Muscle weighs more than fat, so don't just use the scale as a gauge. You can be losing inches and still weigh "the same" if you are replacing fat w/ muscle.
Okay, I know you're right. I have lost an inch so that should be good enough.
In my email from WW today...Dining Out Tips
Dining Do's and Dont's
1. Set a budget.
Determine how much you're willing to eat before looking at the menu. You can give yourself some leeway by scheduling some exercise on or near days you plan to eat out. Putting in gym time or going for a brisk walk will help offset a little extra eating. And remember, be flexible. You can loosen up a bit on special occasions, as long as you eat carefully most of the time. (Just don't let every day become a special occasion.)
2. Put on your game face.
Decide on some guidelines before you go to a restaurant, and stick to them. For instance:
- Skip the all-inclusive menu and opt for ? la carte selections. Doing so might not be as economical, but you'll probably eat less.
- Take one piece of bread, then ask your server to remove the breadbasket from the table.
You're paying good money for that meal, so you're entitled to make special requests or slight modifications. Why not say:
- Can I get that without butter? Grilled? With the sauce on the side?
- I'd like mixed greens instead of fries with my sandwich.
Some restaurant portions can be two, three, even four times the "normal" size?especially super-sized fast food meals. Keep your portions in check by:
- Ordering a salad as a starter and then splitting a main entr?e with a friend.
- Creating your own scaled-down meal from a couple of appetizers and/or side dishes.
If you don't know what a preparation term means, ask. In general, though, the following words translate into high-fat, high-calorie dishes:
- Au gratin, scalloped, hollandaise.
- Parmigiana, scampi, Bolognese.
Super-sized fast food meal options can be loaded with calories. Either:
- Order something small, like a basic burger. After all, the first bite tastes the same as the last.
- Order yourself a children's meal.
The average burger with ketchup, lettuce and tomato isn't so bad. But one with "the works" is usually a caloric nightmare. Skip:
- Bacon, cheese and mayonnaise.
- Double-burger patties and extra pieces of bread.
Salad bars and garden salads grace menus across the country. But those extra toppings can sabotage your seemingly diet-conscious choices:
- Go light on croutons, grated cheese and bacon.
- Opt for small amounts of low-fat or nonfat dressings on the side.
A drink with dinner is fine, but too many margaritas may wreak havoc on your dieting resolve. Keep your appetite under control by:
- Alternating alcoholic beverages with noncaloric sodas or sparkling water.
- Not drinking alcoholic beverages on an empty stomach.
You paid for it so you have to eat it, right? Wrong. Just think of the health and emotional costs of those extra calories on your body. Downsize by:
- Eating half the meal and doggie-bagging the rest.
- Pushing your plate away when you're full.
- And remember to eat slowly. It takes 20 minutes for your body to recognize that it's full.


I have a pair of shorts that I tried on last week and I had to pull them together to get them to button...this is the pair I'll set aside. It really bummed me out too b/c they are my fat clothes size. :0 Oh the horror.
...I thought you were saying...fat clothes size 0!!!! Y'all gave good advice for OL...don't be a slave to a scale!!
NEVER been a size 0. Thin for me is a size 8.( haven't been that since BC. (before children) 10 is where I'd like to be.