Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Clothes

I'm in this limbo area between being able to dress passably in the clothes I own and absolutely needing to buy new ones.  Financially, I absolutely need to wait until I look like a homeless clown before I buy new clothes.  Of course I've got a few things that actually fit.  My incredible wife and I went shopping for new jeans not too long ago, so I've got two pairs of pants that fit.  I have a few shirts from when I was smaller and a few that I bought small and are fitting for the first time ever.  I also bought my first extra large shirt in five or six years this weekend.  It's a little snug, but my weight is headed down and I want to make sure I can wear that shirt when I'm thinner.  The real problem lies in my professional wardrobe.  My dress shirts are all quickly becoming too large.  A coworker insisted today that I can still pull them off, but I'm getting close to having to replace them. 

I want to be able to wear a large t shirt and size 34 or 36 jeans.  I've got a while before I get there, but I don't want to have to replace my wardrobe several times before I get there.  For the most part, I find shopping agonizing and like my clothes the way they are.

I guess it's a good problem to have. 

Have you had any unforeseen difficulties in your weight-loss journeys?

14 comments:

  1. Consignment stores are a really good way to get clothes during weight-loss periods. Good consignments stores have good clothes for cheap, then you're not spending loads of money on clothes you'll wear for a few months.

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  2. Great idea Julia, I was going to suggest the same!

    As far as clothes I have the opposite problem. I refused to buy any as I was going up, leaving me in pajamas all the time and not feeling very good about myself. I finally decided that part of this weight loss journey for me was going to be getting some really pretty dresses that fit me, even if I didn't quite feel pretty yet myself.

    When I decided to do this I kept in mind that I would be going down in size so all of them I can alter to some degree to keep fitting for several sizes and then when I cant alter them any more I can cut them off for skirts ;)

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  3. I'm heading to my local goodwill because I can't seem to keep my clothes long enough. I figure if I've donated all my bigger sizes then surely someone else was doing the same before me.

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  4. Our Goodwill has a "boutique" next door to it with all the brand-name stuff that gets donated...much of it still has tags. My 15 year old had a job interview and needed a nice outfit to wear...and I knew he would likely not wear it again before he grew out of it...so we went there. I was shocked. I got him a gorgeous expensive wool jacket (barely worn and brand name) a pair of slacks with the tag still on, a button down long sleeve shirt, and a pair of nice wingtip shoes. Total cost for all: $36. Definitely check goodwill and/or consignment shops. MUCH of what is in there still has tags.

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  5. What size shirt do you wear? I might be letting some of my 17 1/2 dress shirts go. They are nothing special, but they are nice. I probably got them from thrift store, garage sale, or something.

    I really am not sure if i have any to get rid of but will check if you want me to...don't feel like you have too.

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  6. Unforeseen difficulty of mine is discovering my passion for running and all things crazy like Triathlon training. This means expenses like 5Ks, 10Ks, half and full marathons. Getting a road bike. Buying Vibrams for barefoot running. THAT STUFF ADDS UP! But good thing they last :) Clothes. Pft, who needs them haha.

    I was lucky that a friend of mine gave me a bunch of her clothes when she lost weight but then my mom ended up giving those away...so now I kind of just live in workout clothes or jeans and a t-shirt. I'm ok with that though. Nobody important to see yet.

    I bet it feels great to see your clothes get larger and larger on you though. That means you're kicking ass!

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  7. Sometimes a tailor can take in pants or a shirt and only charge $10 or $15 -- which can be less than a *nice* new shirt would cost.

    As for me, I bought 4 cheapo (under $12) button down shirts from WallyWorld until I can justify spending more money on clothes that won't fit for very much longer.

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  8. It's a good thing it's spring and Garage sales are starting. I would check Craigslist and the paper. :)

    And I would, of course, donate my unused clothes to you, but I think you'd look a little odd.

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  9. Walmart is great for cheap transitional clothes. My feet got smaller as I lost weight so I had to buy new shoes!

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  10. Clothes are a definite concern for me. As I lose, I am going to have to buy just like you. i don;t want to spend the money...but I DO want to lose the weght.

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  11. Try to treat it as a reward. Glass half full!

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  12. Cheap transitional clothes and then when you get to your goal, splurge on the good stuff. :-)

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  13. I don't know how you feel about used clothes, but the Unique thrift store in Crystal is amazing!

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