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The best part about Jean is that her outer beauty also
exactly reflects her inner beauty, even in the middle of raising five
small children.
Other than her movie-star looks, Jean is like so many of us. She grew up struggling with weight.
As a child, she was always surrounded by sweets they were just a part
of her everyday life. Special Tupperware containers filled with cookies
and goodies sat in the cupboard. Jean helped herself anytime she
wanted. And her weight showed it.
It wasnt like Jean hadnt tried to get her weight under control
before. She had done the diet thing many times over in her lifetime but
without permanent success.
Pounds disappeared; pounds reappeared. Sound like a familiar ride that all of us want to hop off?
When we first met, Jean told me that she felt fat, ugly, and tired.
As I looked at that face, I sort of got the fat and tired part, but
ugly? How could a face like that ever feel ugly? I wondered if she ever
looked in the mirror no kidding!
That was 9 months and 16 pounds ago. I would love to say its been easy
for Jean. Quite the contrary, she lost 10 pounds the first month
yeah; gained back 10 pounds by the third month ouch! Can you feel
Jeans pain when those pounds boomeranged back?
By the 5th month, she had gained another pound and the 7th month, she
was down 2 poundsa grand total of 2 pounds down from her original
weight. Big sigh. Seven months, two pounds down.
Who wouldnt just give up after all that effort without any results?
Most anyone, but not Jean. She just kept putting one foot in front of
the other, even when it felt like slogging through quick sand with no
end in sight. Such a lonely and demoralizing haul this weight loss
struggle.
Then something happened. Only Jean could describe it well. I guess you
could say something clicked in Jeans brain. What is it that makes that
magical switch flip in our brains, the light go on, and somehow we get
on track? Who knows.
At night, sometimes Jean would get this real sense that if she didnt
lose weight she was going to die of a heart attack. Her weight had
crept back up, and she felt bloated, fat, and miserable. Her pattern
was the same most of her life she would slip back to eating sweets,
especially when stressed, hating herself with every bite.
She asked herself, Why am I doing this to myself? I dont want to die. I want to be here for my kids.
Something clicked for Jean.
Recharged and refocused, Jean lost 14 pounds in the last two months.
She eats fruit for breakfast, salad or a veggie wrap for lunch with
hummus, avocado, red pepper, lettuce, and tomato.
For dinner she starts with a salad first (fill-up on the best-for-you
foods first) and eats cooked vegetables and sometimes beans. She makes
sure she is full and satisfied. For snacks, she eats nuts and seeds.
Mochas, an almost daily treat and extra calories for Jean, are now
pleasant memories. She no longer eats any animal products, dairy
products, sugar, or salty snacks another temptation for her.
Jean says she doesnt feel hungry or deprived. In fact, she feels
great. Amazingly enough, her cravings for sugar are gone, even though
the sugar stuff is still in the house. She loves the feeling of sugar
not having power over her.
Now when Jean is stressed, rather than over eating the bad stuff, she
over eats the good stufflike a veggie wrap! (Remember, eating
vegetables is like eating air when it comes to calories.) Way better
choice, dont you think?
As well as Jean is doing right now, do you think that Jean thinks she
is home-free from the trap of conditioned taste buds and lifelong
habits? Not at all.
In fact, Jean just wrote me and confessed a slip-up. Big deal! So
Jean slipped-up. If you are a human being, you slip-upits just part
of being human. Just expect that to happen and go on from there.
The only real slip-up is to give-up, and I know that is something that
beautiful Jean would never do. Her body, her life, and her children
mean too much to her.
I dont know about you, but it is not the rich, famous, and powerful
people in the world that I find inspiring. I draw inspiration from the
Jean Finmans in the worldextraordinary, ordinary (yet not ordinary at
all) individuals, who are perfectly themselves, with all their
strengths, struggles, complexities and layers of being a human being.
Jeans inner strength, courage, and commitment, as well as her
willingness and openness to share her heart, her soul, her victories,
and her frustrations, give you and me the inner strength and courage to
be perfectly ourselves in our own journeys through life.
Arent we so blessed to have one another to give a helping hand along the way?
Thank you, Jean, for your helping hand. Your beauty, inside and out, graces our lives with light and hope.
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