Sunday 2 March 2014

A weight off my mind...

My name is Kelly, and I am a Slimming World member. If you’re reading this and you know me, you probably would have known that already. If you know me, you would also know that I’m not a very good Slimming World member at times.

I have a somewhat love/hate relationship with food. I love eating. Simple as that. But when I eat the wrong things, I hate what it can do to my body. I’m also a very emotional eater. When I’m happy, I celebrate with food (“Can’t believe I’ve lost 2lbs this week. I’m going to treat myself to a chippy tea!”). When I’m sad, I find comfort in food (“Can’t believe I’ve put 2lbs on this week. Sod it, I’m going to the chippy for tea!”). When I’m bored, eating gives me something to do (“Alex is out tonight, there’s nothing on telly... Where did I put those biscuits?”).
This isn’t exactly the healthiest relationship to have with food. I’m fully aware of that. It probably also doesn’t help that I’m one of the fussiest eaters you will ever meet. Don’t get me wrong, you’ll never see me on one of those “Weird Eaters” programmes you get on BBC3, only ever eating things starting with the letter C. I just don’t like vegetables. And when I was little, if I didn’t like something, I just wouldn’t eat it. And nobody ever made me eat it (apart from one evil primary school dinner lady who forced me to eat spaghetti shapes. I threw up on her shoes. That told her!). I get asked on a regular basis “How can you possibly lose weight if you don’t eat vegetables?”. My answer to that? I have no idea. But I’ve managed it (eventually)!
From a very young age, I was spoiled with food. My Nanna Gertie would always let me eat whatever I wanted. Steak and cheese? Of course. Roast chicken smothered in best butter? No problem! I look back on childhood photos of myself knowing this and it seems obvious why I was a rather large child. But of course, Nanna Gertie can’t take all the blame for my appetite. She died when I was 13. At her funeral, I ate 14 cheese sandwiches. No one forced me to, I just ate them. I probably ate a lot of other things that day besides that, but it’s the cheese sandwiches that I’ll always remember.
I was probably at my biggest at the age of 14/15. I was a size 16. A lot of people don’t believe me when I tell them that. You might even be one of them. Well, here’s the proof:
 
This picture is almost 10 years old, and it never fails to shock me. When this was used in a slideshow at my 18th birthday party, I was more embarrassed at seeing this photo than I was at seeing a photo of me aged 3 naked on a beach, save for a sun hat.

I was one of the biggest girls in my year at school, I was always aware of that. I was terrible at PE, always coming last. I’d get out of breath at the slightest bit of exercise, my face the colour of a tomato. That being said, the only time I remember ever getting picked on about my weight was in year 7 when one boy thought it would be hilarious to sing “Who ate all the pies?” to me in the school canteen. It wasn’t hilarious, it made me cry when I got home that night. But I never let it show that it got to me in school. I was the stereotypical “fat, funny friend”. I’d make fun of myself before anyone could do it for me. Or at least I thought I did. When I met up with a group of old school friends a few months ago, they were all complimentary about my weight loss and all commented on how small I was these days. The “fat, funny friend” reflex kicked in almost immediately, and all I could say was “I’ve always been this small, just never this slim!” to which one of them replied “Yeah, we used to say you were 4ft tall and 5ft wide”. That stung a little – they never once said it to my face.
My first dabble with dieting happened not long after that photo was taken. Mum and Dad were planning to get married in 12 months time, and I was going to be a bridesmaid. None of us wanted to look fat on the photos, so as a family, we all started to eat a little better in preparation. By the time the wedding came around in July 2005, I was probably somewhere between a size 12 and a size 14. Not bad!
18 months after that, I split up with my first boyfriend and lost more weight. I didn’t even mean to lose more weight, it just happened (honest). A person (who shall remain nameless for the sake of this blog) then came into my life who was constantly telling me I was still too big and that I should lose more weight. I believed he was right, so I lost a bit more weight. Just as quickly as he came into my life, he then left – a dead weight lifted off my shoulders.
So there I was, the slimmest I had ever been, unsure whether to feel brilliant because I’d lost weight or rubbish for losing it on someone else’s say so. Then I met Alex – a lad with a mammoth appetite and the fastest metabolism ever (Me? Jealous? Get lost!). A few months into our relationship, it was my 6th Form Leavers’ Ball. I had the bridesmaid dress from Mum and Dad’s wedding altered specially for the occasion, and I even had to have it taken in because I’d lost so much weight in the 2 years that had passed. What a great feeling! I was slimmer, I had a gorgeous boyfriend and everything was going brilliantly.
I’d heard vicious rumours that when you’re in a relationship, you tend to get comfortable with that person and a few pounds could creep on. Those rumours proved to be true. Whatever Al ate, I did too. We’d have huge takeaways at the weekend, followed by a tub of ice cream. We’d eat a lasagne big enough for a family of 4 between the 2 of us. He never put a pound on, what with his metabolism being faster than Usain Bolt, but my weight slowly crept up. I brushed it off, and squeezed myself into the same clothes, convincing myself that I hadn’t put weight on and that I was still the same size. This was also around the time I was in uni, and I wasn’t eating healthily at all while I was there. I think my highlight of every week was going to the chippy for dinner with my friends on a Friday.
In 2010, I was due to graduate and turn 21 within the space of a few weeks, which is what eventually started me on my Slimming World journey.
 
I was having a 21st birthday party, and I wanted all eyes to be on me. I planned to wear my beautiful pink bridesmaid dress/6th Form Leavers' Ball dress while everyone else would be in black and white. So imagine my horror when I tried the dress on 2 months prior to my party and it wouldn’t zip up! I was devastated – I wanted everyone to be looking at me because I looked nice, not because I looked like a sausage bursting out of its skin! I couldn’t possibly wear something different, it was this dress or nothing, so I knew something had to be done about it. My mum had started going to a Slimming World group a couple of weeks before at our local church, and the Extra Easy plan they’d introduced seemed exactly that – Extra Easy to follow. I went to the next group with her (not before I shoved a massive sausage and cheese sandwich down my neck) and stood on the scales.

10st 2lbs. Surely that was wrong! I thought I was more around the 9st mark! I walked out of group that night determined that I would never see that weight on the scales again. I changed what I ate straight away – I replaced full fat Coke for diet Coke, sugar for sweetener and said hello to the world of unlimited rice, pasta and lean meats. Feeling excited at this change, I went for my 2nd weigh in a week later. 10st 2lbs. What?! I’d followed the plan all week! How could this happen? I left the church feeling mentally deflated – what a load of rubbish this was. I hadn’t lost anything, what was the point? Both Mum and my consultant Noreen tried to keep me on track. “You’re not used to eating breakfast Kelly!” “Your body’s just getting used to the changes you’re making!”. I carried on with the plan, just in case what they’d been telling me was true and I actually would start losing weight.
My 3rd weigh in. I wasn’t holding much hope out. I stood on the scales and held my breath as I watched the digits on the monitor change (like holding your breath makes any difference!). 9st 13lbs. I’d lost 3lbs! It had worked - I’d actually lost weight! By the time of my 21st birthday party, I’d lost half a stone and the dress not only zipped up, but it fit perfectly. By the time I’d lost a stone, I decided to set my target weight at 8st 7lbs – the weight I’d convinced myself I was when I met Alex (looking back, I think our bathroom scales were being too kind to me). The next big turning point was buying my first ever pair of size 12 skinny jeans – I think I danced out of the changing rooms that day!
I got to target weight in March 2011, and looked forward to being a lifetime Slimming World member and never having to pay again. I’d worked so hard, I was never going to go out of my target range again! Being at my target weight meant I was also now a size 10, something I had only ever dreamed of before. I got rid of all the clothes that were bigger than a size 10, because, of course, I would never need them again!
But nothing is ever as easy as that. After a while, I got complacent with being at target. Thoughts like “It won’t matter if I have a Mars bar today!” and “I can’t be bothered to make a sandwich for lunch, I’ll just buy one from town!” started to creep into my head, and I was ok with that. I was still fitting into my clothes and I wasn’t putting too much weight on. So I carried on. I’d make excuses like “Oh, I’m still in holiday mode”, “It’s Christmas, so I thought I’d be more flexible with my syns” and “I only eat chocolate on days ending in Y!” (I’m kidding about the last one!). And so, I put a stone back on. To a lot of people, I just looked the same as ever – when you’ve been bigger, you get quite good at hiding yourself, so baggy tops were my new best friend. Eventually I got fed up of wearing trousers that cut into my stomach, so I decided to start making an effort again.
In the last 12 months, I have lost that stone again, and just last week I got back into my target range for the first time in a long time. Don’t get me wrong – in that 12 months, I haven’t always been 100% on the Slimming World plan. Sometimes I will have a blip, and eat things I’m not supposed to. One of the things my consultant has taught me is to take the guilt away, and remember that tomorrow is a brand new day. If I have a curry on a Saturday and I end up having a bit of cheese naan to go with it, I don’t think “That’s it, diet ruined!”, I think “I enjoyed that. I’ll get right back on plan in the morning so I don’t do too much damage at my next weigh in”. If I know I’ll be using my syns on something “naughty”, like a meal out at the weekend, or a bowl of custard after my tea, I’ll make sure that I eat plenty of free food during the day so I don’t feel remotely guilty when I treat myself.
Kate Moss once said “Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels”. At Slimming World, my consultant’s slightly adapted that to say “Nothing tastes as good as a weight loss”, and she is absolutely right. When I stand on the scales on a Tuesday night, knowing I have stuck to the plan and I get a weight loss, I can’t wipe the smile off my face. No cake or chippy tea will ever taste as good as that for me (even though I acknowledge that both do taste pretty good).
 
I will also never get bored of being able to go into a clothes shop knowing that I can pick up something in a size 10 and chances are it will fit me. I will probably never have the body of a Victoria’s Secret Angel, sometimes I still have to wear control underwear under tight dresses, and I can bore the pants off anyone about how many syns are in a quarter pounder with cheese given half the chance (26.5 if you’re interested). But I hope now you’ve read this, you’ll understand why I’m so passionate (and sometimes boring) about it. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have chicken nuggets to eat – syn free, naturally ;-)
 
Love,
Kelly
xXx