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In My Jeans

Jodie S. as told to Valerie Denny Hometown: Stanley, Wisconsin
Goal: To get to a point where I could buy clothes because they looked great on me; not just because they fit.
Motivation: During my intial weight loss, I was motivated to continue by the results I was seeing in the mirror. I told myself: You are worth it. Now? I do the same thing. Our bodies are our temples. We should treat them that way.

My Story
I'll never forget the day my dad thought my jeans were his and when he tried them on, they were too big. Up until then, I never thought I had a problem.

It all started when I got a job working for food service in college. I was mindlessly eating, drinking more and putting on weight, but in complete denial about it. I eventually gained up to 100 pounds in college, but none of my family or friends ever made any comment about my weight. My life was going well. I wasn’t depressed at all. I had a boyfriend and I wore clothes that I thought hid my weight gain, but there’s only so much a wrap dress can do!

Even though I was 245 pounds (at 5’7’’), since no one said anything to me about it, in my mind, I was fine. After my dad tried on my jeans, I kept that incident in the back of my mind, but didn’t do anything about it for a while.

It wasn’t until I graduated college and got a job in May 2005, that I thought about losing the weight. I got an email for Weight Watchers at Work. They needed people to join, so I went. I followed the core plan which gave you a list of foods you could eat and 35 points each week to eat the foods not on the list. By December of that year, I was down to 150 pounds. I focused on eating high energy density foods like lean meats, veggie burgers, fruits and veggies. I started walking. I had only cared about getting down to the goal weight I set, because once you reach it, you don’t have to pay for Weight Watchers anymore. You’re a lifetime member.

I eventually cut my emotional attachment to food. It was hard and at first I was treating healthy food the same way I had treated junk food. I had to eat a huge salad when I really didn’t need all that food. I finally realized, I had to change my thinking and make a lifestyle change.

I used to spend my extra Weight Watchers points on desserts, but they don’t satisfy me anymore. They're gone in three minutes. I’d rather have extra oil or some almonds. I had been eating mindlessly before. If a store had food samples, I ate them. Now I think about what I’m putting in my mouth.

I started running five to seven miles, five days a week. When I started running, I started looking at food as fuel for my body. I don’t believe in comfort foods anymore. I don’t reward myself with food. If I want to reward myself, I buy a new book or get a new tattoo. I’m now down to 127 pounds. I’ve run two marathons and my goal is to qualify for the Boston Marathon.

Jodie is a member of the National Weight Control Registry. If you've lost at least 30 pounds and have kept it off for at least a year, you are eligible to join. Visit www.nwcr.ws for more information.

Editor's note: Do you have a weight-loss success story of your own? If you've lost weight or are in the process of losing weight, email editor.neversaydiet@nbcuni.com with "Weight-Loss Success Story" in the subject line and tell us your story. You may be featured on NeverSayDiet.com!




Comments

From: Kay
Date: 12/09/2008 - 02:59 pm


Wow-truly amazing. Congrats!


From: Anonymous.Poster
Date: 11/26/2008 - 11:49 pm


AMAZING STORY!!! Thanks for sharing!


From: Anonymous.Poster
Date: 11/26/2008 - 11:46 pm


Tattoos? I love it! You're amazing, keeping so much weight off and keeping so fit! You go, girl.


From: Anonymous.Poster
Date: 11/20/2008 - 01:32 pm


Awesome work! You look great and I love the comment, "I don’t reward myself with food. If I want to reward myself, I buy a new book or get a new tattoo." Books and tattoos last a lot longer than the short satisfaction of food. Thanks for the inspiration.


From: Anonymous.Poster
Date: 11/17/2008 - 12:41 am


Wow, you did it!


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