Every now and then when we're traveling and crunched for
time, my husband and I will eat at a buffet (NOT my favorite kind of
restaurant for a variety of reasons). When eating at one of those
buffets, I overheard a man sitting behind us and who had just refilled
his plate comment,
"This is it. I'm going to start eating better tomorrow." He laughed as
he continued, "Oh, wait . . . that's what I said yesterday."
I
smiled when I heard that, because that sounded like something I would
have said five years ago. I had good intentions, really I did. I
certainly understood that I was significantly overweight, although I
avoided thinking of myself as being morbidly obese (but with a BMI of
44.6, that's exactly what I was!). I also was aware of the health risks
associated with my obesity and recognized that my own diabetes was
probably a result (since my mom and sister are both diabetic, I also
wondered if I'd be diabetic regardless of how much I weighed). In those
days, I was always a day away from finally starting on the diet to end
all diets - the one that would finally help me lose weight. I say I was
always a day away because the diet was always going to start
"tomorrow." My "tomorrows" usually were a Monday, as that seemed like a
good day to start a diet. I'd reason that I would enjoy "one more
weekend" and then really buckle down and just do it. The problem was
that Mondays at work were usually very busy and often stressful, and if
things were busy and stressful, well, that wasn't a good day to deprive
myself of my favorite food. Never mind that I'd just had another "last
supper", eating all of my favorite foods "one last time" in preparation
for my new diet . . . it would just have to wait until "tomorrow."
The
fact that the man at the table behind me joked about eating better
"tomorrow" told me that, on some level, he recognized the need to do
just that, and his size certainly shouted that he needed to do something
for his health. He was just going to wait until "tomorrow."
Tomorrows
have a sneaky way of always being just one day away, and
those days turn into weeks, which turn into months. There really is no
better day than today to make the choices we need to make to put us on
(or keep us on) a path that will lead to a healthier tomorrow.
The choice is yours . . . choose wisely :-)
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