Like most women, I don’t usually flaunt my weight. I, again like most women, prefer that number to be as secret as the codes that launch nuclear weapons. Recently, when asked my weight when I renewed my driver’s license, I mumbled an incoherent reply as I shielded my head and held up my baby as if in explanation. When I repeated myself, it was from behind my baby’s chubby thighs as he smiled at the lady as if saying, “You see, it’s all my fault. That number didn’t used to be that big.”
In fact, it’s not his fault. If there’s anyone to blame for the larger-than-desired number, I’d blame the twins. I was fit and happy with myself when I got pregnant with them six years ago. I had just completed my first (only) half-marathon and was in a size 8 (in one pair of jeans). While pregnant with Thing 1 and Thing 2, I gained 52 pounds. My doctor had given me a range of 40-50 pounds, so I was pretty happy with that number. After having those two little bodies pulled out of mine, I pretty quickly dropped back to within about 10 p0unds of my pre-pregnancy weight. Then I weaned the little tykes but unfortunately, I didn’t wean myself from the extra 300-500 calories a day I’d gotten so accustomed to while first pregnant and then breastfeeding. Slowly but surely, the weight crept back on.
Or I could blame my husband who is still the exact same size he’s been since he was a freshman in high school. And still manages to eat a bowl of ice cream every night. EVERY night. Ice cream with whipped cream and chocolate syrup. Sometimes I hate him.
I can’t blame myself. I didn’t make myself eat 2500 calories a day. No. Not me.
Anyway. I guess it’s time for some gut wrenchingly honest numbers. When I got pregnant with the twins, I weighed 160 pounds. Which is technically on the high-end of normal for someone of my height, but I’ve always been pretty muscular. Like I said, I was happy with the way I looked then and wasn’t so concerned with numbers. I just wanted to feel good about myself and fit nicely in my clothes.
Four years after having Mac and Omi, I still struggled with an extra 20 pounds, which, if you’re keeping track (and if you’re a woman, I know you are) put me at 180. Way past the high-end of normal and bordering on the obese side. I wore a size 14. I was incredibly unhappy with my body, but not unhappy enough to give up ice cream and milk shakes.
Then I got pregnant with E. I gained right at 25 pounds, which is what the doc recommended. So, that put me at just over 200 pounds. I was mortified. Seeing that slider on the scale keep moving every week at the doctor’s office was so embarrassing. And even though I know I was pregnant and supposed to gain weight, I most certainly was NOT supposed to weigh over 200 pounds. At some point near the end of the pregnancy, I made a conscious decision to get back to where I had been, no matter what.
I joined a gym when E was 3-months old. When I joined, I had a complete work-up done from one of the trainers. He performed all kinds of tests with those nasty calipers that gauge body fat as well as putting me through stress tests that determined what my optimum aerobic heart rate is. I wasn’t shocked at the numbers. Embarrassed but not shocked.
At that time, I weighed in at 183 pounds. I was actually pretty happy with that number because it meant that in 3 months time, I had lost almost all of the pregnancy weight. My clear goal, at that time, was to get back to 160.
And here’s where I quit hiding behind the numbers and start shouting them from the rooftops.
Last week, 6 months after my initial work-up, I had my follow-up appointment. The trainer re-weighed and re-measured me. Turns out, I’ve lost exactly 20 pounds. That means I’m 3 pounds from my initial goal. I say “initial” goal because now that I’m that close, I realize that it’s not enough. Six years ago, 160 might have felt good, but with three kids and gravity taking it’s toll on this body, it doesn’t feel so good now. My new goal is now 150. Hopefully, the next 10 pounds will come straight from my gut and thighs.
The thing I was most happy about was not the weight, but the other numbers. Turns out that all the hours at the gym have actually done something other than decrease the number on the scale. My total body fat has gone down 5.5%, and every girth measurement dropped by a significant amount. My waist measurement has gone down almost 5 inches. My hips a full 5. My forearm and calves a whole inch. My thighs, 2 inches.
In celebration, I took down all my old pairs of pants that have been in hiding in my closet for 6 years now. And guess what? They all fit. Even the one size 8 that I never really liked but kept just because it was an 8.
So now, I’ll keep working and praying that when I wean this baby (if I ever do), the same thing won’t happen again. It’s going to be hard giving up those extra calories! As a matter of fact, I may just go ahead and ditch all the 12s and 14s from my closet so I have no alternatives.
And I may look into becoming a professional wet nurse for when E is in middle school and getting the side eye every time I go to nurse him.












