Numbers on a scale tend to motivate some people to diet and exercise.
For Julia Pierce, celebrity magazines get her through the workout.
Yep, I just saw her and that motivated me to run faster, she said.
Julia's goal is to be healthy ... not stick thin.
I like to feel good, look good and fit in my clothes this summer, Pierce said.
She may be onto something. New research suggests an extra ten pounds is healthier.
Two studies published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found people who are slightly overweight are no more likely to die from cancer or cardiovascuar disease.
A third study from the University of Western Australia published in February confirmed those results.
Doctors at the University of Texas say accepting the extra weight can even be good for your self-esteem
It's also hard to maintain and I think people get in trouble working hard toward achieving a goal that's not necessarily achievable for them and so it's important to recognize that if you have a little bit of extra weight, it's not necessarily a problem, said Dr. Eve Guth, a bariatric specialist.
At Equinox, a national chain of gyms, the campaign is, My Body, My Biography.
Whether you are a couple pounds heavier or even a couple pounds lighter, you have to be comfortable and healthy in your own skin, personal trainer Giovanna Quatraro said.
I don't like to be too slim and I'm a prime candidate for osteoporosis, so I take that pretty seriously. My grandmother has it, Pierce said.
She's right. An extra ten pounds may keep osteoporosis at bay. Fat produces estrogen, which can increase bone mass ... according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation.
And to be vain -- extra fat can serve as a natural face-lift by adding more structure, according to a study in the Archives of Dermatology.
You don't feel like someone is looking at you, judging you. You're here because you want to be, Dianne Edmonson said.
Julia Pierce's thoughts exactly -- her motto: Health and fitness over dieting and scales.