...who's motivation to join was more than "my husband would like me to be skinny like a beanpole" as this leader said. It's great that she lost weight, though.
That comment should have been in the first post. That comment is offensive and wrong, while her "only" losing 14 lbs is not.
I thought that there was some kind of rule with WW that you had to be at least 10 lbs overweight to even join.
5 lbs above the lowest for your age and height.
I agree that it sounds more dramatic or inspirational I guess to hear a leader say they lost 100 lbs, 50lbs etc. rather than 14 lbs, but it's not just the numbers you that matter you know? It's gaining control of yourself, changing bad habits into good habits, making a lifestyle change. Certain things can be a challenge whether you are 14 lbs overweight or 100 lbs overweight.
It's also a big challange to maintain any weight loss, regardless of how big or small it was. She may have only lost 14 lbs, but how long has she been able to maintain that loss? How many times have we seen (or done it ourselves) people lose weight, only to go off their "diet" and put all the weight back on?
I lost 30 lbs on WW, and have put about 10 back on since the fall. I am struggling with those 10 lbs as much as I struggled with the first 30.
I totally agree. I've lost something like 60 lbs in the past (and gained it all, plus more, back once I quit) with WW, but the idea of being in WW *forever* has kept me, two times now, from staying with it, sticking to it, and getting the REST of the weight off.
I was probably 20 lbs over, no, I think I was less than that, the high healthy weight for my age and height, and I quit BOTH TIMES. That last bit of weight is the hardest...
When I was in college, I had less than 20 to be nice and trim (it's always HARD for me b/c I am naturally very muscular, and always weigh more than I "look", it's something I've dealt with from childhood in the 70s when people only talked weight, not size or shape), and that 20 became 25, became 30 etc etc etc and here I am, a two times over WW dropout, far heavier than I was before.
And it was those last 20ish pounds that did it.
I'm not that close now, but when I was 10 lbs heavier than I wanted to be it actually felt WORSE than I feel now, at gosh knows HOW heavy I am...being so close was more painful for me, mentally.
So I wouldn't mind a good leader who had "only" lost 14 lbs, but I WOULD mind a leader who made that husband/beanpole statement!!! (and I'd contact the corporate offices about that comment as well!)