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Dianne Bourne & Steven Smith

Woman who lost seven stone in weight by 'thinking herself thin' shares how others can do it

A woman who has battled with her weight since she was a child has revealed how people can 'think themselves thin'. She's now lost seven stone and wants to help others.

Rachel Williams said she had difficulty with her weight since the age of just eight. She felt like nothing she did helped her keep on top of it.

As the mum-of-two approached 40, she knew it was time to sort it once and for all. Rachel decided that she had to face her fears. She said she had to change the way she spoke to herself and essentially think her way to a healthier way of life, reports the MEN.

And in less than two years she has dropped seven stone, from 16st 5lbs to 9st 5lbs since July 2019. For the first time, that weight has stayed off.

Rachel credits that to being mindful and "counting chemicals, not calories". Now, knowing how it feels to have tried everything to get trim, she wants to help others.

Since losing the weight, she has trained to become a health and lifestyle coach to be able to encourage others. Rachel, 41, lives in Henbury in Cheshire with husband Anton and their two children, Sofia, eight, and Solomon, two.

Rachel said: “I started putting weight on from the age of eight years old, I can remember my mum taking me to Weight Watchers when I was 12 or 13 years old. In hindsight, reflecting on my journey now, I can see I was a secret eater, eating sweets, crisps, chocolate. All the comfort foods.

“Later on in life I went through a phase of ballooning and then just stopping eating - that was when I was at university. I dropped weight but not in a healthy way. From then on I yo-yo-ed and I have tried every diet in existence I think - from WW, Slimming World, the Dukan Diet, the Maple Syrup diet, the Cabbage Soup Diet, Atkins, 2:5 - I tried everything.

“The one I had most success with was Slimming World, and that's the one I'd go back to and felt comfortable with. But then you'd get to target, you’d come off plan, and I’d pile the weight back on and then some.”

Rachel's starting weight was 16s 5lbs, and her current weight is 9st 5lbs. (Rachel SV Williams Coaching)

As Rachel began to approach her 40th birthday, she was horrified after seeing a photo of herself on holiday with baby boy Solomon. “That was me at my biggest,” Rachel said.

“I'm there smiling, but inside I'm not smiling, I'm just feeling awful. That particular summer I didn't want my photo taking."

"I thought gosh, I don't want my picture taken and yet my daughter Sofia was saying ‘come on mummy’. I thought I need to do something about this, because I'm taking memories away from my children. They're not going to have pictures with their mummy. Something really cut me up about that.”

Rachel’s husband asked what she wanted for her 40th birthday and her reply was: “to get fit and healthy”. So having seen a friend train with a local personal trainer on a 12 week programme thought she would give it a go.

“The thought of going to a gym put the fear of god into me at that point,” said Rachel. "But I met him and he really put me at ease, he said let's do some sessions in the gym. I was scared of going to the gym and disrupting everyone’s schedules so I met up at 6am in the morning.

Rachel pictured at her biggest with baby Solomon (Rachel SV Williams Coaching)

“When I first started I can’t tell you how much pain I was in. I didn’t even fit in the XL sizes at TK Maxx, or even into a sports bra. It was only at trusty M&S I could find size 20 sportswear and bought myself a whole new set and a size 40H sports bra. I found the exercise hard and it was painful at first.”

But despite her determination and sticking to the trainer’s exercise and nutrition plan, Rachel was horrified to see it was still not helping her to lose weight. Frustrated, she paid to see a naturalist to see what was going on.

She was told she had parasites in her gut and to stop eating all forms of sugar. “I was like, but there’s sugar in everything”. But she ditched sugar where she could. Mortified, she found even doing that did not make the weight come off.

Rachel said: “I was on the crossfit machine, I was full on Kim Kardashian crying saying "I just can't do this". I was working so hard, I'm putting everything into it, I can't lose weight, I've got a newborn, is it all worth it?”

And that’s when Rachel started to read personal development books and about biohacking, the concept of changing the environment to give you control back of your biology. “They were talking about eating for your biology, not around a diet. And about addressing how you talk to yourself.

Rachel is now feeling in the best shape of her life (Rachel SV Williams Coaching)

“I realised, I'm talking to myself in such a negative way, all I'm focussing on is what I can't do. I'm not focussing on what I can do. They talked about facing your fears, facing your gremlins. So I started to address the gremlins.

“After addressing my mindset, focussing on what I was actually eating, and how my body was responding versus the calories, all of a sudden the weight started to come off. I was like, what?

“I started to focus on what I COULD have to eat rather than what I can't and the weight started to come off. I continued going to the gym three times a week, drinking water, and really focusing on the quality of food I started to eat - I got rid of all diet food, all processed food.

“I started to look in the mirror and see Rachel.”

By June 2020 Rachel had gone down from 17 stone 5lbs to 10st 5lbs in a year. By December 2020 she was down to 9stone 5lbs and has not put a pound back on since.

“For me it’s not about body size, it's about health. The visceral fat wrapped around your heart, around your liver, it's not helping you to function.

Rachel now "counts chemicals, not calories" on labels (Rachel SV Williams Coaching)

"I feel more alert now, I have a lot more energy, I'm able to keep up with my children. I run around the park and don't think twice about it and my skin seems to glow a lot more.”

She no longer counts calories but counts chemicals instead - ditching all processed foods from her daily diet.

Rachel said: “My thing now is body awareness, listening to your body. It is always communicating to you.

“For example, I know if I eat sweet potato, I bloat, but I never addressed it before. I never had that awareness before of listening to my body so now I only eat white potatoes.

“Now I look at labels, I count chemicals not calories. I'm very conscious of what I put in my body. Do I love pizza? Yes. So if I feel like pizza I eat sourdough pizza with the best quality toppings.

“I eat freshly baked sourdough bread, and I don't have anything low fat anymore because it's full of chemicals.

“Similarly with a burger, if I want a burger I'll have a burger but it's going to be a good quality meat burger. I don’t use oils, because they cause havoc to your gut.

“But I eat good fats - good quality cheese, full fat cream, everything is full fat but good quality. I go to local farm shops or buy organic and if I have dairy milk, it's full fat dairy milk. I go to the butchers to buy all my meat, I go to fishmongers and buy free range chicken.

"The focus and the way we eat now is back to basics of how people would have eaten in the olden days, going to your butchers, your fishmongers, getting your vegetables locally. And removing all processed foods and home cooking from scratch.”

Buoyed by finally finding something that worked to help her get mentally and physically fit and healthy, former marketing manager Rachel decided to retrain to become a life coach.

She said: “I’ve learnt so much on my journey I just thought I can't keep this to myself. I got myself qualified as a health coach through an online course with the Health Institute, and set up my own practice in April 2021.

“My mission is to share, inspire and support as many people as possible. I know how hard and miserable it can feel being in that space when you're not comfortable.

“I'm supportive of people looking in the mirror, seeing themselves, and falling in love with themselves. So many people look at everything that's wrong, they’ll say oh my fat tummy, my fat legs.

"But if you have the ability to stand in front of the mirror - you're already winning, you have two functioning legs, two functioning lungs you are able to breathe. If you're able to do that you're able to achieve anything.

“For me, gut health, plus mindset, plus consistency, plus movement gets you lasting results. “I'm on a mission to tell people how you can lose weight for good, change those habits you've had for a very long time, turn them into long term habits that you just do.

“So if you want to have cake ok, have cake, but with only the best quality ingredients. Focus on what you can eat rather than what you can't. People are making decisions to cut out entire food groups and they don't even know why.”

Now, Rachel exercises three times a week to make her feel good as much as to keep in shape. She chooses to be “quite regimented” with what she eats Monday to Thursday but at weekends “anything goes” when she will have a pizza night or a drink of tequila, and cooked breakfasts for the family using organic meat, eggs, and sourdough bread.

She said: “The way I practise my life now is being the best version of myself. I've understood the concept of perfection doesn't exist.

"I work to be the best version of myself, the best mother, the best wife, the best health coach I can be. I invest in my movement, in moving, it makes me feel much better.

“I'm just a regular girl who yo-yo dieted all my life but I found something that works and I want to share it with people. I eat what I want, it's that shift of mindset, moving away from a "diet" mentality.

“I spent many years not believing in myself, not liking myself, comparing myself to other people, looking to other people for validation. When the only person who needs to validate you, is you.

“When you can get to that place to look at yourself in the mirror and high five yourself it’s great. Every morning I get up and high five myself for how far I’ve come.”

Rachel offers online zoom sessions as well as one-to-ones for clients, but is also keen to do more group sessions to help more people. She is starting these with a group session on how to conquer your sugar cravings on May 10 at The Botanist in Alderley Edge, with tickets available here.

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