I'm worried about my friend's weight loss. Please Help.?!


Question: Ok, my friend was big before. 5ft 4 and weighed 80kg. She has lost a lot of weight over the last two months which I guess in one way is a good thing. However, the way she speaks about food - she counts calories, knows exactly how many calories are in everything - and she's secretive about how she eats. I also found bathroom scales which aren't allowed at our school so I think she weighs herself regularly. I think she displays all the signs of anorexia without being underweight (yet..). She's reached a fairly normal level now (a teeny bit chubby but normally so) yet she's continuing. What should I do - can you be suffering from anorexia nervosa even when you're obese? HELP PLEASE


Answers: Ok, my friend was big before. 5ft 4 and weighed 80kg. She has lost a lot of weight over the last two months which I guess in one way is a good thing. However, the way she speaks about food - she counts calories, knows exactly how many calories are in everything - and she's secretive about how she eats. I also found bathroom scales which aren't allowed at our school so I think she weighs herself regularly. I think she displays all the signs of anorexia without being underweight (yet..). She's reached a fairly normal level now (a teeny bit chubby but normally so) yet she's continuing. What should I do - can you be suffering from anorexia nervosa even when you're obese? HELP PLEASE

You dont have to be thin to be anorexic, thats quite important to know. Also i think a good girly talkis in order. inviote her over with afilm you know proper girly and just tell her whats going on in your head aand that you r worried

Get her to take a BMI test and prove to her that she is now in a healthy weight range http://www.alfitness.com.au

I don't think that she has a disorder I think that you might be a little jelous of her success. Take the emphasis off her weight and just be her friend again.

Hello kit_2007_kat

Know 7 tips for successful weight loss

1. The desire to lose weight must come from the individual. If you're truly ambivalent about making changes in your lifestyle or are doing this to please someone else, you're likely to fail. When making changes, decide what's right for your lifestyle. Your best friend's diet and exercise plan may be completely wrong for your habits and interests. The key is to find a system that works for you.

2. Don't blame yourself if you aren't perfect. If you once fail at your attempt to curtail your overeating, it doesn't mean you are a failure at weight control and that you should just give up. Accept that you made a poor choice, but don't let that poor choice influence the rest of your plan. The same holds true with exercise. Skipping a few workouts doesn't mean you can't get back on track. Weight control does not involve making perfect choices all the time; rather, it's about attempting to make good choices more often than poor ones.

3. Avoid surroundings where you know you're tempted to make poor food choices. Everyone has a time when we're most likely to overeat, whether it's the morning coffee break or after-work gathering with friends. Try to plan other activities or distractions for those times, or plan in advance how you're going to handle them and stick to it.

4. Surround yourself with people who support your efforts. Even our good friends can knowingly or unknowingly sabotage weight-loss attempts. Spend time with those people who will not pressure you to make poor food choices.

5. Decide on some nonfood rewards for yourself when you reach interim goals. For examples, at the end of the first week of healthy eating or after the first 5 pounds lost, buy yourself a new CD or book.

6. Stock your pantry and refrigerator with healthy foods. Get rid of the high-calorie, low-nutrition snacks like chips and candy. But don't forget to have plenty of healthier options available as well, such as popcorn (hold the butter, try Parmesan cheese sprinkles), low-fat cheese and yogurt, fruit, instant cocoa without added sugar, sugar-free popsicles or puddings, or whatever appeals to you when you're hungry for a snack.

7. Set small goals and focus on these rather than the "big picture." Decide where you want to be in a week or in a month, rather than focusing on the total amount of weight you'd like to lose.





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