Posts Tagged ‘Weight’

Chronic Dieting vs. Permanent Weight Loss: Carol’s Story

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

You can read part I of Carol’s story here – a story that rings true for millions of Americans  who have been dieting all their lives only to come up short when it comes to losing weight permanently.

In our first counseling session, Carol told me her mother had started putting her on diets at the age of thirteen, when she was in sixth grade. At that time, Carol was the largest person in her class. The boys ridiculed her for her size. On more than one occasion she heard her friends laughing behind her back. She would fight back the tears when she heard them calling her “cow” and “pig” and “monster.” Deep inside she knew they were right. That was how she looked. Worse yet, it was how she felt about herself.

Her weight made her look older than she was. She was a child in an oversized adult’s body. Since she had no real friends at school, she began to walk down a path I have seen all too often — a journey that embraced an intimate, negative relationship with food.

Diets, Pills and Weight-Loss Doctors

Carol would sneak snacks during recess, hide food in her desk, and pilfer sandwiches and cookies from the lunch bags of fellow students. Several times a week on the way home from school, she would pay homage to the corner grocery store where candy, jelly donuts, and half gallons of ice cream were waiting to be her friends. All that food had to go someplace, and without any exercise or care for her body, Carol just got larger and larger.

Her mother assumed the only way for Carol to reduce her weight was to go on a diet, and then another, and then another. When the diets didn’t work — and they never did — she began taking Carol to different doctors in town — weight specialists, they were called — but even ritual appearances in the offices of these medicine men and women did not work. So she began buying diet pills for her daughter, thinking that surely pills would do the trick. They would work for a while, and then Carol would get sick, so her mother would try another brand of false promises.

During this ordeal, Carol’s mother would put her on a scale three to four times a day, hoping, searching, praying for those two or three illusive pounds that somehow miraculously might have fallen from Carol’s body. Carol would stand on the scale and cry as the scale confirmed what she knew would be true: another one, two, three, four, or five pounds. Without knowing it, her mother had set Carol up for failure. She continued to look for the magic pill, the overnight answer, the one diet that would help her daughter shed her unwanted weight, all to no avail.

Carol was learning a lot about dieting. She was also learning that her body was not her friend.

The average person coming to The Center for counseling about weight challenges has been on at least seven diets. These men and women have learned to count calories automatically, have an obsession with cholesterol, know as much about packaged diet foods as the manufacturers of those foods, have fasted, eaten only herbs, wracked their bodies with liposuction, and had their stomachs stapled. Desperate people do desperate things. The trouble is that most desperate people do the wrong things.

People who lose weight permanently dismount the roller coaster of dieting. People who lose weight permanently realize their lives must no longer revolve around food. They know they must take control of their lives and start living as God, their heavenly Father and faithful Friend, intended them to live — with freedom, joy, and an all-abiding sense of self-worth.

SOURCE: Chapter 1, Losing Weight Permanently: Secrets of the 2 Percent Club by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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Lose Weight for Good: Introducing Secrets from The 2 Percent Club

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

As a nation, we have a problem — a serious problem:

  • It’s estimated that one in three Americans is overweight, an increase of 30 percent in the last 10 years
  • 44 percent of high school girls and 15 percent of high school boys report that they are trying to lose weight
  • 50 percent of adult females and 24 percent of adult males are on a diet on any given occasion
  • It’s now estimated that 10 percent of Americans have disordered eating

Unfortunately, the battle of the bulge for most is not getting any easier. That’s why my colleagues and I at The Center for Counseling and Health Resources are concerned about people and their weight challenges. But, unlike other weight-loss programs, we do not isolate weight as a single issue. We don’t focus on the use of scales or on a daily regimen of checking to see how much has been lost or gained in the last week. Our whole person approach does not encourage people to tally calories, check body fat, or count cholesterol and sodium. This is because people who lose weight permanently do not rely on the stuff most diets are made of.

Progress … not Perfection

Instead of working toward perfection in weight management, the members of the two percent club inch toward progress. They come to understand that food is not the issue, because if food were the problem, then diets would be the answer. People who lose weight permanently understand they no longer need to rely on food for solace and comfort. No longer do such people feel trapped and immobilized by weight. Instead, they begin to see themselves as individuals for which the issue of weight is only one component. That is the exhilarating thing about this approach.

The diet mentality is based on the belief that thin is good and fat is bad. People begin dieting to become thin and good, only to set in motion an endless cycle of pain and dieting failure.

When I started seeing Carol for weight counseling, she had already been on 13 different diets, none of which had worked. In fact, after each diet fiasco Carol always gained back the weight she lost, plus a few extra pounds. You can imagine how large she’d become after putting her body through such intense shock over so many years. I’d estimated that since junior high Carol had probably shed a total of three to four hundred pounds. Yet she continued to begin every diet with a vague sense of hope that this one will work; I know I’ll make it this time…. Just one more shot at this and I’ll be thin…. I know I’ll be successful with this one.

But every diet was just another breaktaking roller coaster ride of self-delusion and false promises, with her depression dipping lower each time as yet one more diet provided painful and ineffective. During and after each unsuccessful diet experience, Carol’s highs were high and her lows lower on more than one occasion. She had come to the end of the line. She now knew that diets didn’t work and never would. Her question was what would work?

How did this terible diet mania start? What put Carol on the hopeless path of eating disorders in the first place? What had gone on in her past to create a foundation of pain that dogged her steps well into adulthood?

Next Thursday: Carol’s story continues.

SOURCE: Chapter 1, Losing Weight Permanently: Secrets of the 2 Percent Club by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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Healthy Habits, Happy Kids: Helping Them SOAR

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Somewhere along the line, kids have lost some of their childhood. We’ve taken it from them through our accelerated culture. We’ve overshadowed it by adult concerns and worries. Through a long line of stress-induced choices, we keep putting their childhood on hold. The sum of our daily decisions can add up to a childhood compromised or lost. That certainly isn’t our intent as parents, but it’s becoming a common outcome.

Changes in our culture and society have negatively impacted the health and well-being of kids today. Our kids are more stressed, less connected, more busy, and less active than we were growing up. As parents, we see this but feel at a loss to know how to regain control over our own frenetic lifestyles and return a healthy, balanced childhood to our kids.

Concerned with our own weight we worry over the physical health of our kids, as childhood weight gain and obesity levels begin to mirror adult epidemic proportions. Caught between the dangers of unhealthy weight on one hand and the dangers of unhealthy attitudes about weight, food, and body image on the other, parents are left struggling.

We want to help but don’t know how. Sometimes what you do to try to help just ends up making the whole situation worse. So you do nothing, out of fear; which provides no solution at all.

But we must provide a solution!

Our kids are being weighed down not just with extra pounds but with conditions and concerns long thought to be strictly associated with adulthood and advancing age: hypertension, type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, anxiety, and stress. Given these realities, we want our children to lose weight and live healthy and happy lives.

Helping Kids SOAR

The secret to healthy kids can be found through a whole-person approach to the needs of your child. Each child is more than he or she weighs. Each is a compilation of preferences, personality, genetics, and family patterns. In society today, appearance takes center stage, but a thin child is not necessarily a happy child. By addressing the emotional, relational, physical and spiritual needs of children, parents are able to provide a balanced, caring environment that contributes to lifelong happiness and health.

I call this helping a child SOAR. As parents, we must strive to allow our children to grow up in an environment where they are:

Supported – provided intentional guidance, direction, and nurturing

Optimistic — assured of a bright hope and future ahead for them as they grow

Active and Achieving — finding success in their personal and family endeavors and in active, energetic pursuits

Responsible — understanding and accepting their own part in healthy living and choices

When children grow up with this framework, they are truly able to SOAR through a healthy, happy childhood and into a productive, vital adulthood.

Next Wednesday — Helping your child SOAR emotionally

SOURCE: Introduction to Healthy Habits, Healthy Kid: A Practical Plan to Help Your Family by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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