(CNN) -- Edwin Velez used to have to suck in his stomach in
order to tie his shoes. He requested tables at restaurants, rather than booths,
and constantly made jokes about himself in order to hide how uncomfortable he
was about his physical appearance.
"I may be big, but I'm sexy," he would say.
But on the inside, Velez, an English-as-a-second-language
teacher from Albertville, Alabama, really wanted to make a change.
He attributes his weight struggles to eating habits he
learned as a child. He grew up in a Latin family, with a diet consisting of rice,
beans and plenty of fried food. His family moved from Puerto Rico to Florida
when he was 4.
When he was younger, Velez loved playing baseball, but after
his sophomore year of high school he weighed 250 pounds and had to give up the
sport because it exhausted him.
In college, his eating habits worsened. Like many students,
he ate whatever was readily available and cheap, such as cafeteria hamburgers,
French fries and chicken fingers.
By the time Velez reached adulthood, he weighed 310 pounds.
It was not until he was reminiscing over photos from one
spring trip to the Bahamas with friends that he realized he was significantly
overweight.
Velez set a goal to drop 100 pounds in a year's time before
his next trip. He changed his diet, exercise routine and most importantly, his
attitude.
He began walking 45 minutes every morning and soon after was
able to jog.
"It was only after I lost 30 to 40 pounds from jogging
that I joined a gym," says Velez. "It's intimidating."
Once there, he began lifting weights and building muscle to
sculpt his ideal body. But "it doesn't just happen at the gym, it happens
after (the gym), too," Velez says.
He cut out soda, sweets and carbohydrates while focusing on
high-protein foods such as fish and chicken, pairing them with fruits and
vegetables.
Since Velez had never been a gym-goer or calorie counter,
many people who knew him discouraged him from starting his weight loss journey.
They told him he was working toward an unrealistic goal because of his past
habits.
Velez says that he's competitive and that their words fired
his desire to prove everyone around him wrong.
"You really have to want it bad enough," says
Velez. "Once you get the mental part right, you can't let the negative
Nancys get you down."
After a year and two months -- and 155 pounds lost -- he
decided to reward himself with skin removal surgery. He now has plans to tone
and sculpt his body to compete in men's physique competitions for the 2014
season.
Velez says he has no problem maintaining his diet and
exercise plan and that the temptation to eat unhealthy food is no longer
present. He takes his own meals to work to ensure he sticks to his routine and
sacrifices the candy he once had a sweet tooth for.
Food was 'only relationship that mattered'
After seeing Velez transform into a more confident and fit
individual, his sister, Zorry Padilla, began her own healthy journey to shed
the weight she gained after the birth of her children.
"I always had an excuse," says Padilla.
Velez helped his sister lose 40 pounds in nine months by
following the same meal plans he does. Padilla plans to run the next 5K in
their area with her brother.
"Though I'm not a personal trainer, I know what it
takes, and I want to help others as much as I can," Velez says.
Long-time friend Angel Ramirez says he is amazed at Velez's
life changes.
"On Facebook he has so many followers that are trying
to do the same thing he did," says Ramirez. "Every time he posts
something, he's got instant feedback."
Velez says his outlook on life has been altered for the
better; he now creates goals and sticks to them.
He finds he is more confident in his own skin and his
day-to-day decisions, unlike before when he would frequently change his mind
and had low self-confidence.
Velez says he was once known as "the big goofy
guy." However, now, both Padilla and Ramirez say his jokes come in
moderation because he doesn't need to hide behind his weight anymore.
"Drive, determination, discipline and dedication are
the four D's to my success," Velez says.
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