100 Pounds Lost, 15 Years Later

100 Pounds Lost, 15 Years Later
Left: hot single in the Hamptons. Right: Not-bad mom in her kid’s messy room.

Packed away in a box marked ā€œphone & camera packaging, WW info, old postcardsā€ is a certificate, one that was presented on July 5, 1997, fifteen years ago today. I received it at a small ceremony held in a meeting room in Astoria, Queens, up a rickety flight of stairs over a home-dĆ©cor shop. The ceremony itself took about five minutes, and none of my loved ones were in attendanceā€”the audience consisted entirely of people like me, people who were hoping to get healthy with Weight Watchers.

Judy, the leader, said a few words, about how Iā€™d been attending Saturday-morning meetings there for three solid years. How Iā€™d spent nearly nine months stuck at the 75-pound mark, but kept coming until I finally broke through. That day, Weight Watchers recognized my accomplishment with a piece of cardstock: Iā€™d lost 100 pounds. Iā€™m quite sure I cried. For years that certificate hung on my bulletin boardā€”it only got tucked away when I left Astoria to move in with Stephen in 2004, just before our wedding.

Obviously, a lot has happened in the intervening years: a second (this time happy) marriage, a child, a new career as a food writer and now a Weight Watchers blogger. For more than half that time my weight stayed steady at the 88-pounds-lost mark, which was fine by meā€”in order to maintain the full loss, Iā€™d have to spend 8-10 hours a week at the gym, which I wasnā€™t willing to do long-term.

Iā€™ve struggled to remain in spitting distance of that weight since Harry was born almost six years ago. Well, since the ā€œno-babyā€ weight I gained during a stretch of infertility. Iā€™ve been off-program and on-program, and Iā€™m down 10 pounds from a scary high a few years ago. But these days Iā€™m still about six pounds beyond my ā€œstandardā€ weight, and Iā€™m not happy about it. Unhappy enough that I never even considered putting on a bathing suit to make that picture up there symmetrical. I dread hitting the pool that just opened down the street.

Lately Iā€™ve been eating my way through the day, it feels. The excitement of publishing a cookbook has waned, my life hasnā€™t been magically transformed by the experience, and Iā€™ve got a bit of a hole in my life. Apparently, Iā€™m filling that hole with food.

I can feel myself sinking into sadness, even as I type this. That kind of thinking isnā€™t doing me any good. Instead of focusing on my jiggly arm-wings, my bundt cake-sized muffin-top, or my excessive thighflesh, Iā€™ll put that certificate back on the bulletin board. I earned it. And I can earn it again.

Any advice for the ā€œexpertā€ who normally gives advice?