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<blockquote data-quote="DCUKMod" data-source="post: 2003311" data-attributes="member: 345386"><p>Charis, I think you have made huge adjustments, very fast and that takes a lot of getting used to in both body and mind. If you are a bit prone to an emotional rollercoaster, it's only to be expected it'll butt in from time to time.</p><p></p><p>In your shoes, I'd see my Doc and ask if I could have a decent check-up, including a good wide panel of blood tests, to cover vitamins, and hormones, as well as some of the usual diabetes stuff.</p><p></p><p>In terms of weightloss, it's a complete and total pain that our losses - particularly the fast ones go from parts we're less happy about. Most of us have places we'd like or l would have liked to tackle, but it rarely works like that. </p><p></p><p>I've often said it takes a whole for our bodies to catch up with weight loss. When I got very slim, I still had a bit of an up and down figure. OK, I was used to that, as I'd always been that way, but a fair while later, "all of a sudden" I had a waist. A little, slim waist! At the same sort of time, I realised other bits of me had "softened up a bit", so it seems my long held belief that our bodies shuffle the remianing fat around.</p><p></p><p>I just wish my body would get with that belief and pad my backside a bit more!</p><p></p><p>Don't be despondent Charis. You've done incredibly well, but you've passed the "new and exciting" phase and are now in the "better really get used to this" phase, which is just a bit boring.</p><p></p><p>In terms of the emotional rollercoaster, a look at the Kubbler Ross Change Curve could be worthwhile. We don't enter the curve at any defined place and nor do we leave in a defined place, and sure as heck we all revisit it from time to time.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]31733[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DCUKMod, post: 2003311, member: 345386"] Charis, I think you have made huge adjustments, very fast and that takes a lot of getting used to in both body and mind. If you are a bit prone to an emotional rollercoaster, it's only to be expected it'll butt in from time to time. In your shoes, I'd see my Doc and ask if I could have a decent check-up, including a good wide panel of blood tests, to cover vitamins, and hormones, as well as some of the usual diabetes stuff. In terms of weightloss, it's a complete and total pain that our losses - particularly the fast ones go from parts we're less happy about. Most of us have places we'd like or l would have liked to tackle, but it rarely works like that. I've often said it takes a whole for our bodies to catch up with weight loss. When I got very slim, I still had a bit of an up and down figure. OK, I was used to that, as I'd always been that way, but a fair while later, "all of a sudden" I had a waist. A little, slim waist! At the same sort of time, I realised other bits of me had "softened up a bit", so it seems my long held belief that our bodies shuffle the remianing fat around. I just wish my body would get with that belief and pad my backside a bit more! Don't be despondent Charis. You've done incredibly well, but you've passed the "new and exciting" phase and are now in the "better really get used to this" phase, which is just a bit boring. In terms of the emotional rollercoaster, a look at the Kubbler Ross Change Curve could be worthwhile. We don't enter the curve at any defined place and nor do we leave in a defined place, and sure as heck we all revisit it from time to time. [ATTACH=full]31733[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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