The Scale is a Liar. A. Big. Fat. Liar.
I finished sixty days of Insanity Max 30 about five days ago. Woo hoo!
And, I subsequently shared my 60-day photos with my online accountability groups. The positive support and comments I received were overwhelming. I owe my fitness friends and supporters much gratitude. Love you all!
See the joy and excitement in my face above upon completing the sixty days? I do!
Sixty days of Insanity Max: 30 -----> behind me. Man, oh, man! Sweat, tears, and cursing (maybe just a little).
- Increased strength.
- Increased confidence.
- Increased stamina.
Priceless. It may not have been always pretty (hardly ever!), but I am proud to say I finished!
To be honest? I wasn't going to share my "before" and "after" photos publicly here in my blog, or on my Facebook page. It felt humiliating. And, scary. And, somehow "icky".
BUT THEN.
I read what I wrote above. And, I see that thrilled look on my face when I finished. I am PROUD to have completed this program. It was the hardest program I've done in at least 2 years. And, I finished it. I didn't miss one, single workout. Even with our crazy, hockey-filled lives. My nutrition was spot-on for about 90% of the program.
Do you want to know what held me back from sharing my photos? (Well, besides the unattractive "before" photo?)
THE SCALE.
I lost one pound. In 60 days. One. Pound. Yes - you read that right.
But, you can't always trust the scale. Sometimes, you need to do yourself a favor and not listen to its insidious lies.
The scale can be a serious and negative addiction.
Your scale tells you one thing and one thing only -- how much you weigh (at this exact moment, on this planet).
The scale doesn’t tell you how much fat you have. The scale can’t tell you if you’ve gained muscle. A pound of muscle is like a brick: small and compact. A pound of fat is like a fluffy feather pillow: bulky and lumpy. When you gain muscle and lose fat, your body gets smaller and tighter. Building muscle also makes it possible to drop clothing sizes without a big change in weight. Perhaps after a 60-day program, the scale says you lost 1 pound, which may not sound like much. Right?
BUT, what if you actually lost 8 pounds of fat and gained 7 pounds of muscle? Hello? That's GOLDEN. That’s a remarkable improvement in your body composition, but you wouldn’t know it if you only used your regular bathroom scale to track your progress.
A-FREAKING-MEN.
The scale also shouldn't dictate how you feel about yourself. On any given day. It shouldn't determine whether you have a negative day or a positive day. If you are stepping on the scale daily -- STOP. Especially if it really isn't working for you. Just think about it.
SO, in the spirit of being transparent as a Team Beachbody Coach, and admitting that 2014 was the roughest year ever for me, fitness-wise (just due to life circumstances) ....... here I am. In all of my sports-bra and tight-shorts glory. Day #1 photos, Day #30 photos, and Day #60 photos.
I don't see one pound lost here. Do you want to know what I see?
- EIGHT INCHES lost.
- A tighter and leaner abdomen.
- Smaller arms.
- A booty lift.
- Leaner thighs and hips.
- A happier, healthier, more fit gal!
- And, someone who can hang with Shaun T. for 60 days! Phew.
ALL THE BEST,
xo
Christine
EmoticonEmoticon