Become Trans for Weight Loss

Become Trans for Weight Loss

There is a very strange inconsistency in how people think about change.
When someone wants to be rich, or when someone wants to be the best weight lifter, the first thing they do is look at people who are already successful and try to copy them. They copy routines. They copy techniques. They copy mindset. They copy food. They copy supplements. They understand instinctively that results come from becoming a certain kind of person.

But when it comes to weight, this logic disappears.

Instead of looking at thin people and copying how they live, how they eat, how they stop, how they do not obsess, people look for shortcuts. Fads. Hacks. New science. Pills. They search everywhere except the obvious place. Thin people are not losing weight. They are maintaining it. They are not fighting their bodies. They are aligned with them.

The problem is that most fat people are not doing anything to set themselves up for success. Even when they lose weight, they gain it back. Because nothing inside changed. The habits stayed. The appetite stayed. The identity stayed. The body simply returned to the truth.

This is why dieting looks like winning the lottery. A person who never learned how to manage money wins a fortune and then loses it. Not because the money is cursed, but because the person never became someone capable of holding it. The same is true of weight loss. A newly thin fat person is still fat inside. In appetite. In impulse. In self command.

Weight loss drugs only make this clearer. They are not really treating a physical problem. They are treating a mental one. They restrict intake by suppressing desire, not by teaching restraint. Nothing is learned. When the drug stops, the old pattern resumes. The root cause was never touched.

So do you really want to lose weight?

Become trans.

Announce to the world that you are trans.
I am a trans thirty year old Japanese woman.

My eating habits are those of who I really am deep down. A trans thirty year old Japanese woman. I prefer pickled vegetables. I am full when my stomach is eighty percent full. I eat with moderation. I eat balanced meals. My Shinto beliefs are reflected in how I eat.

Balance over excess.
Variety over intensity.
Sufficiency over maximization.

I am a trans thirty year old Japanese woman.

This is not about pretending. It is about alignment. A trans person understands that when the inner reality and the outer form are in conflict, something must change. Fat people try to do the opposite. They try to change the outside while leaving the inside untouched. They ask the body to lie.

The body refuses.

It follows habits. It reflects identity. It obeys what is lived, not what is wished. Until the internal state matches the external form, nothing lasts.

Nature is patient.
She always collects her debt.