Before I start, use this simple widget and see what your result is...
http://www.cdc.gov/healthyweight/ass...alculator.html
I was in the Army for nine years. When I graduated from OSUT training in 2004 I was 6'-0" tall and I weighed 155 lbs. The Army taught me how to stay fit, but it also taught me two other things. 1) it's a whole lot easier to stay healthy when someone else is putting healthy, balanced food in front of you every day and all you have to do is eat it, and 2) exercise is pain, and I didn't ever want to do it again.
I went to the doctor five weeks ago for the first time in a long time and got on the scale, where I weighed 195 lbs. I can spit on 40 years old from where I'm at. For about seven months before I got out of the Army I quit exercising, and for the first four months of this year I didn't exercise either. 40 lbs and a year later here I am. It was time for a change.
I just finished watching The Weight of the Nation on HBO, and it disgusted me...simply because it was about me. My BMI puts me on the "overweight" catagory, and I firmly believe that we, as in society as a whole, are to blame for it. The whole concept of "accepting" obesity as normal, treating fat people as regular people, talking around the subject because we don't want to offend anyone...is horseshit. After watching the first two parts of this program, the LAST thing we should be doing is accepting obesity...we should be accepting that it's wrong, it's abnormal, and fixing it. Our society being tolerant of the 250 lb woman stuffing a cheeseburger into her mouth while drinking a Diet Coke is leading not only to the declining health of our society, but to increasing costs for everything, from health care to insurance, so if being a disgusting blob in the mirror doesn't do it for you, think about your wallet, or what role model you're being for your kids. No more "plus size", "voluptuous", "Reubenesque", "curvy", or "big beautiful woman" around here. By putting the word "beautiful" with the word "big" you're resigning yourself to being fat...you're accepting your obesity as normal and not something to be ashamed of, when in fact you should be doing the EXACT opposite.
Are some people genetically predisposed to being overweight? Of course, studies have proved this for decades. Are some people's weight problems caused by their lifestyle choices? Of course, studies have proven this for decades. What you're missing is that EVERYONE is a combination of both. Just because you have a genetic predisposition to being overweight doesn't mean that if you eat right and exercise that you won't lose weight. Just because you're not predisposed to being overweight doesn't mean that if you don't eat healthy and exercise that you won't gain weight. End of the story is that eating right and exercising is beneficial to EVERYONE...there should be NO accepting being overweight or obese as "normal". Some people will be obese due to genetics...they're not normal...everyone else needs to unfuck their fat ass...it's that simple.
I'm not here to give you ideas about how to lose weight. I'm not a dietician, and me spouting off what has worked for me on my way to 170 lbs may not work for you. I'm not here to throw scary statistics at you about obesity and health, the CDC has more than enough of that on their website.
http://www.cdc.gov/obesity/data/adult.html
But, here are the laws of weight control, take them for what they're worth.
1. If you take in more calories than you exert, you're going to gain weight.
2. If you take in more calories than you exert, you're going to gain weight.
3. If you take in more calories than you exert, you're going to gain weight.
4. If you take in more calories than you exert, you're going to gain weight.
Do something about it...because if you think that I've been uncaring about fat people in the past...just realize that I was fat, and was just being easy on you out of my own feelings of self-loathing. Now you're just fucked...
P.S.-I'm not a dietician, but I was trained as the Weight Control NCO for several years in the Army. While I was in, I took it for granted because all the work of eating healthy and exercising was done for me. Now that I'm done, I've re-evaluated my lifestyle, and have made small changes to my life that has yielded enormous results. And no...I haven't exercised a single minute in the past five weeks...
P.P.S.-Thank you to my beloved wife...for showing me a multitude of things...this not the least of them.