Update: “The Long Haul” (Nicole) – first cut after reset

To follow Nicole’s journey from the beginning: part 1, part 2, part 3

cut after resetJust when you think you have it all figured out, you realize that you still have so much to work on.

It’s been about 6 weeks since my last update.  At that time, I was just entering CUT phase after an 8 week reset.  I had healed so much during that time, both mentally and physically and I felt GOOD.  I felt READY.  So, into cut I went.

Guess what I did?  First thing I did was to CUT at 15% of a lower exercise level- (I told myself it was because I was going on vacation and probably wouldn’t get in as much exercise and also that I was building in a buffer for all snacking I’d be doing around a campfire that would be hard to track).  The second thing I did was to increase my cardio.  After all, I have a beach vacation coming up in 2 months…don’t want the loss to be too slow…  Hmmmm, gee…does any of this sound good so far???

Well, for the first few weeks I had no scale, I was on vacation, camping and I couldn’t lift weights during that time, but I crammed in as much cardio as I could through mountain hiking, walking and running (in the mountains so lots of hills and lower oxygen availability).  I still monitored my food best I could although my macros were terrible…protein came in seriously short and carbs skyrocketed and I leaned toward overestimating calories in and underestimating exercise…just to be safe you know?  Right…  Anyways, after vacation, I weighed in expecting a gain and saw a 3lb loss!  I was ecstatic!  I’m thinking, “I’ve got this pegged…all is good.” (I would like to mention that during my entire vacation I was unable to use my Body Media Fit to gauge my calorie burns because I had no internet.  This is an important fact as you’ll see shortly.)

cut after resetSo, let’s move on to post vacation.  I resumed my lifting practices, created a new 5 day hybrid schedule of Chalean Extreme and Turbo Fire.  I was being good…I kept all my workouts to about 1hr long each day and I reduced my dog walking to a much slower pace and shorter route so that I wouldn’t stress the body, but I didn’t increase my calorie intake.  At this time I also started monitoring my BMF again to double check my deficit.

First thing that happened? My weight started to rise. Within 2 weeks I had regained almost all of the 3 that was lost.  (At first I told myself it was because I was lifting again, and there was water retention…and to some extent I believe this is totally true, but not the entire story)  At the end of those two weeks I ran a BMF report.  I discovered that my 400 – 500 cal deficit that I was aiming for, was actually a 657 cal average deficit per day!  I was mortified!  I wanted to ‘speed up the loss’ but not destroy all my hard work of the reset!  It was time to get real with myself and correct my ‘enthusiastic’ approach to CUT.

So, I increased my cals to bring me back to a  400 cal deficit. (this gives me a 100 cal buffer for the odd food portion I eyeball instead of weigh/measure)

Day 1 of increasing cals…weight up .2lbs

Day 2 of increasing cals…no change

Day 3 of increasing cals…weight down 1.4 lbs

I guess the extra cals aren’t hurting me at all, are they?  And here I was all worried…

cut after reset

Where all other “tools” fail, pics will always tell the whole story

I also did some measurements today.  What I discovered was quite cool…I lost inches in some places, gained inches in others.  Overall, I have gained about ½ inch (that’s obviously not the cool part).  What is interesting is that there were so MANY changes in inches, up and down and all over the body…it’s like my body is shifting, rearranging everything.  AND, when I mentioned the weird measurements to my husband he said that he’d noticed that my body was changing – and in a good way! (oh, and when my husband says something like that…it’s truth…he only says it if he believes it) I can’t see it, but he can see it.  He also made a comment that “It’s too bad you can’t measure your face.” because so much of the change shows there first on me.  And in my hands. (my rings fit differently).  He also said my shoulders are smaller…how many people measure their shoulders?  I sure don’t!!!  So he sees changes in places I can’t even measure.  My clothes don’t reflect it.  My measurements don’t look great.  My scale sure doesn’t either.  But something is happening.  I’m about 6 weeks into cut…so as you can see, these changes are SLOW.

Now, all that being said…what’s the point of my story since I don’t really have a huge loss or any major success to share yet?  It’s just this:

cut after reset

Tape measure says no change, pics say “bye, bye, belly!”

If you come from a VLCD that you maintained for a very long time, learning to have a healthy relationship with food and exercise is not an easy thing to fix in a short time.  Be careful of falling victim to old habits even if you think you have everything in control this time or think you have already overcome those issues.  The frustration of slow progress or none at all, that little ‘extra deficit’ or the logical reasoning to adding more exercise to your schedule can run away on you and before you know it, you’re on the path to your old life…the one you WANT TO LEAVE BEHIND!  Put boundaries in place on exercise and keep yourself accountable with your deficit through whatever method you can.  And whatever you do, don’t let life trick you into speeding up your weight loss because of some beach vacation, or a wedding or any other event that you are worried about looking good for.  You need  to learn to love yourself at whatever point you are in your fitness journey.  If you don’t work on that…you’ll never escape your past.  And you can’t move forward if you are stuck in your past.

Edited to add-I took these progress photos after I wrote this update. I can see changes in these photos that otherwise would have gone unnoticed! Even my husband was surprised at some of the changes and said “Wow! There’s some big changes happening!” I find it interesting that my stomach is flatter and yet my measurements there are EXACTLY the same…no change. Just thought I should point that out. “


 

 

Thanks for the update, Nicole!  And thank God for pics! ~EM2WL

Have an EM2WL transformation to share?  Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it!  Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

Cheri: “The scale is just one way to measure progress” – EM2WL

Cheri: “The scale is just one way to measure progress” – EM2WL

progressI started 15 months ago.  I weighed 227 pounds and was utterly ashamed of what I had let myself come to.  I knew I had to do something, and that something had to start with letting go of my excuses.  I was like this because of my family, it’s in my genes.  I’m not “that fat.”  I have never been thin, so I never will.

Well, I let them go.  Over the next 6 months, I started biking and controlling my eating habits.   I learned to cook my meals at home and pack a lunch for work, no more fast food everyday for me!  I got a gym membership and started working out about 3 days a week.

By January of this year, I had lost about 60 pounds.  I wanted more though.  Not just “weight loss” but something I’d never had.  I wanted to be fit.  To be athletic.  I registered for a sprint triathlon!  It was July 28th, 2012 so I had 7 months to get ready.  During those 7 months, I started researching metabolism and eating properly to fuel my mind and body.  I didn’t have the energy I needed for those workouts!  I started eating more and more, until June, one month before the triathlon, I was at 2000 a day.  During the training time, I had been quite discouraged about the stall in weight loss.  But I kept pushing on.  I knew I was doing my body good.  I was increasing my running speeds regularly, increasing my weights during strength training and I could go longer and longer during my cardio workouts all the time.  But the number on the scale wouldn’t budge, nor were my measurements.  I took some pictures toward the beginning of my training and I hated them.  I may have lost weight, but I didn’t look good.  I decided to take some more in August, not expecting much…  Boy was I shocked!  progressMy measurements and scale weight may have stayed the same, but I was toned, more muscular, I looked happy and my tummy was flatter!!!

I completed my first triathlon on 7/28/12.  It was hard, but I finished smack in the middle of the pack.  I bawled after I crossed the finish line.  I had become that athlete.  I had overcome my excuses.  Not only had I finished the triathlon, I also had completed 3 other running races, placing in my age group in two of them.

Now, the number on the scale is just that.  A number.  I’m healthy, I’m happy, I’m an athlete.  I will spend the rest of my life making this my lifestyle.  I will get stronger, leaner, fitter, healthier with time. I will teach my children to eat healthy, be active and enjoy life.

The scale is just one way to measure progress.  But it can’t measure the milestones that make this journey worth while.

 

 

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share?  Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it!  Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

Trish -“…there is no turning back” A life free from binge eating…

Trish -“…there is no turning back” A life free from binge eating…

binge eatingWhere do I start…hhhmmm, well, throughout my childhood I was always of average weight.  When I graduated high school I wore a size 6.  My first encounter with being overweight came during my first year of college.  I gained the typical 15 or 20 pounds, so following graduation I joined a gym with  my boyfriend at the time.  I immediately fell in love with the choreography of step aerobics and attended classes regularly.  Occasionally I would walk the track around the gym, glancing at the intimidating machines and free weights section.  While I would never go into the ‘man’ section (aka free weights), I did try out the nautilus machines.  Of course, I didn’t have a clue as to their proper usage or set up so I quickly lost interest and stuck with my cardio.

Some years later I reconnected with an old high school flame whom I would eventually marry.  By that time I managed to work my way into a size 12.  It was at this time that I tried losing weight using a fad diet.   These diets either restricted calories or carb intake or some combination of the two.  They worked, but only as long I stayed on them, which was never for very long.  This was also the start of a long battle with binge eating.

binge eatingFast forward 5 years to the birth of my first child.  My weight ballooned and I was up to a size 14.  I was miserable.  Never in my life had I worn that size and I didn’t know how I was going to change it.  With a newborn to take care of, I didn’t think I should be running off to the gym (note: I did wise up after baby #2).  So, I stuck with my size 14s and occasionally found a size 12 that fit…score!!  As my daughter grew older I wanted to get back into my first love so I bought a step for home which came with a DVD…Cathe Friedrich All Step.  I was in heaven…the workout was just as intense as my live gym classes.  I started watching Cathe on Fittv and ordered more DVDs including weight training DVDs.  Slowly the weight started to come off.  During this time I still tried different diets, but the restrictions always left me on a food rampage undoing any progress that was made.

Fast forward another 8 years, which included the birth of another child, I have made fitness and maintaining a healthy lifestyle a primary pursuit in my life, so much so that I get up as early as 4:00AM to get my training in.  Over the years I’ve made lots of fitness-minded friends who have similar goals to mine and have learned greatly from them.  This past year I was lucky enough to become friends with a well known rambler, Kiki, who introduced me to eating more to weigh less as well as implementing bulking and cutting cycles in my training.  Both concepts were new to me and quite frankly a little daunting at first, but I jumped in with both feet and have been amazed.  After successfully going through my first bulk/cut cycle I am still wearing my size 8 pants and although the scale is a few pounds more than before, I’m not concerned because I know some of that weight is due to the additional muscle I am carrying.

binge eatingFor me there is no turning back.  I’ve done the research and what I have found supports what EM2WL is all about.  Never again will I subject myself to eating 1200 calories.  I know I can lose weight on a calorie-restricted diet, but it will cost me some of hard earned muscle I’ve built and that’s not an option.  I’m looking forward to my next bulk/cut cycle kicking off this fall and I am spreading the word to family and friends about eating more to weigh less.

 

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share?  Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it!  Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

Ready to give up!!

Q: I have a confession.
Its been 3 months, I’m up 10lbs and I couldn’t have gained 10 lbs in muscle. I cannot handle this anymore, is EM2WL for everyone? I didn’t go through over a year of hard work to slowly go back to where I started.
I’m trying to stay positive, I’m trying to promote EM2WL but I’m getting sick and tired of it and ready to give up.
I so badly want to go back to my 1200 calorie diet and 2 hours of cardio, regardless of all the articles opposed to it.

A: Ugh! I feel your pain at seeing the scale creep up 10lbs — really, I do. It seems so contradictory, and if I were in your place (and still at the beginning of my journey) I would feel the same way, and would probably look at someone saying what I’m about to say as insane. But having lived to see the other side of it, I can tell you from experience, that 3 months is NOTHING in the grand scheme of your entire life. Especially if you want to win this battle once and for all.

But, as for troubleshooting the gain (which I’m sure is the only part of this that you’ll even WANT to hear, lol):

  • How much cardio are you doing?
  • What types of workouts are you doing, and have the workouts been the same the whole time, or changed?
  • When was the last time you took a rest week?
  • Are you weighing yourself under the same conditions every time (couple days off of lifting, moderate sodium, etc?)
  • Is there something in your diet, in particular, that has increased that could be causing extra bloat water retention (dairy, wheat, gluten, etc)?

I know how frustrating it can be. It took me so many months before my body got back on the right track, that I’d pretty much given up, too. And not trying to scare you off, but…I gained back every.single.pound that I’d lost up until then.

Straight up.

This is not always gonna be a numbers game, and you may not always be able to “explain away” everything that happens on the scale. There are always so many variables, that honestly, you shouldn’t even try. Trying to make sense of every single pound that is away from a certain number will drive you insane. Personally, I know that I can hold up to 10lbs of water weight, at any given hormonal moment. I would love for it to only be 2-3 like some ladies, but I just don’t get that kinda luck. We are all about the real deal here. I’m not gonna sugar coat it and say to that you may not keep that 10lbs or that all the weight is gonna magically fly off. I’m also not saying that it won’t happen, either. But I will say that stressing about it will literally make the problem worse, while not changing the logistics of what must take place here.

This is a mental battle. All mental. If you can stay strong in MIND, the rest can, will, and DOES fall in to place.

A few things to realize:

1) I’m exactly the same size that I was at my “fattest.” Right now. But I’m about 5 sizes smaller, and look 10xs better (if I do say so myself, lol)

2) We tend to get frantic when we start “gaining” during our reset and such, but typically any weight that is gained during the reset is the EXACT amount that you will gain ANYWAY, regardless of if you rode out 1200 cals until goal or did the reset. That’s because if you ride out 1200 cals, get to “goal” then start eating normal, your body will still have the same reaction. Much better for your body to do the adjusting NOW, and see what you’re really working with, than to be deceived by the false sense of security that low cals gives. Most people don’t understand that when dieting, they would need to actually go 5-10 lbs below what they think goal is, because once they get to “goal” they have to allow for weight fluctuations that happen to EVERYONE when they get there. Check out the difference in the weights of former Biggest Loser Contestants. How many stay at the exact weight that they “ended” with?

3) If you do drop back to 1200, then hit a plateau before getting to goal, what do you do? Drop even lower? That is just so unhealthy, and I would pray that you would not let the scale have that much dominion over you. I know that it’s hard to get to that point, mentally, where you don’t care what the scale says, but it really cannot be your only dictator.

4) Studies have shown a very strong link between delaying gratification and success in life, so look at the ways that this journey will help you in ALL areas of life, not just how you look on the beach this summer. How’s that for multi-tasking?

“Going back can sometimes be the quickest way forward.” C.S. Lewis

Guest Post: How I made the EM2WL lifestyle work for me

EM2WL is a lifestyle, not a “one-size-fit-all” set of rules.  We often leave many areas “gray” when discussing the process (Paleo? Gluten free? Vegan? Intermittent Fasting? etc), because we want to encourage everyone, as individuals, to seek how to make the journey “theirs.”  Recently, we received a Journey testimonial, that we felt was a perfect example of this.  In fact, we loved Krystal’s story so much that we’ve invited her back to discuss how she — determined to fix her own metabolism — adapted EM2WL to her lifestyle, with great success. 

 

EM2WL – How I Made It Work For Me

Krystal Kretschmer

lifestyleWe are all different and we all need different things.  But we all try the same approach to weight loss: eat less, exercise more, lose weight.

Fail.

I did this and it destroyed my health (little by little so I was relatively unaware as time went on and it worsened), and not only that, it made it harder for me after the fact, to be healthy and not gain back tons of fat.

This goes out to anyone who has done restricted calorie diets, high calorie deficits and effectively ruined their metabolism.  The idea that “People who have been obese in their life, will need to live on a permanently calorie restricted diet in order to not gain back fat,” is NOT TRUE and doesn’t need to be preached.  It is upsetting, defeating and it’s an unhealthy principle that does not need to be adhered to!

The more you eat, the healthier you are, simply because:

more food = more nutrients

I’m am not saying ‘eat more calories’ necessarily (but I am, just not to excess).  More so, I am trying to say, ‘eat more nutrients’ and ‘eat more quality food’ to be healthy.  Eat as much as you can and still remain true to your goals.

When I realized that I was living on 1600 calories and burning 3200 calories every day, for months and years (I never thought I burned that much so I thought my deficit was much smaller), I realized that that was just incredibly wrong.  That was not healthy.  I was suffering, unaware.  I had adapted to the side effects that crept on over the years (bad moods, losing energy, poor workouts and an inability to progress) and just wasn’t aware of how much my health was being affected.  I knew then that I needed to eat more.  I was scared because if I was eating this little and not gaining or losing (and I was still trying to lose, for years, with no success – I couldn’t eat less, I lived with a permanent plateau) then surely if I consumed more calories I would gain weight, no?

NO!  I believe that I avoided fat building by building muscle instead which has the added effect of increasing your metabolism with the more muscle mass you build.  Eating more calories also means an increase in metabolic activity.  I felt all of this as weeks passed and I began to feel better and better, and then just absolutely great!

lifestyleWhen I decided to start eating more, I had to console the part of my brain that truly believed that eating with a deficit was the only way (the part of me that had lived like that for years and years and years).  I really just wanted to repair my metabolism and everything I read suggested eating more.  To me, it seemed logical that if I had adapted to fewer calories, that more calories WOULD turn into fat and I obviously didn’t want that.  Many other articles suggested that the second best way to increase your metabolism was to increase your muscle mass. So, those two principles in hand seemed a fitting pair! Also, everything I read said that it is next to impossible to put on muscle with a calorie debt.  So, I decided I needed to change my focus from losing weight, to eating more and building muscle.

I researched body building and learned a few key things, for example:

EAT MORE PROTEIN Most sources suggest eating about 0.5g of protein per pound of body weight.  I eat between 0.5 and 0.75g per pound.  Don’t limit your (healthy) carbs, and I say this ONLY because eating that much protein means you are naturally going to cut your carbs anyway or else you would eat far too many calories.  Initially, I went protein crazy and was eating too much protein and not enough complex carbs and I got, um, backed up, if you know what I mean.  This may not ring true for everyone.  I needed to increase my carb intake a bit and stuck strictly with complex carbs for ‘bowel regularity’, lol.  Fibre keeps the system running efficiently and we want that for sure!

ZIGZAG YOUR CALORIES Every day eat a different amount of NET calories.  And I have higher calorie days on my harder workout days.  Also, I try to eat the majority of my calories before and after my workout.  Before, so you can fuel an awesome, intense workout, and after to help repair and build muscle.  Try to eat protein and complex carbs within 30 minutes of a good muscle-burning workout.  When I say zigzag, I love this philosophy because plateaus are all about our body ADAPTING to our lifestyle.  We need to keep it guessing.  I ate a constant 1600 every day for ages and my body knew it and worked according to that.  Increasing my calories and eating, say, 3000 one day, 2700 the next, 3200 the day after, 3000 the next, 2600 the day after, etc.. And TIMING those calories so my body has more calories to fuel workouts and become stronger, means that I am now telling MY BODY what I want it to do with those calories, and that is not to store them for later!

lifestyleThe key with zigzagging is accuracy with numbers.  I have a Body Media Fit armband which measures my caloric burn (95% accurately which is good enough for me) down to the minute.  Most people use estimations to calculate their burns, or notoriously inflated machines that over-estimate your burns by hundreds of calories or more (I’ve seen this first hand, not once has a cardio machine ever underestimated my burns).  For many, it would be far easier to stick with a static calorie goal every day rather than jump around, and if this works for you, then by all means, stick with what works for you!  The concept of zigzagging is a valid philosophy, but again, honesty and accuracy are required. 

SLEEP ENOUGH This is the predominant time that our body uses to build muscle.  Make sure it has that chance

QUALITY AND QUANTITY With increased calorie output, our need for nutrients (the building blocks for creating new cells, i.e. muscle fibre) also increases.  If you suspect at all, that you are not getting enough nutrients (and this can be possible with even the best of diets, because of day-to-day differences) then maybe consider a multivitamin.  Take half in the morning, half at night because we can only use about that much at a time and after about 12 hours we’ve used up all that half-pill has to offer.  If we’re going to build, we need the tools to do it, not just the energy.

If you are coming out of a high calorie deficit, implement your changes/increases slowly.  I increased my calories by about 400 every couple of weeks and took a full 6 weeks to get up to my maintenance eating levels (around 3000 in and out per day, less on rest days but still aiming for balance with calories in, calories out).  Zigzagging all the way!

You can’t change one single aspect of your lifestyle without compensating elsewhere.  If you keep burning calories the same way throughout your day, you keep exercising the same and eating the same (just more), then your body is going to think “Everything’s the same, and I have more calories!  Great!  Let’s store these for later!” Boom, FAT.

If you outsmart your body and tell it you want to build muscle, not fat, and you feed it calories in order to work harder at the gym, and feed it after to repair and build the tissue it just micro-tore to pieces, the your body thinks “Oh, we are doing things differently.  We need to be stronger so the next time we do this I don’t get so broken.”  And boom, MUSCLE.

lifestyleI wanted reassurance from my body that I was building muscle and not fat.  Initially, I gained a couple of pounds, which I expected but didn’t like.  I stuck with it.  The reassurance came from a few feelings:

DOMS Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness is a good pain we feel 24-48 hours after a good workout.  It will be felt in the muscles that got worked the most and that is exactly where you will build more tissue.  When we work our muscles hard, we tear them up a bit (in a microscopic way) and when we rebuild them, they get built back strong and a bit bigger.  Over time, this effect exponentially increases our muscle mass and we grow.

ENERGY I felt I had more energy to put into workouts.  I could work harder and longer.  This was something that declined for me with a low-calorie diet and my workouts suffered and plateaued.  My progress in the gym halted.

POST WORKOUT With a calorie deficit, I began to get very, very grumpy after workouts for about half an hour.  I was so irritable and angry, even during my workouts. When I increased my calorie, this feeling subsided completely and I left the gym with a smile on my face again.

PROGRESS A few weeks into increasing my calories, I FINALLY was able to increase my weights at the gym, for the first time in months, even years.  I am currently lifting more than I ever have.  A couple of weeks later, I was able to increase again.  Obviously, I was building muscle and getting stronger.  This was one of the greatest reassurances I have had.

Measure your success with feelings as much as possible.  Numbers are not going to tell you most of what you want to know, especially short term.  In 45 days, it looks like I lost about 10 or 15 pounds, but I gained 0.88 pounds realistically, by building muscle and losing fat.  My measurements didn’t change either.  A photograph was all it took to make my hard work and success glaringly obvious.  But still, during those 45 days, I stuck with my plan because I was feeling better, stronger and progressing.

And vice versa, if you feel lifestyleworse, you feel you have no energy, you feel cranky after or during workouts, you feel like you’re not progressing at the gym… If you feel poorly about any aspect of your lifestyle, try to find another way to your goals.  There is always more than one road to success, though they are all paved with failures.  We learn from our mistakes.  Embrace them.  As long as you stay the course, you will get there eventually.  Keep your health and well-being at the front of it all and you will find health and happiness now and at the end, and you will enjoy your life now and now ‘when you get there.  A quick, unhealthy fix to your weight issues will abandon you in the end and your hard work will have damaged you in the process, mentally and physically.  I was there, and I’m never going back.  Aim for a sustainable change, live the way you want to live the rest of your life and who wants to live with less than they should forever?

I have been on this lifestyle journey for 11 years now.  I have tried high-calorie deficit diets twice and yes, I did lose weight.  But, I also plateaued far above my goal each time and struggled, basically for 11 years, to get to the physical, mental and healthy state that I want to be in.  More importantly, high calorie deficits work short term for weight loss, but they are not the only (or necessary) way.  Nor are they the healthiest option.  My health declined while living this way, I regained weight when I ‘returned to life’ and I never achieved what I set out to achieve in the first place.  High calorie deficits failed me.  Realizing that there is a healthy way to tone and sculpt this body, lose fat and feel great is something I wish I had known 11 years ago, but it’s never to late and this journey will never end.  I truly love this lifestyle, it’s not restrictive, it’s liberating.  To feel normal, to eat normally, for the first time in my entire life, is absolutely gripping and I can’t wait to see what tomorrow brings! 

I cannot say this enough: We are all different.  Our individual body is a composition of millions of different variables that all work together to create the human being that you are.  What works for one person will likely never be the exact formula for someone else.  Over the last 11 years, no one ever helped me or coached me.  I searched for information and kept learning so I could understand the human body and dieting and lifestyles.  I compiled knowledge, tried different things, I stuck with what worked and tried something new when results wore thin.  If anything, I hope to bestow some information on someone that unlocks the next step to success, because that’s all I ever wanted for myself.  When the pieces came together in just the right way, all the mistakes and struggles became worth it.

Coach your body and support it as though it is someone else with a mind of its own.  It has good intentions for you, but there’s a disconnect between our wants and its wants. Work with it, not against it, find the balance and you will find your success!

lifestyle

Thanks SO much for sharing the key elements in your success, Krystal!  We look forward to hearing more as your journey progresses!

We hope that this encourages everyone to do the research and spend this time on your journey learning as much as you can about your body.  That’s what the process is all about.  When you become the expert of YOU,  there’s no stopping you!  How have you made EM2WL work for you? 

STOP Spinning your wheels and Get OFF the Rollercoaster!

 

 

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