Jes and Lori, thank you so much for the inspiring compliments! It is really gratifying to know that my own experience can provide motivation for others. And thanks for pasting my 'emotional eating' comments here, Lori. It's very relevant.
And Mogambo, thanks for the "perfect answer" remark! I feel like I just aced a test LOL!!
Gosh, I have so much to say about the subject of weight loss, I'm not sure where to start, nor when to stop! I'll try to be succinct.
Yes, I joined WW on July 3, 2002, the day after returning from a 4 day conference where I had the most miserable time of my life, because I was so embarrassed by how much weight I'd gained since the last time I saw all those people (my professional peers!). And yes, I am now a lifetime member, but I stopped attending meetings. I am grateful to WW for being one of the few organizations that endorse and actively support a common-sensical and healthy way to lose weight.
I've been at least slightly overweight ever since puberty. In this regard, I take after my father's family. Ergo, I'm not, nor have ever been, the kind of person who can eat as much as she wants, and doesn't gain a pound. It has taken me 22 years to figure that out, and to fully accept it. Ever since I was 14 I've gained, lost, gained, lost....rinse and repeat.....That largest weight gain came *after* I had my daughter, 4 years ago.
I got pregnant immediately in the fall of 1999, followed immediately be feeling so sick and tired that I stopped exercising, and any pretense of eating healthy went out the window. I ate only what I could choke down, and stopped all my fitness. I slept (it seemed) from Dec 1 to Jan 31. My lovely daughter was born in July, 2000, and I had a bit of baby weight to lose, but not a whole lot. But I was just very, very tired from being a new mom, and recovering from a very difficult birth. At one point I just accepted that I would be large for the rest of my life, and donated away 3 garbage bags full of clothes. So, that brings me back to the conference in June, 2002. I was 70 pounds overweight, and instead of proudly talking to people about my research, and about the book I'd co-authored, I just wanted to hide in my hotel room. The last time they'd all seen me was when I was 8 months pregnant; some people didn't even recognize me.
I began WW, and gradually started back into exercise. You've already read the rest of that story. It took me about 10 months to lose the weight. Along the way, I discovered a lot of things about myself that surprised me. For starters, I learned to look at my body as my dearest friend, rather than my most dreaded enemy ("Why can't look like I want you to look?! Why do you have to get fat? Why won't you let me eat everything I want, the way my mother can?!"). This was probably the change that did the most good to my weight loss, and to my life in general. I have put my poor body through soooo much over the years; it's done its very best to preserve itself from my repetitive onslaughts of junk food and inactivity. When you start a weightloss program from a position of loving, or at least respecting, your body, it's amazing what a difference it can make. I choose not to eat french fries because my poor body doesn't deserve such abuse. I choose to keep my weight in check (and pass up on a lot of dessert along the way) because my body does not deserve to have to work extra hard, carrying around excess baggage. I choose to eat food that tastes good to me, and that offers my body the nutrition it needs to keep working well.
My emotional eating came about through anger. I was angry at a lot of things. Anger is a masking emotion. When you begin to dissect it closely, you'll find that it is a reaction to something else altogether: pain, frustration, sadness, impatience, fear, boredom. If you eat something every time you experience a situation that creates one of these emotions, you will be eating a lot!! Emotional eating for other people might have a different dynamic, but this was mine. I think all the sugars and fats helped temporarily lift my mood and made me feel better. But then reality always came crashing back, but now I was a pound or two heavier. So, my problems multiplied. Have you ever heard that expression: "If you keep doing what you've always been doing, you'll keep getting what you've always been getting?" Well, that finally rang true to me. Life was moving along at a rapid pace, and I wasn't making any progress on this issue. What I'd been doing was definitely not working!! I had to break this cycle.
Once I made this realization, combined with the realization that eating all these high-cal, high-fat, high-sugar foods was actually self-abuse and disrespect, I devised a little trick for discerning true hunger from a craving. As I gaze at the cookie calling my name, I ask myself "If this cookie was a carrot, would I still want to eat it?" If the answer is "no", I know that I'm truly not hungry. If the answer is "yes", then I go eat the carrot

I have no patience for starvation, but I'm not going to assault my body, either.
The amazing thing is that once you start to see rewards from your lifestyle change, they become their own motivation for continuing. I don't know the reasons behind your compulsive/emotional eating, but I do know that you are not going to make much permanent progress without sensitive (sympathetic) introspection.
This is key: DO NOT feel that you have to have all of your problems, (past, present, and future) resolved before you will be successful at losing weight and overcoming your compulsive eating!
What you have to internalize is this: Everyone has problems, always and forever. "Successful" people (at whatever) are people who know how to LIVE WITH PROBLEMS. In other words, problems remain contained, and do not consume their entire being. A bad day at work does not become a reason to sabotage personal health and fitness, for example. Instead, after a stressful day at work, you come home, growl at the houseplant, drink a smoothie and do IMAX2. By then, the endorphins will have kicked in. If you're still feeling distraught about it, take a few minutes to think about your emotional reaction to the problem (not the problem itself). Ask yourself why you are reacting the way you are. Tune in to the emotions, explore them. Learn something about yourself. The problem won't magically disappear by doing this, but you might be able to ward off a binge.
Jeepers, this has gone on much longer than I anticipated. I truly apologize if it comes across sounding preachy. I am very passionate about wanting to help people become healthier, and am happy to pass on any tidbits of advice I might have gleaned over the years. As you can tell, I can go on and on about this. But, I'll stop for today.
Take care,
Sandra