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Kristen Houghton

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When Weight Loss Organizations Take It Too Far

Posted: 08/26/10 08:00 AM ET

More of my hard-earned dollars have found their way into the coffers of weight loss organizations than I care to count. I admit I have tried them all. Finally, though, I can say that I lost the weight I wanted to lose and have maintained it for over five years. It's a small success.

But my success is tempered by the very people who purportedly helped me get to my personal goal. While I may be happy and comfortable with the amount of weight I lost, the weight loss organization does not agree. After meeting my personal weight goal, one that was agreed upon between the organization and me, I was encouraged to drop another 5-10.

"You'll be happier and like yourself better if you're skinnier, " I was told.

Actually to get skinnier I would have had to starve, certainly not something that would make me happy.

With the media focused on the negative messages sent to young women by anorexic models and starving actors, no mention is ever made of legitimate weight loss organizations. Believe it or not these organizations can be just as much to blame for eating disorders. Here's why.

Let's say you join a popular weight loss group. You only want to lose 20 pounds but are "advised" to lose 30. You are then told that "it is always best to get at least five pounds below goal." So now, instead of the 20 pounds you felt were right to lose, you're being told to lose 35. That's 15 pounds more than you wanted to originally lose and you're paying for every pound. The impetus to lose the weight at any cost is high.

A woman in a popular weight loss group could not lose the last seven pounds of the 60 she was told she needed to lose. Fifty-three was all her body was willing to give up. Yet she was pressured relentlessly by the person in charge of the meetings to "lose that extra baggage."

"I am really ashamed to say that I wanted to just starve to get rid of the so-called extra baggage. I briefly contemplated taking laxatives to help me and then laughed at myself for such a ridiculous thought."

My colleague belonged to a nationally known organization. She was told to leave half of all her meals on the plate. The problem was the meals, which came from the organization itself, were already excruciatingly small. When she protested, her weight coach said: "Come on! Don't you want to shoot for a size zero and be happy?"

Zero? Since when did a zero become the poster number for looking your best?!

According to a new Canadian study, there is solid evidence that not reaching a size zero or even having 10 to 15 pounds of extra weight on your body may actually be healthier for you and help you live longer. There is, it appears, a big difference (no pun intended) between carrying a bit of extra fat and being obese. A healthy weight, not a size, is what you should 'shoot' for.

We are bombarded with images from well-known weight loss organizations that subtly, and not so subtly, hint at how horrible our lives will be if we aren't a certain size and weight. We are made to feel that there is something wrong with us if we don't achieve the "right" number on the scale and the smaller that number the better.

The public needs to remember that the weight loss industry is a highly competitive multi-billion dollar business. The commercials, the testimonials, the before and after pictures are all advertising at its best -- and it works.

Your weight is subjective. Make your own decision about what is best for you and not what someone else says is best. Skinnier is not better. Being healthy should be the prime objective. That's happiness.

To read more from Kristen Houghton, peruse her articles at Kristen Houghton.com and visit her Keys to Happiness blog.
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Copyright 2010 Kristen Houghton

 
 
 

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More of my hard-earned dollars have found their way into the coffers of weight loss organizations than I care to count. I admit I have tried them all. Finally, though, I can say that I lost the weight...
More of my hard-earned dollars have found their way into the coffers of weight loss organizations than I care to count. I admit I have tried them all. Finally, though, I can say that I lost the weight...
 
 
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07:09 PM on 09/11/2010
Thanks for the excellent article. I was in Weight Watchers years ago and did not experience any of this. The leader was very supportive of your individual goals. It took me about ten years to gain weight back and then only gained half back. I have only myself to blame for that. Now that I'm over 55, I'm taking a different tactic by really adding measurable exercise to the diet by using the BodyMedia armband device. So far it's been good.
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BarbNYSE
11:11 AM on 09/03/2010
Working in the Wall Street area we are very aware of how commercials affect lives. The ad people we know say that weight loss is a business and nothing more. They also tell us it is a very, very LUCRATIVE enterprise. WW is just as bad as all the rest. Emily here was told by her *leader* to lose extra weight so it is a pound per dollar type of deal no matter what anyone says.
Barb & the crew
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
05:49 PM on 09/03/2010
Your comments seem to justify what many have posted. Thank you Barb & the crew
02:55 PM on 08/27/2010
May I suggest that we just call this little ugly thing for what it is? It's marketing trap head game. Oh, you want to lose 50lbs, well we here at _____ think you would just look FANTASTIC at 75lbs lighter. They're upselling you on your own goal, which 10, 15 25 lbs may not be what you want, nor healthy. So now, our consumer that has sought support and advice at an emotionally vulnerable time ( for most), when encourage is at a premium, and in a "safe" space, is now hooked. Most time in meetings, more service fees, more money spent on packaged food. It's a low, slimy trick and I sincerely hope whoever came up with the idea of abusing a woman's sense of self worth and possible health gets on the wrong side of such an obvious and damaging scheme themselves.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
09:48 PM on 08/27/2010
Very well said Head Mocker!
09:09 AM on 08/27/2010
Any weight-loss organization that charges by the pound has a conflict of interest. A healthy weight is a weight that you can maintain while eating sensibly and exercising regularly. It's pointless to try to attain some arbitrary number (either weight or clothing size) when you haven't yet experienced what a healthy lifestyle feels like.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
03:26 PM on 08/27/2010
I have to agree with you Exene. And the body fluctuates; you may have a small normal gain from week to week. I am also against arbitrary numbers - one size, number, etc., never did fit all.

It is interesting to note that my aunt had applied for a job in the 1950's at a telephone company. At 5'8' and 167 she was told she was "too heavy" to work there.
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suzjazz
12:24 AM on 08/27/2010
Not all weight loss groups give such bad advice. I have never heard anything of the sort being said to anyone in my group. In fact, your goal weight does NOT have to be within the healthy guidelines for your height (BMI) It is whatever you can maintain, which is determined through a trial and error process. You can also adjust your goal weight upward (or downward) any time you want to.
Weight loss organizations are not for everyone, but mine has helped me to lose 27 lbs. I could not lose on my own. And I have kept it off, and more importantly, learned how to cook and eat in a healthy manner and get control over my bingeing.
03:22 AM on 08/27/2010
Congratulations on your success suzjazz! I do think that any program that teaches people to cook is very worthy.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
06:44 AM on 08/27/2010
Excellent suzjazz! You have found a very supportive group and that is key to losing and maintenance.
07:26 PM on 08/26/2010
I totally agree. The problem with denying oneself food when truly hungry is that the primative part of the body sends it into a famine response mode where it stores fats for emergency energy resources. So it is a vicious circle: the more you diet the more weight your body holds onto.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
09:40 PM on 08/26/2010
Thank you Elsa. Science backs up this statement; it is a vicious cycle many of us have gone through..
05:54 PM on 08/26/2010
All I can say is... Wow, sad, very sad. Healthy nutrition, hydration and exercise are key to maintaining a healthy weight. And just because you are skinny does not mean you are healthy. I've tried to just working out and 'watching' what I ate and ate what I thought were healthy foods and then when that didn't work, I gave up and 'went back to normal' as in gained weight. Then right before my kids were born, I started again, but this time on nutrition and really looking at whole foods and cooking from scratch. Took me a while, but now I've found a healthy balance between healthy eating and exercise and I don't deprive myself cause that only leads to overeating. While I'm not at my healthy weight yet, I'm on my way. :)
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
06:53 PM on 08/26/2010
Shanna, your message is such a great one for all of us who want to be healthy. You're right, skinny doesn't equal healthy unless a person is naturally thin. Thank you for sharing!
04:42 PM on 08/26/2010
"...I can say that I lost the weight I wanted to lose and have maintained it for over five years. It's a small success."

That's a monumental success. It puts you in a group of less than 5% of everyone who attempts a weight-loss program.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
04:55 PM on 08/26/2010
Thanks Sam. This comes after many tries.
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HighDesertBob
Earth is the only planet with chocolate.
04:24 PM on 08/26/2010
Weight Watchers is the only tried and true method of long term weight loss. It works if you stick with it and don't cheat. It doesn't leave you hungry nor is there anyone there to browbeat you into losing that last bit of "extra baggage."
04:49 PM on 08/26/2010
Weight Watchers results aren't any better than anyone else's.

If 100 people start the program, at the end of 5 years only four of them will have maintained their initial weight-loss. The remaining 96 will have regained all of the weight they lost, and somewhere between one-third and two-third will have regained more than they lost.

Worst of all, since previous unsuccessful attempts at weight-loss are the single best predictor of future weight gain, those 96 are now worse off than they were when they started.

This is how the weight-loss industry victimizes the obese. They offer solutions that they have to know simply don't work for the vast majority of their clients and, in doing so, do nothing but create return customers.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
04:58 PM on 08/26/2010
Well said samknox; thank you.
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HighDesertBob
Earth is the only planet with chocolate.
05:52 PM on 08/26/2010
I understand there are those who will fail to follow the program. Weight Watchers isn't a weight loss program as much as it is a lifestyle change. My wife and I both lost weight on WW and have kept it off because we adhere to it.
If you decide going in you are going to fail, then you will likely fail. A positive attitude is what is required to succeed at most everything in life and weight loss is no exception.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
04:57 PM on 08/26/2010
I'm glad your experience with WW was positive HighDesertBob. The woman in the article, who was pressured as she says, to lose the 'excess baggage', did not have the same type of experience there.
03:47 PM on 08/26/2010
I am desperate to lose weight. I need to lose 50lbs! The thought is simply daunting. I have no motivation. I get up every day and go to bed nightly with the same idea...that I will really try tomorrow. It is psychologically the one thing in my life that I cannot address. I so want to be thin. Not skinny, just thin. I am 55 years old and I give in to the idea that because I have the money to buy good clothes, why does it(the fat) matter? But, it does matter. Where to find the motivation every day just like an addict is the big question.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
05:01 PM on 08/26/2010
I have been in the same position linnilue. Someone told me that I had to have the mindset to begin to live healthier and to lose weight. She was right and when I finally decided that this was it, I started doing what I had to do. It certainly took me time to realize it though.

It is hard, but please don't give up.
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HerrMonk
Son of Apollo
05:45 PM on 08/26/2010
Stop eating bread: cut all grain-based products form your diet (and refined sugar should go without saying)

At 50 pounds overwieght, you could do JUST that and lose half the weight with no other changes.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
06:54 PM on 08/26/2010
Thank you for your comment HerrMonk.
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Vivian Alicia Evans
03:37 PM on 08/26/2010
Thanks for the insightful article. Those weight loss companies make money hand over foot and there are so many woman who are made to feel they have not accomplished their ideal weight loss. So sad.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
05:03 PM on 08/26/2010
Thanks Vivian. With all the money spent by consumers on weight loss programs, each success, no matter how small, should be celebrated and praised.
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cyranorox
I dare do all that may become a man
01:58 PM on 08/26/2010
I congratulate the Huffpost on using a picture of an illustrative fat person which is not at all mocking, actually rather attractive. I've complained sporadically about the fat pix which emphasize grotesque shapes, cut off faces, demean the subject, etc. You got this one right IMHO.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
02:21 PM on 08/26/2010
It is a good picture and not at all derogatory. I'm glad you feel ikt is appropriate cyranrox.
10:49 AM on 08/26/2010
I, too, have tried every weight loss program on the market starting when I was about 10 years old(I just turned 39). The worst not only pumped me full of Phen-Fen, but also had me on an 800 calorie/day diet. Yes, I lost weight quickly, but at what cost to my health? Of course, as soon as I quit, I gained it all and then some. Finally, in my late 30's, I've found that, "they" are right! Healthy eating and exercise IS key! :) I've lost 60lbs, and look better now than I did at 21.
I always hated hearing people say, "If I can do it, anyone can do it!", but....I really mean it! Good luck to everyone struggling with weight whether you need to lose or gain or you just have poor body image! You are beautiful - be kind to yourself!!
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
12:27 PM on 08/26/2010
Junebug628, your comment is so welcome. It is a simple thought, eating right and exercising is the key to weight loss and maintenance.
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Cloball
Dog eat (whip cream) dog world...
08:51 AM on 08/26/2010
Never had any weight gain until I hit 40. But I had always been active and ate healthy, but I ate! After I backed off from the gym, the weight came on. What I have learned in ten years since, is that cutting back on food, whether its portions or adding healthier foods, doesn't affect my weight at all now. It only seems to keep it steady (no weight gain, but no weight loss). So, at age 50+, exercise seems to be the only way to lose the lbs added in my 40's.

Is this common? To lose fat in middle age, you have to burn it off. Can't diet it off.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
12:29 PM on 08/26/2010
exercise is key, Cloball. I know when I exercise even just a little, it makes a difference. Thanks for your input.
12:40 PM on 08/26/2010
Like me, it sounds like you compromised your metabolism by starving your body in order to lose weight, which is what any caloric deficit "diet" is doing. Also, there is just no evidence supporting exercise as a weight loss tool at any age. I am almost 50 and the weight loss plan I devised for myself recognizes that exercise is not for weight loss, it's for fitness. I'm losing weight very nicely without exercise after years of being unable to shift any weight at all. When I'm healed and lighter, I will be more active and will return to fitness, because I have always been very active whenever I've had the energy in me...and that's energy I can feel returning to me right now.

http://winningtheobesitybattle.wordpress.com
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
02:25 PM on 08/26/2010
Health care professionals in the field of healthy lifestyle have agreed that exercise is not just a weight loss tool; it is more for fitness. When I was first losing weight I only did light exercise. I had no energy for more. As I reached the weight I wanted to be, I went back to ballet and tennis because my energy level was higher. Thanks Alvarask for sharing your thoughts.
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Cloball
Dog eat (whip cream) dog world...
03:27 PM on 08/26/2010
No. I have never starved myself. I was skinny all my life, but I was always active and didn't live on junk food. I have always cooked from scratch, etc...but about the time I hit my 40's, I stopped going to they gym because I wasn't driving to that city anymore for work, and the weight came on. I thought maybe I would gain 10 lbs if I stopped exercising and nothing more! So I experminted with portions and cut back on stuff like how many times a year do I eat pizza instead of eating it every Friday night, and nothing helped. So after trying all this portion control and limiting foods like pizza, tacos, etc...I decided that maybe it will have to come off with adding exercise. Is it a middle age metabolism thing? Exercise increases it.

I remember reading about Elvis recently about how he could diet before a concert and lose 10 or 15 lbs just in time, but when he hit middle age, the weight wouldn't drop off when he dieted. That's why we saw him so heavy in the end!
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veggiequeenmo
Proud to not be republican.
08:33 AM on 08/26/2010
Well, duh!

We have very cheap, heavily subsidized food everywhere - largely meat and dairy foods. Drive thru McDonald's and you're paying for that burger and fries three times - thru tax dollars, when you pay for it and again at the doctor's office years later.
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cjgnew
10:02 AM on 08/26/2010
I don't know about you guys out there, but I am starting to abhor McDonald's for the way they brainwash our kids into poor nutritional habits. Our son, who's five, eats fruits and veggies with gusto. On the other hand, our daughter, who's seven, won't touch them. I tried just about everything else in the books to no avail, and I'm beginning to wonder if the only way to counteract the McDonald's effect is by bribing my daughter with a better reward than McDonald's.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
02:28 PM on 08/26/2010
My pet peeve is seeing chicken nuggets offered at restaurants on the "kids" menu. Most of the time they are prepared the same way fast-food places prepare them. The caloric content and the saturated fat in them makes me shudder. Thanks for your comment cjgnew.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
10:02 PM on 08/27/2010
I have one picky kid out of three -- a vegetarian who doesn't like vegetables. He will, however, drink a non-sweetened fruit and vegetable juice to go along with his whole grains, cheese and nuts.
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Kristen Houghton
Author, Lifestyle Journalist, Humorist
12:29 PM on 08/26/2010
Thanks veggiequeenmo!