The one constant, however, is my New Year’s Eve resolution. Every year it has been my resolution, my goal, and my hope that this coming year will be the one in which I finally lose weight. Once and for all. This will be the year that I discover the magic diet, the magic plan, that will change me into a thin person.
Last year I had already started my diet in November, and I stuck to it even at a fancy New Years Eve dinner out. My New Years resolution last year was to stay on the diet till I got to my elusive goal weight. Sometime in the spring I hit a plateau and got tired of the plan. So I tried keto and then I went back to my original diet and then I tried to make my own hybrid version of the two. And then my dad got really sick, and we moved in with him. I tried to eat my “diet food” during the day, but every night I tried to make dad all of his favorite foods.
Calories, carbs, and fat grams, be damned-my father was going to have his beloved meatloaf with mashed potatoes and green bean casserole w the crunchy deep fried onion bits on top.
I had watched both of my parents struggle with their weight off and on during their lives. Dad still weighed 220 pounds when he died after his 2 year battle with prostate cancer. He and I had gone to Weight Watchers together about a dozen years ago. He was pushing 300 pounds and I was well over 200 back then. And all of us Dunn’s are short which doesn’t give us much space on our frames for a lot of weight. Dad had shrunk to 5’5 at age 78, and I’m still holding at 5’0” at 53. Dad loved charts, and he meticulously recorded his weights over the years. The best weight chart he ever made was back in the seventies to accompany whatever diet he and mom were on at the moment. At each ten pound interval he had cute names to mark the accomplishment, cute names like “Macho Man” and “Foxy Dad”. At his goal weight, 160 pounds, he had drawn a little crown and next to it were the words “Disco King.”
In the last ten years or so of his life dad seemed to stop dieting, and ironically, he lost weight. I asked him back in 2011 what his New Years resolution was going to be that year. He said, “I’ve never kept a New Year’s resolution in my life, and that’s why I’m the way I am today.” It made me laugh. I even posted it on Facebook, I was so amused.
I’ve never before even considered having a New Year’s Eve without my annual resolution to lose weight in the coming year. I’ve never had a New Year’s Eve where I didn’t have my resolution hanging over my head that after the stroke of midnight I really needed to get it together and start working on getting skinny.
When dad was the age I am now he was still trying to become the Disco King. And now none of that matters. He is gone. He left us after Thanksgiving to a place with no diets and no New Years resolutions. And as much as I’d like to be thinner I’m not making any resolutions this year, not this New Years Eve.
This year for once in my life I’m going to give myself a break. I’m not thinking about the diet I have to start. Instead I’m going thank God I’m alive, that I made it through this God awful year. I’m going to count my blessings and kiss my man and see what a year with no resolutions feels like. Happy 2019, everyone.