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Thread: weight

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    the foggy wetlands,los osos,ca
    Posts
    2,860
    Wow 110 and 5'5 sounds good to me I would take that! I guess we all need to be different in our own minds. I have been the same weight for years now (give or take a pound or two) and I ride almost every day, yoga etc... And i seem to stay the same. I am not as tone as I used to be but i should be happy that I am built pretty good. OK I ACCEPT MYSELF! There I said it! Who is going to join me!
    Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.
    > Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    1,046
    Being underweight definitely means loss of performance. Last year after a nasty car accident, I could no longer exercise and burn the calories I was taking in. Afraid of getting fat, my "solution" was pretty stupid... I stopped eating. After a while, the lack of exercise and reduced intake made me lose my appetite all together. I also slept a lot more, my period slowed by half, and I had no energy or inclination to go out and do things. When my weight dipped into the low 90s my parents became so worried that they hinted at an intervention.

    The light switched back on after I put on a pair of pants and they fell off. At the time, my chagrin had less to do with my weight and more like, "I paid $250 for these pants so I better be able to wear them!"

    After that I started eating regularly again. When it was back to a normal 105-106, I resumed my fitness activities and started feeling healthier all round. Now at around 112, I feel as strong as I have ever been. Much stringer than at 105. And I really don't care about being thin anymore... the feeling of sheer POWER I can feel coursing through my legs offset any vanity or insecurity about body image. And my pants fit again!

    Confucious may not agree, but for me DOING is more rewarding than simply BEING.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Flagstaff AZ
    Posts
    2,516

    Weight, fitness and strength

    Okay, I'm going to tell you my story of weight and it may not seem so hard cause I've never been heavy, but it does describe how being too thin can just not be too healthy!

    In my late teens, early 20's, I was an exercise girl on the thoroughbred race track. I wanted to be a jockey, but never quite made it that far (but that's another story). At that time, I was a skinny kid; I never weighed much more than 103 pounds and most of the time closer to 100 (I'm 5'4"). Remember I wanted to be a jockey and that is one profession where being obsessive about your weight is pretty important AND VERY DETRIMENTAL TO YOUR HEALTH. Being a girl and young and just thin naturally helped me out. I didn't have to take Lasix (diuretics), sit in a hot box, starve myself, throw up everything I ate, or anything like that. BUT, there were many days when I was not feeling too good and really should have been eating more so that I could feel strong. Some days those horses would just pull my arms out of the sockets and I can remember one day when I wish I had more strength cause I had a horse bolt right thru the outside rail - talk about scary. (Me and the horse ended up okay, scraped up real bad, but not seriously injured) My sister thought I looked sickly and she was probably right. Looking back, I would have been a lot better off if I had weighed more and had more muscle. The guys were not as lucky as I was since they were mostly bulkier and more muscle bound being the guys they were so they were doing all those things listed above and more! Suffice it to say, most jockeys do not live long and healthy lives because of the practices they have to keep to stay thin

    So, later in my 20's when I took up cycling, I was weighing more in the range of 110 pounds and let me tell you this was really a lot better for me. I was stronger, fitter, more full of energy and feeling pretty healthy. However, I was never a very good climber (some of this was because I was a new cyclist, but some of this was because I did not have the strength at that weight). It is different for everyone.

    So, in my 30's, I went up to 115-118 and this was probably my ideal weight. I was strong, but still light enough. I got to be a decent climber at that weight.

    Now, in my mid 40's, I weigh around 123-125. Wow, that's a lot more than I was when I was young huh. Am I slower up hill - Well, surprise, surprise, No, if I train, I'm just as fast uphill if maybe not faster.

    So, remember, weight is not everything. It has a lot to do with training, fitness, strength to weight ratio, etc. Lighter does not mean better!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    stratford upon avon,england
    Posts
    223
    you darlings!all i need now is a printer,print off these experiences and post them around my room,thatd be fantastic motivation,THANKYOU.


    FEEL SO MUCH BETTER BEING HONEST AND SHARING IT ALL.
    who is driving your bus?

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    The following article, and the movie it's about, should interest a lot of us...

    http://thetyee.ca/Photo/2006/11/08/Thin/

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    stratford upon avon,england
    Posts
    223
    has anyone any other leads with sports nutritionalists?seem to be getting nowhere,infact eating more and still losing weight so well worried.DR tues,told my coach,eerie response of silence,eeeeeek...............blinking stigma of eating disorders,arrgh.IM DETERMINED TO CRACK IT THIS TIME!
    who is driving your bus?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    stratford upon avon,england
    Posts
    223
    Update (boring soz!)changed diet to better quality foods and adopting the gi method.RIGHT!not gaining weight,so is the best way to increase the diet by a set amount ,its a battle mushing up my brains,an athelete trying to kick hell out of an eating disorder.making me a tadge tired and weepy,,damn damn.sososo wana smack this illness for good,i suppose its a bucket of courage,and a bit of biker bloody mindedness.
    who is driving your bus?

 

 

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