Here Comes The (Fat) Bride
Will our bride-to-be blogger go down the aisle fit or fat?

Lately I've been obsessed with losing weight for my wedding. I guess that's normal. But what's not normal is instead of watching what I eat and working out more consistently, I've been lying on the couch with Fred and chomping whole bags of microwave popcorn (the movie theater butter kind, no less). Am I reverse psychology-ing myself? Maybe I should concentrate on gaining weight for the wedding, and I'll become anorexic.
Seriously though, I just wrote up a small article for a fitness magazine about brides going to extremes to lose weight for their wedding. Something like 70 percent of all brides diet in an unhealthy manner in order to squeeze into those little white dresses on the big day. It's so trite— don't we have more important things to think about?— and it makes me feel like such a follower. Ew.
So I'm trying to keep myself in check, my buttered-popcorn habit under control, and remember that I was pretty happy with my body a month ago—why do I all of a sudden need for it to be skinnier? Fred isn't going to love me any more (to make sure, I asked him, while I was eating my third piece of Federo Rocherer chocolate. "Honey, if I walk down the aisle in a Hawaiian moo-moo, will you still marry me?" "Of course I will," he said, "but please don't do that.")
I won't really look all that better in pictures (what's five pounds, after all?), and in 20 years and three kids, I'll be looking back at said wedding pictures and covet my 28-year-old pre-children figure no matter what I weigh on the big day.
My dress fitting is in two weeks and between now and then, I'll just get back into my workout routine (4 days a week), try to eat a little better (no more late-night Taco Bell runs after the club), and try to worry about something more profound than my weight (like the rumor that microwave popcorn causes cancer. If so, I'm in deep s**t.)
Discussion
Sounds like a classic case of stress eating. Weddings should be fun but we all stress over the tiniest detail and want everything to be absolutely perfect. Try to concentrate on feeling happy and if there is a glitch or two, so what? It's only one day in a hopefully long and happy life. Remember to laugh long, loud and often!
Oh honey. five years after I got married I looked way better than I did when I got married. and I regret nothing. all that work you put into working out, put it into making your life with your husband better. For how skinny I got it still didn't fix our marriage problems.


