I just talked to a co-worker who had been off work sick for the past month. He asked whether I’d lost weight again and how much I’ve lost now. He had asked me about it several times before and complimented me on it so I didn’t mind his questions. I told him I’d lost about 25 kg now. He said how that was quite fast and asked whether I had any health problems because of it. Why would I though? I am a lot healthier now than I was 8 months and 25 kg ago. I think people assume that I must be eating very little or having some sort of nutritional deficit because of the amount of weight I’ve lost, when really, it’s the complete opposite! He then said that I shouldn’t starve myself. I replied that he shouldn’t worry as I still eat a lot of food.
This is where things got weird. The co-worker who was sitting with him joined in the conversation saying, “yeah you won’t be able to stop that either. Once you start eating big servings, you’ll always be doing it.”
I honestly thought, “what the hell is he talking about?” I had been meaning to say that I was eating normal servings, and not starving myself, NOT that I was stuffing myself with huge portions. Not to mention that I also disagree with what he said. Of course you can get used to smaller portion sizes if that was your problem with gaining weight. For me it wasn’t. I always ate quite normal-sized portions at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. My problem was the junk food I ate between meals.
He then went on and asked, “haven’t you lost weight on this program 4 or 5 times before?” I found that so offensive.
First of all, no, I haven’t. I have lost some weight a few times before, but I have never lost this much weight in my life ever before. The only time I was close to the weight I am now was six years ago when I lost 16 kg with Weight Watchers and managed to get down to 73.3 kg which I maintained for a month or two at the most. I have also attempted to lose weight a few times since, but I never lost more than 5 to 10 kg at a time, and ended up gaining the weight back. Is that healthy? No. But I also didn’t yoyo back and forth losing and gaining crazy amounts of weight. I never did any fad diets or starved myself. And what program is he even talking about? All I do is eat healthily and count calories – that isn’t really a ‘program’ or ‘diet’ at all.
I did wonder how he got that idea though, and I realized that people have probably been talking about me. I did probably mention to some people that I’d tried losing weight before, and I do not mind people knowing that, but when the truth gets distorted and I get the feeling that people are just waiting for me to fail and gain back the weight, that does bother me.
But the madness didn’t stop there.
He told me about a friend of his who had a lap band surgery and he is now doing great, and I could talk to my doctor about that.
At which point I couldn’t believe my ears. Did he really just suggest to someone who is a healthy weight to have lap band surgery?! What the FUCK? Excuse the language but what the fuck?
Now, I realize that he clearly has no clue what he’s talking about, because no one who did would even suggest such a crazy thing. Lap band surgery is a last resort for morbidly obese people. Not only am I virtually normal weight with a BMI flucutating around 25, I was never morbidly obese at any point in my life. I am pretty sure that I never would have qualified for lap band surgery even at my heaviest weight.
Not only that but he seems to think of lap band surgery as a convenient and easy solution to losing weight. It just seems so absurd that he would suggest that in reply to my co-worker’s comment not to starve myself. How would lap band surgery be any better? I am sure that there are people that lap band surgery is a good, maybe the only, solution for. But for 99% of overweight people, it shouldn’t even be considered. There are a million better and healthier ways to lose weight.
I just said that I wouldn’t qualify for it anyway, and also why would I want to get a lap band now that I’m a healthy weight – not even mentioning that that would have never been an option for me even at 97 kg. He said, I could probably get one if I talked to my doctor. But why? Why?
Basically, the conversation was a big fat WHAT THE FUCK from beginning to end which resulted from a misunderstanding on his part leaving me wondering whether to be offended or laugh because clearly he is completely clueless.
I have been getting comments like “don’t starve yourself”* or “you’ve lost the weight quite quickly”** a few times lately, and although I know they’re not true, they do bother me a bit. They imply that I lost the weight in an unhealthy manner, when I did it the right way, eating healthily, never going hungry or denying myself anything, and exercising regularly. I have also had a friend mention a few months ago how my way of losing weight had been quite extreme. I asked her what she meant, and she said she meant the amount of exercise I did, and that she would rather lose the weight slowly and healthily. However, while I do exercise a lot more now than I used to, so I would agree that the change has been quite extreme, I do not think that there is anything extreme about what I do.
It feels a little like an insult to insinuate that I did not lose weight in a healthy manner, and it takes away from my achievement. I know that it’s not true but it’s hard not to let it get to me all the same.
* I eat at least 1500 calories a day, but usually more as I eat back all the calories I burn during exercise as well.
** I lost about 25 kg over the span of 8 months. Is that fast? Probably, though not unheard of. Is it too fast? No, I don’t think so. Weight Watchers recommend to lose between 0.5 and 1 kg per week, and I have averaged about 0.7 kg which is perfectly normal.
