logo
I was too fat for my FEET and had to be picked up after walking 100ft – now I've lost 16st after horror wake-up call

I was too fat for my FEET and had to be picked up after walking 100ft – now I've lost 16st after horror wake-up call

The Sun3 days ago
TIPPING the scales at 27st, Diane Blackmore was beset by health issues, ranging from the painful to the life-threatening.
The 51-year-old struggled to walk more than 100ft and was devastated when she couldn't cuddle her baby niece. But a terrifying realisation about her own funeral proved the wake-up call she needed to transform her life and lose weight.
13
Her diet consisted of two breakfasts totalling around 2,000 calories, a plate piled up with pasta for lunch, and six main takeaway dishes with sides and starters for dinner.
She and her husband, Peter, 55, would gorge on curry, rice, chips and poppadoms, indulging at the local all-you-can-eat buffet, scoffing three plates of starters, three mains and at least two rounds of dessert.
Charity worker Diane, from South Wales, easily ate over 5,000 calories a day and it was severely impacting her life.
She tells Sun Health: "I had so many medical conditions, including high blood pressure (on medication for 18 years), high cholesterol, borderline diabetes, plantar fasciitis, long term undiagnosed cough, skin conditions, anxiety and depression, long Covid and mobility issues."
The great auntie could not do normal things, like put her baby niece on her lap, because her stomach was so overhanging.
She was so fat she had to phone someone to pick her up in the car after walking 100ft.
"At my heaviest there was very little I could do, I wasn't moving very much at all," she says.
"I could barely walk 50 metres - I was walking with a stick.
"I would sit in my car and wait for a car parking space to become available - even if it was for half an hour with the engine running.
"The bigger I got - I got even lazier. I would do online shopping, sit at my computer to work and do no physical activity at all.
Towie star Saffron Lempriere reveals how she lost 12 pounds in 4 weeks - without fat jabs
"Really bad habits came into play and I had no movement whatsoever."
Diane did not walk to the shops in her village for 21 years and had to put her feet in an ice bath every night and keep wet towels in the freezer to soothe them.
It got to the point that she couldn't walk her dogs and the doctor suggested surgery or injections in her feet, which could not carry her weight.
Three years ago, Diane decided enough was enough and began her weight loss journey.
The final straw was that she felt like she would die soon because of her health, and was filled with dread that her family would not be able to carry her coffin.
She had seen it happen at a funeral before and did not want to be remembered that way.
After slimming down, Diane, who now weighs 11st and wears size 12 clothes, says: "It has been totally life changing for me.
"I couldn't even walk more to the end of my road at the start of my journey without being out of breath.
"I am now medical condition free, taking no medication whatsoever and to be honest, this is more important to me than the weight I have lost."
Diane has been battling her weight since she was a teenager.
She says: "I would lose weight and put it on. Every time I slimmed down, I put on a bit more.
"I had the wrong idea about food - I had tried to get rid of carbs."
13
13
Three years ago, Diane came across a healthy eating plan on Instagram.
"It taught me that everything was OK in moderation," she says, adding that she lost weight by:
Cutting out snacking completely
Filling up on three meals a day
Prioritising home cooked meals
Eating very few processed foods
Focusing on protein
After two years on the plan, having lost 8st, Diane's weight loss plateaued, and she looked for a new challenge.
In the summer of 2023, Diane joined her local gym, Snap Fitness, where she found a supportive community that propelled her fitness journey to new heights.
With the guidance of personal trainers and participation in extensive group exercise classes, Diane lost a further 8st.
She has since become a powerlifter - she can leg press an astounding 445kg and perform lunges with 50kg dumbbells.
'It's saved my life'
"The trainers and other gym members have been incredible," she says.
"I've made friends with teens through to people in their 70s because we all share a common goal and enjoy exercising.
"Their support has made all the difference and kept me going on this journey."
Her achievements have not gone unnoticed with other gym members who are in awe of her progress.
The 5 best exercises to lose weight
By Lucy Gornall, personal trainer and health journalist
EXERCISE can be intimidating and hard to devote yourself to. So how do you find the right workout for you?
As a PT and fitness journalist, I've tried everything.
I've taken part in endless fitness competitions, marathons and I maintain a regime of runs, strength training and Pilates.
Fitness is so entrenched in my life, I stick to it even at Christmas!
The key is finding an activity you love that can become a habit.
My top five forms of exercise, especially if you're trying to lose weight, are:
Walking
Running
Pilates
High-intensity interval training (HIIT)
Strength training
Diane says: "Being an overweight middle-aged woman entering a gym is extremely daunting but I was greeted by lovely smiles; everyone was very reassuring, knowledgeable and helpful too.
"I knew I needed a PT to help me, and to be honest, I'd rather spend money on my fitness than buying a Chinese, Indian or pizza takeaway regularly like the old me.
"My trainer, Christian Cox, has pushed me to do things I would never have dreamed of.
"He has been absolutely amazing; he genuinely cares and I wouldn't be doing this without people like him in my world.
"It's like a gym family and it's a beautiful community.
"People often ask me how I afford a PT, I answer back in many ways.
"'How can I afford not to? It's saved my life, it's changed my life'."
13
13
13
13
13
The best sources of protein
PROTEIN is found in everything from tuna to baked beans.
As a guide, the NHS says the following foods contain:
Beef mince (140g) - 28g
Battered cod (180g) - 25g
Tinned tuna in oil (100g drained) - 25g
Salmon (100g) - 23g
Lamb chop (70g) - 20g
Tofu (80g) - 19g
Quorn (100g) - 13g
Roasted peanuts (50g) - 13g
Chicken breast (40g) - 11g
Cheddar cheese (40g) - 10g
Cow's milk (half pint) - 10g
Soya milk (half pint) - 9g
Baked beans (150g) - 8g
Yoghurt (125g) - 7g
Egg (one) - 7g
Peanut butter (25g) - 6g
Green lentils (40g) - 4g
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New England Patriots DC Terrell Williams suffers major health scare as he collapses in practice
New England Patriots DC Terrell Williams suffers major health scare as he collapses in practice

Daily Mail​

time5 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

New England Patriots DC Terrell Williams suffers major health scare as he collapses in practice

New England Patriots defensive coordinator Terrell Williams was carted out of practice on Monday after collapsing, according to multiple reports. Williams stepped away from the Patriots' rookie minicamp earlier this year after experiencing a health scare, which forced him to work remotely on doctor's orders. Yet just over a week after returning, the 51-year-old reportedly collapsed on the sideline during Monday's practice session. Boston reporter Pat Lane claims a stretcher was brought out, but he was able to get back to his feet and eventually leave the field on a cart. More to follow.

I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?
I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?

The Guardian

time5 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?

If there was a five-minute nuclear warning, I'd run straight to my local shop and buy a pack of cigarettes. Even now, after all these years. I stopped more than a decade ago – note that I say 'stopped' rather than 'gave up' because the latter implies a sacrifice, and I have been brainwashed (OK, hypnotised) not to use the term. But you are never really a non-smoker. You are just a smoker who is currently not smoking. In your soul, you are forever one of the people who leave the table after eating to go and have a conversation outside, even if you physically stay put these days. So, as someone who found it difficult to quit, it's baffling to hear that although two stop-smoking medications have been available in the UK since 2024, only 0.2% of those attempting to give up have used them, according to an analysis of NHS data on smoking in England. Cytisine (which also goes by cytisinicline) is a plant-based product that has been used in eastern Europe since the 70s and may appeal to those who prefer a natural option over a synthetic drug. It mimics the effects of nicotine, and tricks your brain into thinking you've had a cigarette. Varenicline – withdrawn in 2021 over concerns about impurities, but now reformulated and rereleased – can apparently reduce the urge to smoke, make you enjoy it less when you do and ease withdrawal symptoms. I tried everything when it came to my struggle with Silk Cut. Patches, gum, lozenges – I carried on smoking while I wore, chewed and sucked them all. I read the world-famous success story The Easy Way to Stop Smoking by Allen Carr (no, not that one). I attended the NHS in-person sessions, three times, to no effect. I was a triple failure, and oddly proud of it for a reason I still don't quite understand. I had neurolinguistic programming, where the man shook my hand as he greeted me, asking, 'And how long was it that you smoked for?' 'Oh, I still smoke now. I just had one outside,' I volunteered cheerfully. He tutted and told me that for some clients, talking about smoking in the past tense like that was all it took. I scoffed at those weaklings as I walked to my train afterwards – in a cloud of smoke, obviously. The closest I came to victory back then was a hypnotist recommended by a friend, with the caveat that he sounded so much like Cliff Richard it was hard to take him seriously. She didn't mention that he worked out of an extremely insalubrious portable cabin at the back of a building site. As I knocked on the tin-can door (while simultaneously putting out yet another last ever cigarette), I reasoned that if he murdered me, I would technically have given up smoking, therefore this would have been a success. Reader, he did not murder me. In gentle, dulcet tones, he told me I felt sleepy, while I felt embarrassed for him because I definitely wasn't hypnotised. When he 'brought me round' he asked me how long I thought I'd 'been under'. I'd been thinking about what to have for dinner the whole time, so stifled a giggle as I told him: about 10 minutes. He replied that it had been two hours. The next morning, it occurred to me that I hadn't even thought about smoking, let alone done it. Thrilled, I sent another friend, who had the same experience. However, a year later, almost to the day, we both started smoking again. I went back for a do-over but it didn't work. In the end, I probably spent about as much on trying to stop smoking as I had on cigarettes, and the thing that finally worked was free: boring old willpower. It was agony. Personally, I would have bitten the doctor's hand off if they could have given me a treatment that worked. And while of course no treatment is 100% effective, as I found out, stopping smoking is hard and gruelling. The more options people have, and the more visible and accessible these options are, the better. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Letby babies could have survived with better medical care, claims expert
Letby babies could have survived with better medical care, claims expert

Telegraph

time5 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Letby babies could have survived with better medical care, claims expert

Babies who died at Lucy Letby 's hospital may have survived with better medical care, a leading child expert has said. In a new ITV documentary about Letby's case, Prof Neena Modi, of Imperial College, said she had examined medical notes and concluded that critically ill babies had not been monitored or treated appropriately. Letby, 35, from Hereford, is serving 15 whole-life orders for killing seven babies and attempting to murder seven others at the Countess of Chester Hospital between 2015 and 2016. But Prof Modi, a former president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said the babies should never have been admitted to the ill-equipped and understaffed neonatal unit. 'On reading through the detailed medical notes, what was harrowing was seeing a story unfold where possibly things could have been recognised earlier and interventions could have been put in place, and perhaps for some of the babies, the outcomes might not have been what they were,' she said. 'This was deeply distressing. This was a neonatal unit that was being required to look after babies who should not have been cared for there. 'The babies that we're referring to were all extremely vulnerable. Some of them were demonstrably and recognisably on a knife edge. 'Others could have been recognised to have been on a knife edge, but they were not monitored appropriately, and they were not treated appropriately. 'Problems went unrecognised until the point at which a baby deteriorated very abruptly. So the babies might not have died had their difficulties been addressed earlier.' Prof Modi is part of a panel of world-leading experts who have challenged the verdicts and who have compiled a report that has been presented to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), which looks into potential miscarriages of justice. The CCRC is expected to report back before Christmas. The documentary also heard that test results which the prosecution relied on to prove that several of the babies had been poisoned with insulin were not fit for purpose. Prof Matthew Johll, a forensic chemist from Illinois Valley Community College, said that an immunoassay test should not have been used to convict Letby without follow up forensic testing to rule out a false positive. 'You would not strip a gold medal from an international athlete on an immunoassay,' he said. 'It's not good enough for drug testing for pilots or anyone who has mandatory drug testing. So how can it be good enough to put someone in prison?' Lucy Letby: Beyond Reasonable Doubt? is currently available on ITVX. The show's producers said: 'After two trials, nurse Lucy Letby was found guilty of killing seven newborn babies and attempting to kill seven others in one of the most shocking murder cases in British history. 'Described as a cold-blooded, calculating killer, Letby was said to have used her trusted role to cause catastrophic harm to the most vulnerable newborn babies. 'So why are a growing number of expert voices now questioning the evidence used to convict her? This programme explores the views of a team of international scientists who say the prosecution case simply doesn't stand up to scrutiny.' Letby could also face further charges. In July, Cheshire Constabulary passed a new file to the Crown Prosecution Service relating to new baby deaths and non-fatal collapses at the Countess of Chester Hospital and Liverpool Women's Hospital between 2012 and 2016. The CPS confirmed that it had received the file and said it would 'carefully consider the evidence to determine whether any criminal charges should be brought'. Cheshire Constabulary is also investigating three former managers from the Countess of Chester over allegations of gross negligence manslaughter and corporate manslaughter.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store