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CNN: From fat to gym rat, woman loses 200 pounds



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 5th, 2009, 02:34 AM posted to soc.support.fat-acceptance,misc.fitness.weights,alt.support.diet,alt.support.diet.low-carb,alt.support.diet.weightwatchers
The Masster[_2_]
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Posts: 2
Default CNN: From fat to gym rat, woman loses 200 pounds

http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/12/04...ggs/index.html

From fat to gym rat, woman loses 200 pounds
By Steve Almasy, CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* After topping scale at 352 pounds, Oregon woman lost 200 pounds over six
years

* Her escalating blood pressure proved a motivating factor to change diet,
improve fitness

* She says always have a plan for what to eat, cut out sugar

* To lose weight, you need to form a positive self-image and do things to
reinforce that notion, she says

(CNN) -- These days, Becky Griggs starts her morning well before the sun
comes up, in time to meet her clients at the gym at 5:30. It's a big change
from six years ago, when she was 352 pounds and, as she calls it, engaged
in a "slow form of suicide."

She said that growing up, she was always the pudgy kid, but in hindsight,
she was only slightly overweight. In her mind, though, she was a fat girl.

"We are taught what is slim and skinny and pretty and right," she said
recently by phone, "but in reality, what is fit and healthy is a different
thing."

Positive self-image means a lot, she said, and it has been the key to her
losing more than 200 pounds.

Name: Becky Griggs, a 43-year-old fitness trainer from Oregon City, Oregon.
She teaches four days a week. Before she became a trainer five years ago,
she operated a yarn shop. She is a married mother of two children in their
early 20s.

Background: One of the things that began to worry Griggs as an adult was
her blood pressure. For years, it was low, but when it started to climb,
that really caught her attention.

She also was worried about needing help from her husband. Just walking back
from the bathroom in the middle of the night became a nightmare. She would
return to bed and worry that she was going to pass out and die.

"I used to lay in bed awake, and my heart was racing so hard that I was
afraid, and I wanted to make sure that if I needed help that I was
cognizant of that," she said.

How much she lost: At her heaviest, she was 352 pounds. When she competed
in a body-building contest this year, she weighed 139 pounds. Most of the
time, she weighs about 150.

iReport: Share your weight loss success story

How she lost it: "Calories in versus calories out," she said. Like many
overweight people, she had a bookshelf of diet plan books. But she needed
to go back to what she called a super-simple plan of five small meals a
day, focused on protein and something "God grew." About 80 percent of what
she ate to lose weight was protein.

Sugar and flour were out. She refers to it as clean eating. It sounds easy,
she says, but when you start reading labels closely, you see how many foods
have sugar in them. That includes most protein bars, which Griggs says are
basically candy bars.

How she's keeping it off: She's not always eating clean, she said. But she
plans ahead to counteract the moments of being "naughty."

"Food doesn't control me anymore, I control it," she said. "And I work
out."

She loves being fit, she said. Muscles burn more fat, and they fit better
in your clothes, she pointed out. Working out and getting sweaty is the
best thing you can do for yourself each day, she said.

Read about other success stories at CNN's Fit Nation

It's more important to lose body fat, she said. All the students in her
classes have their body fat pinched at the beginning and pinched again each
month. She says it is a much better measure of your health than the
height-and-weight charts put together by the government.

She became a fitness trainer to keep her in the gym. She didn't want to go
back to "being that other girl," she said. To ensure that she would be
faithful to her workouts, she became a trainer.

"It's taken time, but I know now that this me is the me who I am, and that
fat girl, she is not me anymore," she said. "I am me because of her, but I
won't ever go back to being her."

Advice for others: You have to believe that you can improve your health
before you can make dietary and fitness changes. Put positive images in
your mind, she said. Picture yourself putting down that hamburger and
getting off the couch. And keep doing it.

She also said that morbidly obese people need to come to a reckoning about
their weight. Many people who are that overweight are terrified of what
they will become if they lose all those pounds, she said. Instead, they
hide behind the fat and the food.

She also recommended finding like-minded people. When she was losing
weight, she serendipitously found those folks at the gym, and they are a
source of positive feedback, too. She also found support at a ballroom
dance class.

Also, be careful around family members. "We moms, we're pushers," she said.
Especially around holiday meals. Here's where positive self-image comes
into play again.

"I tell clients and people in my classes that when you can look me in the
eye and say, 'Oh my gosh, I had brownies and ice cream last night, and it
was so good, that's when you have it,' " she said. "If you pick it up and
start to eat it, and the negative self-talk starts ... that's when you put
it down and say, 'No, thank you.' "





  #2  
Old December 6th, 2009, 03:21 PM posted to soc.support.fat-acceptance,misc.fitness.weights,alt.support.diet,alt.support.diet.low-carb,alt.support.diet.weightwatchers
Felicia
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default The owner of words-are-us.com and words-r-us.com can't spell

Bobbi Sanchez, aka Lady Veteran wrote:

No everyone is waiting with baited breath to hear what an idiot has to
say.


Two spelling errors in one short sentence. No wonder your web sites
are a failure.

Anyone who uses your resume services is asking for chronic
unemployment. You have even recently admitted that you cannot find
"gainful employment".

From: Lady Veteran
Subject: Lady Veteran is unemployed again...
Date: Tue, 18 Aug 2009 10:33:02 -0500
Message-ID:

That doesn't mean that I am unemployed. It means that I have a job
that isn't what I consider "gainful employment."

end quote

Could it be all the spelling errors on *your* resume?

--

 




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