What are friends for. :-)
 

David L.

A liberal is someone who feels a great debt to his
fellow man, which debt he proposes to pay off with
your money. -- G. Gordon Liddy

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Bethany
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 12:21 PM
To: The Sandbox Discussion List
Subject: Re: [Sndbox] Beware! The No. 1 Diet Saboteur

actually, my family and friends didn't buy me food and stuff. But when I had lost 14 pounds and my best friend found out how much I loss..she started about how I don't need to lose anymore. Then she started with "I can't believe you need to lose X amount of weight. You don't look overweight, blah, blah.... you're going to look anorexic, blah, blah.."
It started to really grate my nerves along with her downing of low carb when she readily admits she knows nothing about it.
But it's easy for a 110 pound little waif to make such comments..LOL
Although for the first time in our friendship, she actually weighs more than me. She is 6 months PG. The other 2 times she was PG I was also PG at the same time, so I still weighed more..LOL
~*~*Bethany*~*~
The Birds are OUT and
First Never Looked So Sweet!
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
----- Original Message -----
From: Charles
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 1:10 PM
Subject: [Sndbox] Beware! The No. 1 Diet Saboteur

 Beware! The No. 1 Diet Saboteur

If you're trying to lose weight, the one thing that is most likely to derail your best diet plan is...your family and close friends. Don't believe it? Test it. Go on a diet. Lose a few pounds. Brag a little. And then see what happens. Chances are, you'll find you're the recipient of fattening food gifts. Your spouse may buy you a candy bar at the movies or your co-worker will offer you cookies when the afternoon munchies hit. They aren't doing this to be mean or vindictive. They probably aren't even conscious of it. But what they are doing is sabotaging your weight loss success.

"I've seen it happen so many times to my weight loss patients that when they come in and confess they fell off the wagon, I'm ready with my ritual response: 'Who did this to you?'" Colleen Pierre, a registered dietician and an associate professor of aging, nutrition, and fitness at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., wrote in an article published by Rodale Press. "They're always shocked to think that someone else may have had a hand in their weight loss failure. Diet saboteurs. They're everywhere." Pierre says that the problem can be defined in one word: Change. A diet creates big changes in anyone's life. These are changes welcomed by the dieter. But friends and family aren't in the same mode of change. Be aware that diet sabotage is not done purposefully and maliciously. It's unconscious.

You can fight the sabotage by understanding why it happens. Pierre offers these reasons:
--They feel guilty.
--They don't understand.
--They miss the old you.
What you need to do is get them on your side. Numerous studies have proven that when your social network of family and friends supports your diet, it has a positive influence on the results. New York City nutritionist Shira Isenberg, R.D. told syndicated health columnist Charles Stuart Platkin that family and friends bring "an increase in self-confidence by validating the individual's choice to lose weight, a reduction in overall stress, and increased attention to achieving the overall goal." And they do it without offering you a cookie.

 
Charles Mims
 
 


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