After 20 years on the roller coaster of doom, I'm willing to spend money on a new approach and signed up for NOOM.
I'll be honest - I know most of what I'm supposed to do, but I just always fail miserably at it because I lack self control in some areas (i.e. sweets, shame eating, etc.), and i always seem to find it hard to sustain an otherwise effective effort beyond six months. I always tell myself when starting a new program, "This is finally going to be the one that sticks" and I inevitably fail. What really was different after my last failed effort was how badly I rebounded - I reached my heaviest recorded weight ever. While I have fought my weight for so long, I never felt unhealthy, but this time around I'm feeling it and desperately need to change.
The two things I found appealing about NOOM are 1.) It allegedly is designed to help people change their psychological relationship with food, which is the goal that will help me in the long-term; and 2.) the app is designed to nag you if you start to fall off the wagon. The way I see it, if I can have someone (or an app) nagging me to stick with it, having a nine month program might help me fight back against the six month wall I always hit.
I'm interested in know about the experiences of others who have tried it. I've been at it for a week and here are some of my thoughts:
GOOD
NOT-SO-GOOD
I will say I saw a lot of negative stuff about NOOM online before I took the leap. After getting into it, I noticed right out of the gate how NOOM seems to have responded and adapted to criticism over time. For example, they got rid of red as a food category and they repeat over and over again that users should not consider foods to be good vs. bad.
Will it be worth the $200? Is it a scam? I don't know, but we'll see over the next nine months.
I'll be honest - I know most of what I'm supposed to do, but I just always fail miserably at it because I lack self control in some areas (i.e. sweets, shame eating, etc.), and i always seem to find it hard to sustain an otherwise effective effort beyond six months. I always tell myself when starting a new program, "This is finally going to be the one that sticks" and I inevitably fail. What really was different after my last failed effort was how badly I rebounded - I reached my heaviest recorded weight ever. While I have fought my weight for so long, I never felt unhealthy, but this time around I'm feeling it and desperately need to change.
The two things I found appealing about NOOM are 1.) It allegedly is designed to help people change their psychological relationship with food, which is the goal that will help me in the long-term; and 2.) the app is designed to nag you if you start to fall off the wagon. The way I see it, if I can have someone (or an app) nagging me to stick with it, having a nine month program might help me fight back against the six month wall I always hit.
I'm interested in know about the experiences of others who have tried it. I've been at it for a week and here are some of my thoughts:
GOOD
- The app is loaded with encouragement. It kind of borders on too soft a touch, but I can see how it can really help people not be intimidated by a serious weight loss effort
- The readings can be interesting and informative. As much as I already know about what to do, there are little things I learn that are new and do make me think differently about what I'm doing. LOTS of repetition.
- The app dashboard is no-frills down-to-business with calories, weight, water, and the readings. It's not bogged down with extraneous stuff.
- It makes a point to drive home not to attempt being too aggressive with the program by reminding users how dangerous it can be to eat too few calories.
NOT-SO-GOOD
- At $200 for a nine month plan, it's not cheap and might be unaffordable for some folks.
- The app is not intuitive and can be cumbersome and frustrating to use at the outset, and some features, like exercise tracking aren't "unlocked" (translation: usable) until you've been in the program for a certain period of time.
- The food database isn't that great. Sometimes I have to settle for reasonable approximations of things to log them, but there are some surprising generic food in it that have been helpful.
- The food color codes are not particularly useful, despite being a primary staple of the program. It seems like the only thing they denote is how much water is in what you eat. I think the readings about the differences in foods is far more effective.
- The "one-on-one" coaching sessions they talk about so much is actually a $150 per month add-on to the plan that gives you a max of four phone calls with a nutritionist.
I will say I saw a lot of negative stuff about NOOM online before I took the leap. After getting into it, I noticed right out of the gate how NOOM seems to have responded and adapted to criticism over time. For example, they got rid of red as a food category and they repeat over and over again that users should not consider foods to be good vs. bad.
Will it be worth the $200? Is it a scam? I don't know, but we'll see over the next nine months.