I Got This (11 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Hudson

BOOK: I Got This
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I asked my engineer to turn up the house lights so David could see the audience. He loved it. He had no fear whatsoever. As long as he is happy, I am, too. I guess we will all have to wait and see what happens!

CHAPTER EIGHT
I AM CHANGING

W
ithin days of bringing David home from the hospital, I made a decision that ultimately altered my health for life. Becoming a mother brought on tremendous responsibilities, but none greater than the obligation I felt to get healthy to be there for my son.

I gained thirty-five pounds during my pregnancy. Like most women, I was shocked that even after giving birth, I still weighed around 237 pounds. I felt that surely I would drop at least some of the weight once that baby came out. This was the biggest number I had seen on the scale in many years. It was time to think about how I was going to lose the excess baby weight and then put that plan into action.

Since I had given birth via C-section, I was unable to do much
of anything for the first ten days or so. I could barely get off the sofa and couldn’t walk fully upright without pain for some time. For six weeks after giving birth, going to the gym or working out was definitely out of the question. What I could do during that time was try to break my body’s cravings for the unhealthy foods I freely ate during the last few months of my pregnancy. While I didn’t completely go crazy, I didn’t deprive myself of anything while I was pregnant, either. If I wanted cupcakes—I ate them. If I wanted Mexican food—and I did—often, I ate it. So when the time came to gain control over my eating again and hopefully once and for all, I fell back into my old diet mentality that had worked for me so many times before having my baby.

It was an all-too-familiar routine. I had grown comfortable with eating skinless baked chicken, brown rice, and steamed broccoli—morning, noon, and night. My staple diet foods. My big treat was two apple slices with peanut butter slathered on top. I only drank water and occasionally treated myself to Crystal Light. That way of eating is effective for quick weight loss, but it isn’t very interesting. And like anything, if we get bored we change things up, and usually not in our favor. It’s a total setup for failure because eating that way forever just isn’t realistic.

Once I was finally able to get active, I started walking a loop around my neighborhood that took close to thirty minutes to complete. To be honest, when I first began taking these walks, this same route took me closer to an hour because I had to take it slow.
After a few weeks I was able to cut that time in half. I relished these walks by myself because those precious moments were my “thinking” time. I enjoy being outdoors, especially when it’s really hot and humid. I put my headphones on and away I go. I do most everything with music playing in my ears. It gives me motivation to get up off that sofa and inspiration to take those extra laps. But sometimes, the motivation was hard to come by. If the baby had been up a lot or he was napping and I could get a few quiet moments at home, sometimes I just wanted to stay on the couch.

Whenever I’d try to talk myself out of going for a walk, and there were a few days like that, I’d take myself through a series of simple tasks so I would get up and go.

1. Get up.

2. Find your house keys.

3. Put on some shoes.

4. Grab your iPod.

5. Walk out the front door.

Like I said, I like to set goals for myself, and these small goals got me out the door more than a few times.

And if after all that I still didn’t move from the chair, as a surefire way of talking myself into just doing it, I’d trick myself by saying, “It is okay to walk for just ten minutes—because that would be better than doing nothing.” And once I got up, ten
minutes turned into thirty and eventually an hour. It got to the point where I would begin to miss how good I felt from working out that I’d actually get inspired by that, too.

According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the number of obese people in the United States will increase from 99 million in 2008 to 164 million by 2030. The U.S. obesity rate will rise from 32 percent to about 50 percent for men and from 35 percent to between 45 percent and 52 percent for women.

Later in the year, when I was well on my way to losing the baby weight I had gained, I met with a team of people from Weight Watchers. They sat with me and explained the principles of their program. The best way to think about the program is as a plan that gives its members a personalized budget of Points values per day. Your available Points are calculated based on your weight, age, and activity level. Every food has a Points value and you use those values to fill your day up with food. You keep track of your Points by writing down everything you eat. There is flexibility in the program in this regard, but many members cite tracking what they eat and the values associated with their food as the key to their success.

To be frank, I thought it all sounded lame and I wasn’t all that interested. All I could think of was, Who wants to eat and then
have to write all of that down? I was polite, but I felt like this program was in no way right for me.

The representative said that the way the numbers work is that they quantify food for you. They show you that one food choice is better than another based on the Points assigned to that food. For example, a processed nutrition bar, which is something most people think of as a good choice when trying to lose weight, might have a seven
PointsPlus
®
value and may carry as many as two hundred and fifty calories. On the other hand, a banana has a zero
PointsPlus
®
value and will actually keep you fuller for longer than a protein bar. It has more fiber and more water and vitamins, too. So the program quantifies food in a way that teaches you to navigate the environment that we all live in. As I listened, one of the more promising aspects of the program for me was learning that the program builds in some extra flexibility for you because they know that if you don’t get in some of the things you love—the sweets you crave and such, you won’t stick with the plan. They actually give you an added allowance of an extra forty-nine Points every week so you can have those things along the way.

What this means is, if you’re going to a wedding over the weekend and you don’t want to sit it out because you’re afraid of breaking the plan, you can still go. You can even have a cocktail or a piece of the wedding cake without worrying about your Points allowance for the day. If a friend calls you to go to dinner and you’ve already had twenty-five of your daily twenty-nine Points, you can pull from
the extra forty-nine allowed for the week. It gives a kind of real-life flexibility I had never seen in any other plan. When I first talked to Weight Watchers, they hadn’t yet launched their current program,
PointsPlus
®
, but did so soon after. It is now in full swing and has been used by millions to great results.

About the Weight Watchers
®
PointsPlus
®
Program

The biggest innovation from Weight Watchers in more than a decade,
PointsPlus
®
uses the latest scientific research to create a program that goes far beyond traditional calorie counting to give people the edge they need to lose weight and keep it off in a fundamentally healthier way.

The program is designed to educate and encourage people to make choices that:

  • Favor foods the body works harder to convert into energy, resulting in fewer net calories absorbed.
  • Focus on foods that create a sense of fullness and satisfaction and are more healthful.
  • Nudge toward natural foods rather than foods with excess added sugars and fats.
  • Still allow flexibility for indulgences, special occasions, and eating out.

HOW IT WORKS

While calorie counting has been the foundation of many weight-loss programs, including the Weight Watchers former
Points
®
system, the
PointsPlus
®
program goes beyond just calories to help people make healthful and satisfying choices.

The formula takes into account the energy contained in each of the components that make up calories—protein, carbohydrates, fat, and fiber—and it also factors in how hard the body works to process them (conversion cost) as well as their respective eating satisfaction (satiety). As a result, the
PointsPlus
®
formula guides people beyond reducing overall calorie intake toward foods that enhance feelings of satisfaction and fullness.

In addition to the new formula, foods that are low in energy density, and therefore more highly satisfying, are emphasized within the program. Specifically, all fresh fruits and most vegetables now have zero
PointsPlus
®
values. Furthermore, power foods, an important element of the
new
PointsPlus
®
program, provide an easy way to identify the best food choices among similar foods; for example, those foods with higher eating satisfaction, lower sugar, lower sodium, healthier fat, and more fiber, and it also factors how hard the body works to process them (conversion cost) as well as their respective eating satisfaction (satiety). As a result, the
PointsPlus
®
formula guides people beyond reducing overall calorie intake toward foods that enhance feelings of satisfaction and fullness.

The program features, combined with the fundamentals of the Weight Watchers approach—that is, weight loss built on healthy eating, physical activity, behavior modification, and a supportive environment—make the
Points-Plus
®
program revolutionary and innovative.

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

PointsPlus
®
values reflect the energy that’s available after the body has processed a food.

Power foods are an easy way to identify the best food choices among similar foods; for example, those foods with higher eating satisfaction, lower sugar, lower sodium, healthier fat, and more fiber.

Zero
PointsPlus
®
values are assigned to fresh fruit and most vegetables, which are nutrient dense and are highly satisfying.

Weekly
PointsPlus
®
gives an allowance of 49 extra
PointsPlus
®
values per week, in addition to the daily
PointsPlus
®
target. This allows for flexibility so members and online subscribers can avoid feeling deprived and are therefore motivated to stick with the program since real life often means unplanned eating opportunities.

Activity
PointsPlus
®
values are used to reward activity because it is important for good health and is a critical component of weight loss. Members and online subscribers can track activity
PointsPlus
®
values for motivation or they can swap them for extra food
PointsPlus
®
values.

INDUSTRY-LEADING RESEARCH AND PROVEN EFFECTIVENESS

The
PointsPlus
®
program has been tested in a rigorous, independent clinical trial, and the results demonstrate that it delivers significant weight loss as well as improvements in decreasing cardiovascular risk factors and eating behaviors linked with long-term weight loss and hedonistic hunger.

The testing applied to this new program is a reflection of Weight Watchers’ commitment to clinical testing with more than sixty-five original scientific publications over the past fifteen years that demonstrate the efficacy of the Weight Watchers approach to weight loss and long-term health.

Thousands of people across the United States were involved in beta testing the
PointsPlus
®
program. In addition to being thrilled with their weight loss, these individuals reported they felt healthier and more satisfied. People shifted their choices away from energy-dense, processed foods toward fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and lean proteins, changing their life in a meaningful and natural way and demonstrating the effectiveness of the
PointsPlus
®
program.

A global study recently published in
The Lancet
indicated that overweight and obese adults referred to Weight Watchers lost more than twice as much weight when compared with those who received standard care. This study provides significant evidence to the value of a primary care and Weight Watchers partnership for an effective weight-loss approach.

I listened carefully as the folks from Weight Watchers explained the program, but I still didn’t believe most of what they were saying. I nodded in agreement, but they lost me at “You can eat whatever you want.”

I thought, There is no way I can eat those types of foods and lose weight, because it was against everything I knew about weight loss and healthy eating. My mind was programmed to think deprivation, not freedom of choice. No one can sustain a diet of grilled skinless chicken, brown rice, and steamed broccoli forever. Eventually you have to nourish your body with something else and when you do, the weight comes right back. I would stop myself from having the foods I loved until the cravings got so bad I couldn’t take it for one more second. I’d inevitably break down and give in by heading to my favorite chicken wing place, ordering a huge box of wings, and eating the entire thing. Afterward, I’d feel so bad about making that choice, the next day I’d go right back on my extreme deprivation diet until I’d repeat the same pattern over and over again.

I had been so brainwashed into believing that dieting meant excruciating limitations that I had rejected the principles of the Weight Watchers program. I simply didn’t believe I could eat chips, cookies, or pizza and lose weight. My mind was made up. There was no way their plan would work. But out of courtesy, I reluctantly agreed to try the program for one week.

Weight Watchers assigned a woman named Liz Josefsberg to be
my Weight Watchers leader. Liz was there to help me understand and then navigate my plan on the program. The first thing Liz and I spoke about was the ways I’d lost weight before and what I had done to take off the excess baby weight. She recognized that I had what she called “a lot of diet baggage” left over from my past.

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