially thought I’d have a gym membership, but that didn’t work out. So I basically went from working out 4-5 times a week, mostly running and Body Pump, to doing… nothing. I think that’s probably the longest exercise vacation I’ve taken since I started exercising (aside from the time I was at Jubilee). I love exercise, and so getting into the gym has never been a problem for me. A few nights I was able to go walk/run, but for the most part I just wasn’t willing to kill myself in 100*/70% humidity weather to get a “Work out” in.
Combine that with birthday celebrations, a trip to the beach, parties and hang outs involving lots of drank, and my bad habit of late night snacking… ugh. At school-home, I never really buy snack foods that I like because I’m too prone to mindlessly overeating them, so even though I still eat too much at night, my selections are limited (Mmm… frozen broccoli).
At home-home, people live there who are NOT snack crazy Cookie Monsters, like me, and so they have stuff like… potato chips and Oreos around. Basically, snack foods are my Kryptonite, and I’m pretty sure I went to bed every night feeling like I had “ruined” a good day of eating with a lot of late night junk food.
I knew that I had gained weight because even my fat jeans were feeling like regular jeans, but I didn’t get on the scale until after I’d had a week back on schedule to try and do better. Last week, I was 5lbs up. Which is no surprise. I mean, really if someone asked me how to gain weight I would tell them to eat a lot of junk food at night, drink alcohol often and stop working out.
And no, five pounds is not the end of the world by any stretch of the imagination. But when you are trying to lose weight, five pounds is a solid step in the wrong direction. And it is a solid step towards a number, which shall not be spoken, that terrifies me. I’m sure everyone has a weight that they believe “other people” weigh, but that they would never let themselves weigh. Well, for me, that five pounds is just creeping closer to that “Only Other People Weigh This” number, and it really kind of freaked me out.
Feeling better from working out and eating right is always my primary motivator when it comes to maintaining a healthy lifestyle. After a week of working out (5 days at the gym!), eating normally, not drinking … and (3! days) of cutting out the nighttime snacking, I’m feeling so much better, and the scale has gone down. I want these actions to become habits that can make weight loss easier, and get me further away from those “Holy Shit”-numbers on the scale.
So, I’m looking for inspiration… have you ever made a lifestyle change into a habit? How? It doesn’t have to be weight/food/whatever related, I just want to know that it is possible!!

I feel you on this one. I have a low number that I would LOVE to hit (and maintain, though it’d be extremely difficult) and a high number that I have hit once in my life and vow to never again. It’s all relative, of course, one person’s high may be another’s low, but still.
I’ve been out of commission with running for four weeks now. Four weeks of interrupted marathon training and four weeks of significantly less calories burned….NOT cool. Thank goodness for a gym membership because otherwise I’d be screwed, there comes a point for me when the at-home workout DVDs just aren’t taking the cake anymore.
I also tend to do the same type of thing with the late-night eating. I can go all damn day eating well and then when those midnight hunger pangs flare up, suddenly a handful of chips and some yogurt with granola and maybe a slice of leftover pizza seems like the best idea ever. Ugh. Bad.
Then I wonder why the scale is up the next morning. Fail.
Sorry about the gain. I think every woman is sensitive about their number. It’s so crazy to work out with guys and here them talk and say “YEAH!!! Up 3 pounds!!! PURE SOLID MUSCLE!!!” and stuff like that. LOL. And women… if we’re up we’re in tears.
The thing with exercise though like you said isn’t necessarily a number on a scale but that you will always feel better after you exercise than if you didn’t… and really that’s what matters, the health benefits, more than a number.
A.L.
I’m sorry this has you down
My fat jeans aren’t my fat jeans anymore, they’re my regular jeans so I feel ya.
Boo the scale. I recently started weighing myself regularly (it’s been years) to join Kohy in his muscle man transformation. I’m not a fan of the scale though, especially after some time away from exercise, etc. All it’s going to do is give you bad news. I’m glad you feel better now that you’re back in school-home. Tell Moneen I said hi!
You are speaking my language woman. My gym membership ran out a few weeks (…maybe a month and a half) ago. I keep telling myself that I don’t need it and that I can work out at home. The gym builds structure. This summer has been a big ole’ fail whale for me on the exercise and eating right front. I loved this post…I feel like I’m not the only one griping to the side of the wagon.
Hope your school year is off to a good start!
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