E.D.
Hi R.,
Here's my 2 bit psychological advice. Give it some thought and see if it rings true or opens up any new ideas for you.
I think your extra 30 pounds is completely related to your parent's deaths. Such a tragic and horrible thing to have happened. It's perfectly natural that you would have a rocky grief response and gain some weight. Not out of the ordinary and quite frankly I'm impressed you kept it to 30 pounds!
Here's where shedding it comes in. Do you think because you gained weight in response to their deaths - honoring them in a sense - that losing that grief weight feels emotionally like letting them go. And letting your sadness go? You probably grieved professionally for a while, carrying around a literal burden of the impact that had on your life. And I'm sure it was considerable. I don't mean to suggest that was the wrong thing to do necessarily. But since that was the impetus to the weight coming on, I think the answer lies there in taking it off.
Shedding your grief weight does not at all mean you don't love your parents. Being ready to live your life and shed the sadness does not in any way mean you don't love your parents. You honor them in the way you live your life every day. You honor them in the choices you make as a parent. They will always love you and you will always love them. You can be happy and move on. It doesn't mean you forget them or that their deaths were not meaningful. But it's just time to reclaim the part of you that died with them.
Outside of that. You just have to do it. I joined a gym and was intimidated and so I told myself to just show up, walk on the treadmill or the eliptical for 20 minutes. I ended up spending more time in the locker room and steam room but I had to earn it with my 20 minutes. Soon after that I was no longer satisfied with 20 minutes and the gym and exercise became the thing that brought me peace. It's fear that is holding you back and you just do need to decide to go. Have a bag that is all packed and ready to go. Decide that right after your baby's nap (or whatever works) you'll go to the gym. And then just go. Just go once this week and congratulate yourself for that. Then schedule the two times you'll go next week. The following week make it three. It just needs to become easier for you and it will only get easier if you confront the fear by going. It's not going to happen without action and work on your part. Worrying and fretting will not help in any way.
As for food. Eat what gives you life. Pay attention to the foods that make you fel great when you eat them. And the ones that make you feel gross avoid. Go for as many whole foods as possible, anything processed has lots of chemicals and preservatives that wreak havoc on the body. Fresh fruits and vegetables, lean proteins. Make sure you have a nice breakfast with a mix of carbs and proteins (cereal with nuts and or seeds, eggs and whole wheat toast, etc.). Eat fruit and protein for snacks in the day (grapes & cheese, berries & yogurt, fruit and nut butter). For lunch I like lettuce wraps with organic lunch meat and cheese. Dinner a lean protein and 2 vegetables. Drink lots of water and limit your other beverages to 1 cup of coffee if needed.
This is not new information. You know what to do. You just need to dig deep and confront why you're not doing it. Once you pass through that emotional block, it will all get easier.
You can do this! But you have to decide it's time and you're really ready. Meaning, you are ready to take action for yourself. To stand up for yourself and get your life back. You deserve it and it really is OK.
Good luck!
E.
Evanston