hannah: (Running - obsessiveicons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-09-13 08:56 pm

p=m/V.

I'm looking my vanity right in the eye when I say, "I want to fit into smaller dresses." That's it. That's the desire and motivation. Smaller dresses. I don't much care about the scale - while somewhat ego-stroking, it doesn't matter nearly as much. Volume, density, and mass. If I dropped a dress size by weightlifting, decreasing volume and increasing density, the mass is the same.

One of my clients has, some time ago, begun taking an injected antidiabetic medication, presumably for diabetes. I haven't asked and don't plan to. Mostly I noticed that when she needed to move a potted plant that felt like it weighted twenty to thirty pounds at most, she had a hard time lifting it, while I didn't have any trouble. While it's true she doesn't lift weights as much as I do, I can't help but think about how much I like that form of exercise for its direct benefits of being able to pick something up, move it, and put it down without issue, and how that's something I'm unwilling to mess with. There's healthy and there's skinny. There's also vanity, which I'm admitting to - without wanting to sacrifice health to get there. My relationship to gravity is secondary to my relationship to my closet and being able to readily find good pants at thrift stores.
scripsi: (Default)

[personal profile] scripsi 2025-09-14 10:22 am (UTC)(link)
That's a very good way to see it! I'm on oral version of those antidiabtic medication, (I'm diabetic), and has lost a significant amount of weight. But I've also started to weight lift just because I don't want to lose muscle mass. It's intersting to see that even if my wight have been stable now for a year, I still change shape, and my waist and hips have shrunken signficantly.