Yes, as Windigo says, you can customize that a bit. The very first thing you do with WW is take a little assessment, and based on your responses, you can add a food that’s normally one with points to your zero point food list. Some foods, however, are zero points regardless.Perhaps your zero points food would be different if you'd happily eat 5 jacket potatoes and had actually told them that? I don't know, I'm only guessing.
That’s why MrsT gets zero points on potatoes, because she loves them and couldn’t exist without them, so the potato itself is always zero for her, but that’s gets compensated for elsewhere in her plan, and of course, any butter, cream, cheese, oil added to a potato…that counts for points, so it’s not a matter of, “Hey, give me a plate of that potato gratin; it’s zero points!”
Yeah, well tell that voice from me to STFU, because you’ve done this before and you’re doing it again!because my eating disorder voice is instantly telling me ' see you can't do this'
If you need some success stories…my mom struggled mightily with her weight after having six kids. She was very small, and she was always able to lose the weight until she had me, the last one.
She was as big as 200lbs at one time, and she’s barely 5’1”, so that’s some weight.
She tried every crackpot diet when I was a kid, since it was the ‘70’s, that included taking up smoking for a time (in secret) and gobbling diet pills (legal speed) like candy.
Nothing worked until she got on WW. I don’t know how they did it back then, with points or whatever, but she actually went in to meetings with others and weighed in there.
The reason it worked for her, even back then, was that it didn’t really deny her anything, she just had to eat more of the good stuff and less of the bad stuff. She still, to this day, will use a piece of bread to wipe the bacon/sausage fat from a skillet and eat that. If you can lose and maintain weight on a plan that lets you do that, it must have something going for it.
My SIL (MrsT’s sis), she’s done it for years and years, and she’s been able to maintain her weight. She was never very overweight, but she follows their plan and treats it like a permanent lifestyle change. That way, she’s not constantly putting on and losing the same 15 pounds. I think it says something that she’s maintained a very trim figure for a couple of decades now, and she still pays her monthly fee to be a member, still follows her food plan, still tracks her food (though that’s much easier for her now), and is very happy with it. She’s the one who convinced MrsT to finally give it a shot.
You got this!