Any positive weight loss experiences?
I feel slightly awkward saying this but you all seem like you're really good folks and not especially judgemental so here it goes... I'm fat and I want that to change. It has to be the primary reason I decided to get into this hobby. I was never the type to go out for a walk in the woods. This is proving to be great incentive for me to just take a walk, to get active. After less than a week of caching I'm already feeling much better than I have in a while. After an ep of Geocaching Podcast pulled from archives with an interview of a guy who had lost 60 lbs I have been wondering if anyone else has any positive experience such as this or possibly some tips on how to work this into a valid workout regiment. Thanks for yer time.
I was over 300 LBS (ouch!)
I was active- canoed and hiked even at that weight....
but one day in Oct 07...I had enough of being FAT!!!
I walked into the YMCa and started going to a class every day....in Nov 07- I walked into Weight watchers...I have been going for almost 90 weeks and I never miss my meeting....I have lost over 120 LBS so far...and have a few more to go..
As so many have said....its a lifestyle change....I had to change my eating habits and my activity habits. Its a hard road that you have to want to go down. Its hard to pass up on all sorts of goodies - but i do my best each day....
It was the best thing I ever did for myself...I can't tell you how great I feel- how much easier it is to hike, bike canoe, camp and so much more.
If anyone one thinks it can't be done, I am proof it can...
My life has changed immensely....I also promise myself...to never go back...
for anyone who wants to- you can do it!!! it takes a lot of time- its not an overnite thing....
nowadays- I enjoy motivating others to try to reach for their goals :)
keep on moving!!
Carol
Geocaching saved my life...
I was fat... really fat - 472 lbs. - and I'd been Geocaching for nearly four years. I found myself picking out 1/1 caches, and ones with minimal hiking. Sometimes I'd just sit in the car and monitor the radio while the rest of the team did the hunt and find. I'd get so frustrated, both with myself and with Eric (Steak N Eggs - official team Dad), because he'd give up hunting when I know I could have found it, had I only been willing to get out of the car. I can blame the job injury in 1991 that turned my vertebrae into Swiss cheese, and the forced in-activity that resulted from that, but watching the portions I ate told the tale. :eek:
I'd been trying for years to find a surgeon to do gastric bypass surgery for me, and have my insurance pay for it, but it wasn't until I was diagnosed with a bleeding disorder, and my spleen had to be removed that anything was approved. In May of '05 I had the surgery. I've had people tell me I took the easy way out. Okay, if you want to consider an extremely high-risk six-hour surgery (I was the heaviest person my surgeon had ever performed it on, and he'd done over 1,200 of these before me), where I almost died twice due to blood loss, and the enormous forced life change that comes with it EASY, well, I won't argue with anyone about it. I lived it. Still am.
It is now necessary for me to eat 100+ grams of protein per day, drink nearly 1.5 gallons of water, and take high doses of iron, calcium, Vitamins C, E, and all of the B's, and limit my carb intake to nearly nothing. I've lost (as of May '08 - third anniversary) 230 lbs.
My endurance increased dramatically. I did have to have physical therapy for the first six months to learn how to move again... that much weight loss changes one's center of gravity and makes everyday tasks, well, weird. Geocaching allowed me to set goals for myself. Within six months I was walking five miles per day, and could do terrain rated at 3, though with difficulty. Before the surgery I couldn't walk the entirity of Wal-Mart without feeling like I would die. Now, my kids have a hard time keeping up with me when I shop. I couldn't work a regular job, even an office job because sitting all day was a challenge. Now, I work as a CNC machinist, and standing for a ten-hour shift is no problem. I couldn't do that three years ago. I'd do harder terrain caches and get emails from others who'd done it to congratulate me. It was great encouragement.
Maybe I didn't do it all Geocaching, but Geocaching was an inspiration, a motivator and a goal for me.
Now, if I could turn excess skin into fuel, I'd be driving all over Maine to get my find count up! :rolleyes:
Heck, just getting Steak and the kids to go caching with me without moaning is an issue. Anybody out there need a Geocaching partner to motivate them to hike? I'd love that... :D