Being overweight or obese

Health, mental health, diet, fitness, relaxation.
Post Reply
User avatar
satehen
Posts: 180
Joined: Sun Apr 09, 2023 7:28 pm
Location: England
Has liked: 68 times
Been liked: 64 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by satehen »

According to my BMI I’m obese. I’m a U.K. 14, big boobs and hips, I don’t feel or look obese. I could stand to lose a couple of lb but I’m not a big girl.
And all that there is, is the absolute ugliness of being human. And you’ve got to love it. Or else you’re f**ked.
User avatar
RedRosa
Posts: 237
Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2023 5:22 pm
Location: Los Angeles
Has liked: 194 times
Been liked: 98 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by RedRosa »

I'm not obese but for my height I'm a little bit overweight (5'6", 148 lbs.)

I guess I'm a mesomorph, and as it happens the two women I've most recently had sex with are ectomorphs, tall and skinny.
An Injury to One is an Injury to All
User avatar
moonbynight
Site Admin
Posts: 248
Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2022 1:43 pm
Location: Hell
Has liked: 1 time
Been liked: 141 times
Contact:

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by moonbynight »

This is such a multifactoral, charged subject. So many factors influence weight - some controllable, some less so, some not at all. And as far as the health effects, correlation vs causation, or which direction the causation goes, is not always clear.

If you're worried about your health, make positive changes. Eat a healthier diet (though there's no firm agreement on what is actually healthiest, or whether this is the same for everyone) and increase your physical activity. Reduce or eliminate drinking or smoking. Take measures to manage your stress and improve your sleep. Maybe weight loss will follow, or maybe it won't, but it will still be beneficial.
Lilianna
Posts: 61
Joined: Fri Dec 30, 2022 12:53 am
Has liked: 87 times
Been liked: 33 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by Lilianna »

I've had really great experiences losing weight with bariatric surgery (VSG) then Ozempic, after a lifetime of trying and failing to lose weight otherwise, and I've stayed at a normal BMI since 2018. Just putting that info out there in case I can help anyone, I'm open to chatting about it.
User avatar
Silo
Posts: 16
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2023 5:20 pm
Been liked: 11 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by Silo »

I'm overweight right now and I hate it. I *feel* it - especially when it's hot. These Texas summers were much easier on me when I was within a healthy BMI range.
User avatar
VirgoGirl
Posts: 584
Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2022 6:49 pm
Location: SOUTH AFRICA
Has liked: 317 times
Been liked: 181 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by VirgoGirl »

I'm a bit overweight and decided to start healthy ways from today. Lets see how this goes.
Slarae4
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Jun 10, 2023 4:17 pm
Has liked: 1 time
Been liked: 3 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by Slarae4 »

I had bariatric surgery myself, this past March. So happy with my decision to do so, and really loving my results so far and loving myself more.
MarieGreen
Posts: 176
Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2023 5:35 am
Has liked: 125 times
Been liked: 100 times

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by MarieGreen »

I'm overweight since perimenopause. Not obese but in the overweight part of the BMI chart. I'm trying to get my hormones sorted as I think that's the key but also cutting back on alcohol (which is finally working) and stress (I've quit my well paid but horrendously stressful job).

I now wear a sports watch in bed and what is fascinating is how much better my sleep is when I don't drink and when my stress is lower. It's early days but weeks when I lose weight tend to be when I've had better sleep. So I think if I can really crack that I'll be there. Also cutting back on alcohol cuts back on the calories of it too.

What I find really annoying though about healthcare in the UK is my GP was prepared to refer me to a diet and exercise programme. Alcohol yes and I'm reducing but I work in the food industry and I exercise 4-5 times a week. Literally what on earth will they tell me that I don't know. In fact I'm more likely to know more about nutrition than they do. 🙄. The way medical professionals patronise perimenopausal women is a shocker.
So confused.
User avatar
moonbynight
Site Admin
Posts: 248
Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2022 1:43 pm
Location: Hell
Has liked: 1 time
Been liked: 141 times
Contact:

Re: Being overweight or obese

Post by moonbynight »

Yeah, perimenopause makes it difficult. I gained about 30lbs within months when my perimenopause symptoms started (20 from my baseline - I'd lost 10lbs with an illness not too long before). Some of this may have been diet or lifestyle, but I've made changes there, and I'm still only maintaining and not losing.

I exercise 30 minutes in the morning 5 days a week, and go to the gym or some other physical activity, such as a long walk, another 3-4 days. I cook basically every meal. I drink in moderate quantities a few times a year. I eat low carb, with minimal processed sugar or artificial sweetener, though I do use naturally sourced lower calorie sweeteners in small quantities routinely. I've found things that work for me, and for the past 6 months or so, my sleep, anxiety levels, and overall mental health are as good as they've been since hitting puberty (I think peri has actually had a good effect on me in this respect).

Is there room for improvement? Sure. But it's a little discouraging that, with all that, I'm just maintaining.

But mostly I'm looking at it as a wake-up call that I have half my life left (assuming nothing unexpected happens - both my grandmothers died at a bit more than twice my age), and that physically, it's downhill from here, and I am going to have to actively fight that decline to maintain as much quality of life for as long as possible. So if weight loss isn't happening it's still worth it.

Also helps that I've found plenty of people around my age in the same boat. I know a freaking marathon runner who runs for hours a day who is saying the same thing. Kinda comes down to "Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, The courage to change the things I can, And the wisdom to know the difference."
Post Reply