June
June’s weight has fluctuated since her teens. For June, weight gain is emotionally driven, and food is a source of comfort, as well as a treat or reward. June has learnt lots from the weight loss programs she has done in the past, but finds it hard to maintain these behaviors in the long-term. June hopes to lose weight in the future to improve her health as well as her confidence.
June has been overweight in every decade since my late teen. She sees different reasons for her weight gain at various times in her life, although identifies emotional eatin as a common theme. June suggests there are psychological reasons behind weight gain, and describes using food as a trea or rewar, or to cheer myself u. For June, comfort eating has become a habit, and snacking on chocolates is like an addictio. Recently, June lost 1.5 stone through a weight loss support group, but put the weight back on after leaving the group for financial reasons. After this, she found it hard to get her eating back on track, psychologically you;ve got to gear yourself up to start all over agai. She also attributes her weight gain to changes in employment, going from a physical job to a more sedentary lifestyle, eating more and exercising less.
June has tried various diets at different times in her life, and speaks of learning from these experiences. June completed an 8-week NHS weight management programme, which helped her improve her meal planning, but did not lead to long-term changes to her comfort eating behaviours, you need prolonged suppor. June has also attended several weight loss support groups. Although she has not maintained the weight loss from these diets, June feels such programmes have encouraged her to be self-awar about her eating behaviours, as well as giving her knowledge on nutrition, and the importance of eating 3 healthy meals a da. Indeed, she finds this easier to do at times when she has less disposable income, as she cuts back on treats and cooks from scratch.
Even though past weight loss has shown June that she can lose weight, there is an underlying feeling of failure in being unable to maintain this, it’s a feeling, a very deep ingrained feeling that you have no self-will and self-control when it comes to foo. Indeed, June feels there is an emotional impact to weight gain; being overweight is accompanied by a sense of feeling judge and unlove by yourself. June currently wants to lose weight for health reasons, as well as to help her confidence, and in turn her job prospects. June feels she will rejoin a weight loss support group, as it gives her motivation and a sense of accountabilit through being weighed within a group.
June has had some contact with healthcare professionals around her weight. Her doctor mentioned her weight at an appointment for a different health concern, leaving June feeling insulte by being offered generic and inappropriate advice for her situation. June is conscious of the pressure on GPs, and feels there should be a way to raise concerns over weight without wasting their time, people might be really poorly and need appointments and my individual struggle with my weight shouldn’t take that time u. June questions whether specialist services could be implemented which address deeper issues around weight, because to make suggestions on small changes is merely scratching the surfac. Similarly, improving education around nutrition in schools is another strategy that could encourage weight management. June suggests that collaborations need to be forged between healthcare professionals, dieticians, and academics to increase understandings of the complexities around each individual’s weight issues, and work towards solutions. Dealing with weight is multi-faceted;, you can’t do a one size fits everybody type of approach to i.