This question was posted a few minutes ago on an August 2013 post (Quick Recipes) and in order to help Rose, I'm posting her question so that some of you may be able to answer her questions:
I am new to blogging and not sure if I'm doing it right. I have been on the diet for two months and doing well. I do still have some food questions and how the food combinations effect the body, as well as dynamics of Julie's philosophy. I really enjoyed the sessions and am in awe of her. However, after driving for two hours from Gloucester and attending the night sessions, I tended to space out and not necessarily absorb a lot if the information. I emailed Theresa, but got back some long form letter of encouragement. Is there anyone out there who can help me?  -- Rose

11/13/13 update:
I just read an excerpt from the book Grain Brain: The Surprising Truth About Wheat, Carbs, and Sugar - Your Brain's Silent Killers, by Dr. David Perlmutter, which supports a lot of what Julie teaches us. I highly recommend this article. It's available on Amazon and the Kindle price is only $6.62. I devoured the article, so I may have to buy the Kindle version! -- Theresa
This weight loss journey isn't a contest. We are all winners, even though this is not a contest. This journey is about our commitment to drop our excess weight, to reach our desired size, and maintain that size for the rest of lives. How's your commitment working for you?
this is not a contest
We made a commitment to ourselves, and with Julie's help (hypnosis) we can stay committed to drop our weight.

My commitment has stayed strong, but sometimes I get in my own way. The mean girl inside me sometimes whines "how come she lost weight faster than me?" Or I discover something I'm doing that isn't according to the program.

I know people who started this program and dropped straight down to their goal size. For others, including me, reaching our goal size is a longer journey. People in both groups indicate they have always been 100% in the river (on program) the whole time. Others indicate they jump in and out of the river all the time and they still reached their goals. I can't speak for the later group and I don't judge them. This is a solo journey and I can only speak of my own truth.

Why it is that some lose weight so much faster than others? Perhaps it's because we don't all hear or remember the same details and because we interpret what Julie teaches us in different ways. Again, I can only speak of my own journey.

As time passes, I refine my program, as I discover things I was doing wrong. These discoveries happen at refreshers or when I talk with others, but sometimes I have my own "ah ha" moments.

My recent "ah ha" was about the meat-veggie-ratio. I recall meals where I had more veggies than meat. I removed coleslaw from my food options a few months ago, because I realized it's a food I eat too much of, especially when I make it at home. I start off with the correct ratio, but then I go back for more coleslaw than meat and throw off the balance.

Yes, coleslaw is a food we're allowed. Yes, I stayed in the river. However, if we eat more veggies than meat we are going to either stop losing or gain weight. I speak of coleslaw, but I overate other veggies as well. I'll bring coleslaw back again, but for now, it's off my plate.

This concept is not complicated: eat equal to or less veggies than meat.

I'm not sure why I didn't take this meat-veggie-ratio more serious every day or when the line became blurry and I ignored this key concept over and over. I'm not even sure when it started or why I allowed myself to tip the balance. Why didn't I catch this and stop sooner? I'm not sure.

What I do know is that now that I've put the meat-veggie-ratio balance back in balance, my weight is coming off again.

I've followed this program for nearly 3 years and along the way I've identified areas where I make mistakes. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why my weight loss is slower than others. I learn from these imperfections and then I move on.

A big part of this program is learning to reprogram our minds. I don't beat myself up when I discover something I'm doing wrong. This program is a lifestyle change and I keep this in mind as I journey forward. Imperfections are part of the human experience. I expand my knowledge of how this program works by listening to my own body. When I feel I'm in a plateau, I look around to see if it's something I'm doing wrong and if it is, I stop it immediately.

As much as my old way of thinking (my inner mean girl) asks "why is she losing weight so much faster than me?" I have to remind myself: this is NOT a competition. There is no finish line. There is no "end" of this journey. Life doesn't work this way. I am on a journey to lose weight and I'm doing my best to stay the course. My best is good enough.

After I reach my goal size I'll learn how to maintain that and then move on once again. Move on to what? Living my life just as I always have. My whole life doesn't change just because my size does. My life is the same, but I'm a whole lot healthier. I'm the same person, just a smaller size. I think the same, except the mean girl is melting away. The mean girl who held me back no longer has a place in my life.

I speak of the mean girl because a lot of us are so critical of ourselves. It's important on this journey to quiet the inner mean voice. If we want to transform our lives, we have to stop listening to the mean girl who tells us we're still fat. The mean girl who looks in the mirror and only sees our flaws. The mean girl has no place in your life either; let her go.

If we are truly committed to losing this weight and maintaining it for the rest of our lives, we cannot afford such negativity in our lives, especially from ourselves. If we cannot look in the mirror and see ourselves as we really are, we're never going to maintain our goal size.

Let go of your mean girl. Let go of anything that is keeping you from reaching your goal size and embrace your commitment to reach your goal.
Happy November,

Yes, it's Fall and the weather is getting chilly.  I wanted to check in to see how you were all doing. Well, how are you doing? Challenges, successes, laughs? Update us.....

I'll start first.  These past 4 months have been fantastic.  I feel great and in fact, I think I am going to start to run again.  OK... Jog.  :). I was out with my dog last week and started to jog around the neighborhood and felt pretty good.  The places that used to bounce around and not feel comfortable, didn't feel too bad.  So, I'm going to sign up with Planet Fitness and start to use the treadmill 3/wk.  I will keep you posted on how this goes.

I have gone off program 2 times.  Both times when I went away for a few days.  I limited my "off" times to beverage selection and on one vacation food choices.  Both times, I have been able to get back "into the river" successful.

My 4 month anniversary is coming up Nov 15.  I just signed up for a refresher for the end of November.  I have a goal that I would like to hit by Jan 1.  To complete it, I want to be as prepared as I can be.  This will assure that nothing will stand in my way.

Here are a few things that I have learned over the past 4 months:
  1. Food doesn't have a tight grip over me anymore.  With Julie's help with cravings, I don't feel the pull of food anymore.
  2. My beverage of choice (when out with friends) used to be beer.  All different kinds of seasonal ones.  I've realized that, Vodka is a great replacement.
  3. I now drink coffee. Maybe it's because my taste buds have changed and it gives me something different to drink along with water and seltzer.
  4. I'm not hungry anymore.  In fact, I need to remind myself to eat.  I think this is because I don't crave or think about food anymore.
  5. I have the support of family and friends.  I do find that after you have been on the program for a bit, it's easy to stay on it and not have sugar or carbs.  You get used to leaving them off your plate.
Do you agree?

How are you doing?

Jane

"Preparedness Equals Peace of Mind" - is a quote from a dear friend that coached college athletes for over 30 yrs.  She recently lost her battle with cancer this past August.  This quote is right on the money as we are all prepared once our 3 sessions are completed with Julie.  To believe in ourselves and the program brings success and POM.
The month of October has been packed full of conferences and other travels and I'm happy to report that, like our friend Linda who traveled to Italy - I stayed on program everywhere I went! I'll post about my travels in a day or so, but this morning I want to talk about leg cramps, because last night I woke up in the middle of the night with a wicked bad leg cramp.
"The best theory is the “squatting hypothesis,” which speculates that leg cramping is associated with the modern habit of sitting on chairs and on the toilet instead of squatting as our forebears would have done." -- Lisa Shives, M.D., founder of Northshore Sleep Medicine.
I haven't had leg cramps for a while, but last night's was an exceptionally bad cramp. This morning I was determined to find out why I get these cramps. Since I'm no medical expert, and putting soap at the foot of my bed or rubbing it on the sheets didn't work for me, I turned to Google for help.

There's a ton of information online about causes and treatment of leg cramps. After reading a good number of articles, and this isn't the first time I've done this research, I'm taking the route of stretching and taking magnesium to stop leg cramps from happening again. In fact, I just pulled out my bottle of Nature's Bounty 500 mg Magnesium and took one just now!

I divided my summary (below) into two categories: 1) what's the best treatment for leg cramps? and 2) what causes leg cramps?  I hope this information is helpful to those of you who have these leg cramps. If you have a solution for leg cramps, please share what worked for you!

What's the best treatment for leg cramps? 

This is what I wanted to know most:  how to prevent leg cramps. Last night's episode was painful and I want to stop this from happening as soon as possible. After reading a good number of articles, I found this simple statement to be the most helpful:
Simple stretches before you turn in may be all it takes to rein in charley horses. In one Dutch study, 40 sufferers who tried a three-minute workout were able to reduce their agonizing sleep-killers by more than half — and when they did get a cramp, it was much less painful. Source: Bye-bye, Leg Cramps.
That article includes stretching exercises, as does this one:
What Causes Leg Cramps at Night
What causes leg cramps?   

The cause of leg cramps is written about on a million websites, many of which include ads for products. After reading a good number of them, I found a common thread about magnesium deficiency and dehydration. These three article excerpts align with information I found on medical websites:

Medicine.net
Muscle cramps can often be prevented by measures such as adequate nutrition and hydration, attention to safety when exercising, and attention to ergonomic factors. Muscle cramps are extremely common. Almost everyone (one estimate is about 95%) experiences a cramp at some time in their life. Causes for cramps include: vigorous activity, sitting or lying for an extended period, dehydration, low blood levels of either calcium or magnesium, and some medicines. 
WiseGeek
Many people have had the experience of waking up in the middle of the night with excruciating calf pain, and when such a charley horse strikes, the first tendency is usually to try to straighten out the leg and massage the muscle that is causing the pain. This instinctive reaction is actually the best way to ease a leg cramp, and applying a warm heating pad to the painful area also is effective for immediate relief. If the pain persists, the person can take a pain reliever such as aspirin or ibuprofen to help ease the pain.
If common treatments don't help alleviate the cramps, or if they occur with great frequency, the sufferer should consult with a medical professional who can determine if there is a more a serious underlying medical condition.
MgBRIGHT Magnesium Supplement
The cause of leg cramps is a deficiency of magnesium. According to Dr. Oz, Dr. Weil, the Mayo Clinic, and other leading authorities, magnesium deficiency is the hidden cause of leg cramps, and no prescription medication can treat it. In fact, 78% of leg cramp sufferers have a severe magnesium deficiency. Without magnesium, your body is missing its most important natural defense against pain, swelling, tension and inflammation. Studies show that aggressively replenishing magnesium eliminates leg cramps and prevents them in the future.
It was 2 years ago today that I went to Julie for the first time!! Thus the term Julieversary!! Our friend Jill came up with this term and I love it!!!

I will say, I am pleased, thankful, happy, and in disbelief!!!

I have gone from this, my absolute largest size was 26/28.

To this in 2 years, I am getting into 12's!!!

What have I learned in these past 2 years:

I have learned to start trusting in myself. I am learning to like myself (which is a MAJOR step for me)! I have learned I can follow this program anywhere, even in Italy!!!

I have learned patience (I am a slow looser) I am finding myself liking clothes shopping. I don't try to blend into the wall as often anymore when in crowds. I enjoy getting dressed now in the morning as my clothes fit!!!

I have learned there is always tomorrow to eat, I don't have to eat it all today. I have learned to ignore the naysayers and the ones who have to say negative things about how I am eating.

I have learned to love meat and I thoroughly enjoy it!! It is a treat for me to eat so much meat after denying myself meat while on other plans.

It is wonderful to go to bed knowing it was a good eating day and I won't be up half the night with heartburn. It is wonderful to enter into the holiday season, or New Years Day or celebrations and not panic because I have to loose weight to get into something decent to wear!

I can get on the floor with my grand kids!! I sit with my legs crossed with no problem at all!!

I am gaining confidence daily.

I trust the program, I don't mess with the program, it works when you do what she tells you to do!!!

I do not miss the scale! I feel so free from getting weighed in and weighing and measuring my food!! I LOVE I DON'T HAVE TO JOURNAL!!!

I am learning to accept compliments graciously, even though it is hard for me to believe them, the word skinny and Linda just never were in the same sentence in my life ever before!!

I am happy for the first time in my life I am happy with me!!!

Julie if you are reading this, THANK YOU!!!!! THANK YOU for giving me back my life!!!! THANK YOU for giving my husband and my children and my grandchildren - a wife, mother and grandmother!!!
What an amazing trip! Italy is a beautiful country with so much history. I saw artifacts and ruins dating back to single digit years!!! Unbelievable to me!!!
Shroud of Turin museum
I got to meet family I had never met before!!

and the best part: I STAYED ON PLAN AND WAS NOT DEPRIVED ONE BIT!!!

I proved you can go anywhere and do anything and still have a really good time and not go off plan!!! I am thrilled!!! My trip was about sight seeing, family, spending time with my dad, and the culture. Plus I did a lot of shopping!

I always wanted to go to Italy, but I didn't want to be the fat American they make fun of over there. They are shocked at our eating habits and serving sizes. They use hardly any sugar, and everything there is fresh. You don't find store wrapped bread anywhere, it is all bought daily or every couple days. Amazing to not see very few, and I mean VERY FEW overweight Italians.

I am one that won't take the chance of straying at all! I worked to hard to get where I am now, and my goal size is in sight. I am doing the program according to Julie and won't take any chances at all! I have heard to many sob stories of those who strayed and got totally messed up. No way do I want that to happen. It isn't worth it.
I felt great on my trip! We did a lot of walking and it felt great!

Bridge of Sighs in Venice Italy
I actually lost weight while gone!! How great is that!!!
Hi All,

I had my yearly physical last week and received great news. After the nurse weighed me she said,   Wow, you've lost over 30lbs since July.  I stopped her from telling me more.  In fact I was.... "No I can't know."  She then asked me if I did KH.  I said yes.  She said that she had seen a few patients that had done KH and look great.  I started to tell her about it and ... Like all of us, she will make the decision to call or not.

I'm healthy and my doctor said that I'm in great shape.  I wasn't on any meds and don't need any.  I will be 52 in a few weeks and like I have said, I feel wonderful.

So, 2 days later I was heading to Cape Cod for a 4 day long weekend.  I had all the intentions of sticking to the program, but after some quiet thoughts, I allowed myself to enjoy my time away.  What did this look like?

I ate clean each day, but twice I had pizza late at night.  I  had a few beers, and realized that.... I really didn't miss them.  The other treat I allowed myself was candy corn.  Why, I don't  know.   I just did.  On my drive back home, I knew that Sunday was back on my plan.

Now it's Monday and I am so happy to report that, I ate great yesterday and today.  I don't have ANY pull toward sugar or carbs.  I allowed myself to explore and am back and on track for the duration, which is until I'm a loose pants size 8.  Currently, I am a size 10.

Would I recommend this for you? No.  But, I did it for me, while on vacation.  I'm telling you all this, not to say, go crazy, but for me, I feel as strong as I did in July.   That is how good Julie is and was for me.

Jane
How's your exercise plan working for you these days? Have you started moving? Is it time to kick up your level of exercise - or to get started? I bought a Fitbit an electronic gizmo, called to help me kick things up a notch - and it's working!
Walking the Whiting Reservoir, Oct. 2013
My walking friend has been encouraging me to buy a Fitbit for about six months and I finally bought last month. She kept telling me how it helps motivate her to get in a specific amount of walking steps per day and how you can encourage and support your friends who have this gadget (inside the app). At the end of the day, if she is short on the amount of steps she wants to get in, she goes around her block a few more times.

I've found my Zip Fitbit to be a great investment - in me. It's not cheap, but it's worth every penny. I bought it at Best Buy and I opened an account to get an instant $20 off, dropping the price to $39.99. I didn't get the fancier one, that tracks your sleep. When my Zip dies or I lose it, I can assess if I need the higher end one. Right now, tracking my steps is all I need it to do.
I bought a pink Zip Fitbit
A few days ago my Fitbit nudged me (via email) to "walk just 360 more steps" to reach my daily goal. I'm not there yet. I didn't go out and walk around my neighborhood to get in those 360 more steps. Plus, I was already in my nightgown. I can imagine I will be there soon - the day will come when I look at my daily progress (before putting on my nightie) and I go outside to achieve my daily steps.

I know, I should be more motivating and report how great it feels that I did this, but that day isn't here yet, but I will start doing this in time. I haven't yet committed to a specific number of daily steps. I aim for 15,000, but am happy to see over 10,000. The later is how many steps you need to get in to maintain your weight. The former number is the range where you can take weight off from your walking.
How it works: 1) track activity, 2) sync, 3) check progress, 4) make fitness fun.
I am happy with my Fitbit and I'm surprised (and happy) at how it does motivate me. I immediately started to park across the opposite site of campus to get in extra steps and I find myself using any excuse to take a walk. Even though I felt like crap all weekend, I met up with a friend on Saturday and another one on Sunday and both days walked the Whiting Reservoir, which is just over 4 miles.

That is because of the Fitbit - it really motivates me. It motivates me because I set it to automatically upload my stats to Facebook at the end of the day (my MapMyRun app is also set to post my walks/runs when I'm done). It also motivates me because I have three friends who share their Fitbit stats with me. I'm usually in third or fourth place, but sometimes I come in second. I also "cheer" them on within the app, sending them a cheer of support. It's fun when I get such a cheer as well.

BTW, I have an iPhone 4, which predates Fitbit, so it doesn't sync with my phone. This is not a deal breaker for me, since I use MapMyRun to track my walking and running.

Oh, and on Saturday, I forgot to turn off the MapMyRun app, so when it posted to Facebook, it said I'd walked several hours and many miles. Ha! My walking friends asked where did I go! That makes up for the times I walked and it didn't register my walk, usually due to extreme fog or human error.

I saw an article which motivated me to share my own Fitbit story: Fitness Motivator: Why I'm Obsessed with My Activity Tracker by Connie Schultz (Parade, Entertainment, October 12, 2013).

What do you do to motivate yourself to stay active? Get moving and keep losing!