Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I am finding that I carry my weight differently than I did when I was in my early to mid-twenties. And I also care a lot less about what the scale says because I've never been in such good shape. I am 33 years old, 5'6", and about 148 lbs. I wear a size 8 in pants and a small/medium for tops. Here is what fascinates me...when I was in my early 20's, I weighed 130 and I wore a size 8. Now I realize that clothes sizing may have changed somewhat in the last 10 years or so, but if you look at pictures of me then and now, I actually look smaller now. I think I could stand to lose about 10 pounds, but in general, I'm pretty happy with how my body looks. That is definitely not something I would've said when I was in my 20's!
I have a co-worker who is my same height and says she weighs 125. If you put us side-by-side, we look about the same size. Except she has a chest and I don't, and my legs are bigger. That's over 20 pounds difference, so where is my body carrying that weight? My legs aren't THAT much bigger than hers. Interestingly, my mom worked for an OB/GYN for 15 years. She weighed all the patients, and she says she could never accurately guess someone's weight. She said sometimes she'd be shocked that someone weighed so much, or conversely, that they weighed so little. So I guess it's just a very individual thing. I know muscle weighs more than fat, so I'm giving cycling all the credit for my increased weight and apparently descreased size!
Last edited by RolliePollie; 07-21-2007 at 05:18 PM.
I am 5.5, and 147 #'s, and 40 (yikes to age and weight), before I started biking I had lost weight from 180 to 136 ish, then biking (and junk food) returned to my life, along with the 10#'s. I've maintained that 147ish for almost 1 1/2 years. I am very pear shaped, always have been. Was told once by a medical student that I had the perfect birthing hips and I was wasting them by not having any children. I do agree that society pushes the fashion to be pencil thin and the younger folks look up to that and feel they have to look like that to fit in to society. When I was in high school, I so wanted to be pencil thin. Now, I am happy with how I look, okay, I still wouldn't pass up a free trip to the surgeon for some lipo, I will be truthful. Sad though, those models that portray that look smoke and drink caffeine non stop and scant amounts of food all day, probably along with inplants and injections, how is that healthy? Every person has a different body structure, how they carry their weight, and how they perceive themselves. I think if you are getting out there and exercising, feel good about yourself, and are enjoying what you are doing, that should be what really matters.
Oh, to be a size 8 again. Sigh.
I'm 5'8" and weigh 155 or so. I would LOVE to see someone in the fashion industry design clothes that fit MUSCULAR women!
I had high hopes for things like LuluLemon and Athleta and Columbia and REI, since they portray themselves as "sports" clothes first I thought they'd fit over muscles. Uh, no. They fit over skinny lil' butts. Not powerful haunches like mine. Or broad shoulders like mine. And they gap at waists like mine.
I have had good luck with Horny Toad and Ibex, and Levis men's 560 and 501 jeans. And believe it or not, Coldwater Creek.
"Big" thighs are signs of POWER, which our current societal desperate-to-go-back-to-the-good-old-days fixation doesn't value. So fashion isn't going to support it.
Ignore the fanstasy-fixation that surrounds us! Love your power! Honor your biker's thighs!
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
My $.02 is that you need to learn how to measure your body fat. It's more about measuring your body than what you weigh, what and how much you eat and how you exercise. I would recommend getting calipers to measure your body fat over the digital body fat scales. They'll give you a different reading every time. I did the Body for Life program for four years and had great results.