Optifast Week 1 Update

I had my weigh in today at Sparrow Weight Management – I lost…drumroll, please…

4.6 pounds!

Woo hoo!!!   When the nurse said I could step off the scale, I jumped up and down, yelled “Yay!”, and did a little dance!  I couldn’t believe I had lost that much in 6 days!

They took a “before” picture of me for my chart, but I didn’t take one myself. Since I was the same weight last week as I was at BlogHer, I’m going to use this as my official “before” picture:

Date Started: October 13th, 2010

Starting Weight: 204.3

Height: 4’11″ 1/4

BMI (Body Mass Index): 41.3

Goal Weight (based on healthy BMI of 25): 124.3

Total Weight needed to lose: 80 pounds

Week One Weight: 199.7

Total Weight lost: 4.6 pounds

Challenges: Getting in all six products a day, drinking 64 ounces a day of water

Comments of a supportive and encouraging nature are always welcome! Tips, Optifast Phase 1 recipes, links to your weight loss blog are also welcome! Thanks for stopping by!

Single Moms and Dads, I Salute You

This past week has given me a whole new appreciation for single Moms and Dads. I do not know how you work, either in an office or at home, plus take care of kids, plus keep up with grocery shopping, meal prep, dishes, laundry, housework, doctor’s appointments, checking the homework, getting everyone to bed on time – it’s exhausting. Mentally and physically.

I am a terrible housekeeper, that’s no secret. I can’t prioritize the work and so I just let it go as long as possible. I’m trying to delegate chores to the kids, but yesterday Ryan was standing next to me rinsing a dish at the sink and I noticed he looked really sad. I asked him what was wrong and he of course said “nothing”. I said “honey, you know you can talk to me any time about any thing. Is everything okay at school?”

“Yes.”

“Everything okay with your friends?”

“Yes.”

“Okay, then what is it?”

He heaved a sigh and said “it’s just so stressful here at home.”

Oh. OH.

Now, this is a kid who is more than happy to help out around the house.  But without realizing it, I had been piling more work on him than he could really do, and he was trying hard to keep up with my requests without complaining, but it had just gotten too much for him.

I’m just glad he said something. I put my arms around him, which isn’t easy since he’s a foot taller than me, but I pulled his head down towards mine and kissed his scratchy cheek (14! razor stubble at 14! who knew!) and told him I was sorry. “I’m so sorry, Ryan”, I said. “I”m so, so sorry.”

He nodded his head. “I love you”, I said, and kissed him a couple more times on his cheek. “I love you too”, he said.

I’m lucky. So, so lucky.

I’m hanging in there by my fingernails as far as the house is concerned. Everyone is wearing clean clothes today, but I think the boys had to hand-wash spoons this morning to eat their cereal. There’s toilet paper, but the bathroom floor is in desperate need of sweeping and mopping. The kitchen floor – well, probably best not to look too closely at the kitchen floor.

I go to Sparrow Weight Management this afternoon for the start of Week Two on the program. It includes a weigh-in. I’m terrified they will tell me I haven’t lost any weight. I feel lighter, my jeans are buttoning without digging into my stomach flab, but scales can be tricky things. If it’s two pounds, I guess that’s two pounds less than last week, and I still have 23 weeks to go. I’m trying to not worry myself into a high blood pressure situation like last week.

Anyway, I’ll wrap this post up by once again saying BRAVO, Single Moms and Dads. You are unsung heroes.

Got my head shrunk. Felt weird.

As part of the pre-Optifast testing I went through, I had an hour and a half consult with a behaviorist named Richard. I forgot to ask him if he was a psychiatrist or a psychologist, googling the word behaviorist made it seem like it could be either. Before the appointment I filled out a 12-question questionnaire, so he had that, plus the 15 other pages I filled out about my perssonal, medical, fitness, and weight loss history.

The questions I answered were about my mood over the seven days previous, and I had to say whether they had been less likely, more likely, or extremely likely to occur. Questions like “I felt irritated at my family and friends”, “I felt hopeless”, “I found myself getting angry easily”. Of the 12 questions, I answered that four of them had been “extremely likely” to occur. I don’t even remember which four, although I’m happy to say I answered “less likely” to the feeling hopeless one.

What amazed me is that from my answers to those questions plus a couple he picked out from the 15 other pages, Richard was able to pretty much figure me out exactly. He knew, even though it wasn’t a specific question, that my Dad had been emotionally distant and wasn’t home much while I was growing up. He knew that the beginning of my weight gain coincided with my moving out of my parent’s house, that I felt like I had to grow up too fast. I don’t know what I was expecting, but it wasn’t for him to figure me out that precisely.

He said I was a perfectionist, compulsive, and have “interpersonal hostility” tendencies. He’s not wrong.

Despite being treated for chronic depression since my mid-20s, I’ve never had counseling or therapy. Insurance doesn’t cover it, and I always felt like nothing I had been through was really that big of a deal that it needed professional help to get through. According to Richard, I’m wrong about that. Twice during our session he suggested a find a counselor and get some help to work through some issues. Imagine my surprise at hearing that.

The thing is, there was something that happened to me when I was a child that I’ve always known has affected me throughout my life. I’ve never written about it here because I…well…I don’t know. I don’t want to be looked at as some kind of victim, I don’t want the label. I feel guilty because there are people who have been through truly horrible things as children, and my tiny, one-time-only thing seems so insignificant compared to that. Who am I to whine about one thing when others have suffered so much?

Does that make any sense?

Here’s the thing about the session with Richard that also surprised me – as I sat there walking him through my life from childhood to now, telling him all my deepest secrets, I felt better. He said things like “I’m so sorry” and “you were right to do that” and “that must have been so hard for you”. I never knew how good it would feel to have a professional hear me out and let me know that it’s okay to feel bad about the mistakes I’ve made, and that I can overcome them.

That I do not have to be defined by who I was.  That I can start from right now and be better.

I have a long, long way to go, people. I have at least 65 pounds of fat to lose in order to just be “overweight” and not “extremely obsese”.  I’ll have to confront my feelings about food, and hunger, and comfort. I’ll have to deal with how being a smaller size makes me feel.  I’m terrified about all of it. My fear of failure is so great that I can’t even believe I’ve gotten this far, and I haven’t even really started.

It helps to know that all of you are out there.