I got a fabulous problem
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: sydney nsw
Posts: 785
I got a fabulous problem
This sobriety is starting to cost me serious money. I have lost a lot of weight 27kg most of it since going sober. I am tall guy 183cm and now 100kg(6,1) ALL my clothes are so huge on me. I have had to replace all work clothes, jeans etc. I have donated all these to a shelter.
Its a fantastic feeling to be able to shop again but $$$. The weight loss has been a side effect of going sober. The huge boost in self confidence is a plus. Posting this for anybody down due to their weight and that's what keeps them drinking. If you drop the booze not only will you get sober but that weight will come off.
Being fat (nothing wrong with that) for me was one of the triggers to drink in itself. I felt unhappy with myself so to make myself feel better I drank. It was a huge part of the reason I drank, a vicious cycle. I was teased at school and can vividly remember that. No more. Its a great feeling to feel great mentally but also look good physically.
You can drop it both the bottle and the weight
Its a fantastic feeling to be able to shop again but $$$. The weight loss has been a side effect of going sober. The huge boost in self confidence is a plus. Posting this for anybody down due to their weight and that's what keeps them drinking. If you drop the booze not only will you get sober but that weight will come off.
Being fat (nothing wrong with that) for me was one of the triggers to drink in itself. I felt unhappy with myself so to make myself feel better I drank. It was a huge part of the reason I drank, a vicious cycle. I was teased at school and can vividly remember that. No more. Its a great feeling to feel great mentally but also look good physically.
You can drop it both the bottle and the weight
Day 22 for me and I've lost 9.8 pounds (and have been eating lots of healthy food). Look on the bright side, you're not spending money on the booze so that's a bit of an offset. I figured I spent at least $40 per week on alcohol, not to mention all the heavy meals I was making to eat while I was drinking.
Hope I get to having your fabulous problem
Hope I get to having your fabulous problem
Syd,
I was so used to being sick, tired, and weak that my mind thinks I am still like that.
All of my conscious efforts to eat healthy, e.g. veggies, fruit, quality protien, lots of water, working out 4 to 7 days a week, have transformed me into a better human.
My brain tells me I am tired, but when I hit the gym, the energy is there. I started out doing 30 minutes of weights and cardio and now I can go for 2 hours if I want. I usually stop at about an hour though. Rome wasn't built in a day.
The endorphins from fitness feel way way way better than any drunkenness for sure. I have learned that.
I routinely do nice things for people expecting nothing in return. Holding the door, making way in traffic, a big tip for a service.
All of things generate natural endorphins, internally created opiates. These are addictive as well, but can be used to make me and the world a better place.
It is my path for life and it is good and right.
Happy Sunday!
Thanks.
I was so used to being sick, tired, and weak that my mind thinks I am still like that.
All of my conscious efforts to eat healthy, e.g. veggies, fruit, quality protien, lots of water, working out 4 to 7 days a week, have transformed me into a better human.
My brain tells me I am tired, but when I hit the gym, the energy is there. I started out doing 30 minutes of weights and cardio and now I can go for 2 hours if I want. I usually stop at about an hour though. Rome wasn't built in a day.
The endorphins from fitness feel way way way better than any drunkenness for sure. I have learned that.
I routinely do nice things for people expecting nothing in return. Holding the door, making way in traffic, a big tip for a service.
All of things generate natural endorphins, internally created opiates. These are addictive as well, but can be used to make me and the world a better place.
It is my path for life and it is good and right.
Happy Sunday!
Thanks.
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: sydney nsw
Posts: 785
Syd,
I was so used to being sick, tired, and weak that my mind thinks I am still like that.
All of my conscious efforts to eat healthy, e.g. veggies, fruit, quality protien, lots of water, working out 4 to 7 days a week, have transformed me into a better human.
My brain tells me I am tired, but when I hit the gym, the energy is there. I started out doing 30 minutes of weights and cardio and now I can go for 2 hours if I want. I usually stop at about an hour though. Rome wasn't built in a day.
The endorphins from fitness feel way way way better than any drunkenness for sure. I have learned that.
I routinely do nice things for people expecting nothing in return. Holding the door, making way in traffic, a big tip for a service.
All of things generate natural endorphins, internally created opiates. These are addictive as well, but can be used to make me and the world a better place.
It is my path for life and it is good and right.
Happy Sunday!
Thanks.
I was so used to being sick, tired, and weak that my mind thinks I am still like that.
All of my conscious efforts to eat healthy, e.g. veggies, fruit, quality protien, lots of water, working out 4 to 7 days a week, have transformed me into a better human.
My brain tells me I am tired, but when I hit the gym, the energy is there. I started out doing 30 minutes of weights and cardio and now I can go for 2 hours if I want. I usually stop at about an hour though. Rome wasn't built in a day.
The endorphins from fitness feel way way way better than any drunkenness for sure. I have learned that.
I routinely do nice things for people expecting nothing in return. Holding the door, making way in traffic, a big tip for a service.
All of things generate natural endorphins, internally created opiates. These are addictive as well, but can be used to make me and the world a better place.
It is my path for life and it is good and right.
Happy Sunday!
Thanks.
Thanks for your post and congratulations on your weight loss that must make you feel so much better. It is a wonderful side effect of going sober, I have lost 19.5kgs/43lbs myself and just being able to move around more easily is great. Sobriety really is the gift that keeps on giving
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: sydney nsw
Posts: 785
It Is Helianthus. It just shows the overall positives with quitting. I will be off my blood pressure medications I have been on in the next coming weeks. Off cholesterol pills since beginning of this year. I am reversing all the abuse I have done to myself both mentally and physically. I feel like I am part of the human race again. Not drinking myself stupid wallowing in self pity. Perseverance and commitment is what this game takes.
Member
Join Date: Jul 2018
Posts: 1,312
An excellent problem indeed! I lost 30 lbs in 5 months without much effort. It’s amazing how well your body responds when you treat it right.
Last edited by Atlast9999; 03-10-2019 at 01:26 PM. Reason: Hit “Reply” too soon
Member
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: East Coast USA
Posts: 1,068
PS - Sassy Rocks!!!
Great thread. I went from 220# at 5'6" with no muscle to a muscular 165# Have gained a few pounds in the last 3 weeks but my pants are looser in the weights so I think it's muscle.
Exercise and health was a huge part of my recovery. Congrats Syd!
Exercise and health was a huge part of my recovery. Congrats Syd!
Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 3,027
This sobriety is starting to cost me serious money. I have lost a lot of weight 27kg most of it since going sober. I am tall guy 183cm and now 100kg(6,1) ALL my clothes are so huge on me. I have had to replace all work clothes, jeans etc. I have donated all these to a shelter.
Its a fantastic feeling to be able to shop again but $$$. The weight loss has been a side effect of going sober. The huge boost in self confidence is a plus. Posting this for anybody down due to their weight and that's what keeps them drinking. If you drop the booze not only will you get sober but that weight will come off.
Being fat (nothing wrong with that) for me was one of the triggers to drink in itself. I felt unhappy with myself so to make myself feel better I drank. It was a huge part of the reason I drank, a vicious cycle. I was teased at school and can vividly remember that. No more. Its a great feeling to feel great mentally but also look good physically.
You can drop it both the bottle and the weight
Its a fantastic feeling to be able to shop again but $$$. The weight loss has been a side effect of going sober. The huge boost in self confidence is a plus. Posting this for anybody down due to their weight and that's what keeps them drinking. If you drop the booze not only will you get sober but that weight will come off.
Being fat (nothing wrong with that) for me was one of the triggers to drink in itself. I felt unhappy with myself so to make myself feel better I drank. It was a huge part of the reason I drank, a vicious cycle. I was teased at school and can vividly remember that. No more. Its a great feeling to feel great mentally but also look good physically.
You can drop it both the bottle and the weight
Honestly I look like a completely different person today. I'm trim, fit, clear skin, healthy-looking and I feel great. I've been told I look a lot younger at 35 than I did at 25. Imagine that.
I hear you on the clothing thing. I gave multiple trash bags of XL clothes to the GoodWill -- had to trade in for MEDIUMS. Who would've thought.
Great thread
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Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 500
That made me laugh. Over the weekend I found myself going through my closet trying on old clothes, new clothes, new older clothes....
Basically...
Before I had a drinking problem clothes: Size medium that I thought "one day" I'll fit back into these....[DONATED]
When I had a drinking problem clothes: Size XL that I wore to hide my 223 lbs of fat and bloat. [DONATED]
Between clothes: Size L that were too snug when I had a drinking problem, but too loose when I was skinny...and now fit rather well since I'm back to weighing 180 with muscle definition.
New clothes: Went shopping Saturday for a few new things. Felt good!
I'm so glad you feel confident again. It's the best feeling ever!
Basically...
Before I had a drinking problem clothes: Size medium that I thought "one day" I'll fit back into these....[DONATED]
When I had a drinking problem clothes: Size XL that I wore to hide my 223 lbs of fat and bloat. [DONATED]
Between clothes: Size L that were too snug when I had a drinking problem, but too loose when I was skinny...and now fit rather well since I'm back to weighing 180 with muscle definition.
New clothes: Went shopping Saturday for a few new things. Felt good!
I'm so glad you feel confident again. It's the best feeling ever!
Congrats and great post sydneyman!
I've always been average or underweight myself. I'm a 5 foot 9 woman and I weight around 121 pounds at the moment. The one thing I did notice is that regardless of how low my weight was, alcohol ALWAYS caused me to have a podgy looking stomach. I'd be slim all over apart from the chubby booze gut. That completely went once I'd given up alcohol.
I've always been average or underweight myself. I'm a 5 foot 9 woman and I weight around 121 pounds at the moment. The one thing I did notice is that regardless of how low my weight was, alcohol ALWAYS caused me to have a podgy looking stomach. I'd be slim all over apart from the chubby booze gut. That completely went once I'd given up alcohol.
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: sydney nsw
Posts: 785
Haha! Same. I'm actually 60 pounds lighter (27 kgs) than when I was at my worst with alcohol. I had a red face, sunken eyes, I was puffy and had terrible skin. I looked like a shadow of my younger self.
Honestly I look like a completely different person today. I'm trim, fit, clear skin, healthy-looking and I feel great. I've been told I look a lot younger at 35 than I did at 25. Imagine that.
I hear you on the clothing thing. I gave multiple trash bags of XL clothes to the GoodWill -- had to trade in for MEDIUMS. Who would've thought.
Great thread
Honestly I look like a completely different person today. I'm trim, fit, clear skin, healthy-looking and I feel great. I've been told I look a lot younger at 35 than I did at 25. Imagine that.
I hear you on the clothing thing. I gave multiple trash bags of XL clothes to the GoodWill -- had to trade in for MEDIUMS. Who would've thought.
Great thread
I agree with the looking completely different person today. Its a good feeling. Day 124 for me today.
and
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