Saturday, July 4, 2026

Losing while injured?

34M, basically the title. For context I was 305lbs at some point, down to 260lbs, got some knee pain set and hold me back. Not being able to play sports as my escape, I comforted myself with foods (mostly sweets) and went back to 296lbs. I then picked myself up, started building some better habits, took a liking to swimming, so I started learning, knees felt a little better so I went back to sports, was making progress towards 285 and boom ruptured a ligament. For the 1st couple of weeks, I was a little depressed and went back again to the sugar cravings and I am back to 294. I now realize that moving all this weight without having prepared or maintained my muscles to handle the load caused the injury. I’m working on bettering my nutrition. Is there any way for me to get back on the weight loss track? My leg is completely out of commission, can’t bend nor bear weight, so I’m thinking of buying a bench and some free weight to create some burn. Has anyone gone through something similar, is anyone willing to share some tips?

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23 lbs down, and I think I've finally learned how to lose weight in a way I can actually live with.

Sorry for the long post, but i feel like I have nowhere else to share!

27F here. My highest weight was 301 lbs last summer. I started this journey in March at 289 lbs, and as of today I'm 23 lbs down. This isn't my first time trying to lose weight. Back in 2021 I did Weight Watchers for about 6 months. I started at 276 lbs in June 2021 and got all the way down to 237 lbs by December 2021. I was so proud of myself... and then life happened. I slowly gained it all back, plus another 20+ pounds.

Looking back, I realized I never actually learned how to eat normally. I learned how to eat to lose weight. This time has been completely different. Instead of cutting out foods I love, I've been counting calories and learning how to make those foods fit into my life.

I still get Starbucks. I still eat pizza. I still go out for dinner. I still have dessert. I still eat chips sometimes.

The difference is that I don't eat those things on top of everything else anymore. I plan for them. I make healthier choices throughout the rest of the day, focus on getting enough protein, and stay in a calorie deficit most of the time.

Another huge motivation for me is that my wedding is officially 364 days away (less than a year!!) 🥹. My fiancé and I also hope to start trying for a baby after we're married, and I want to give myself the best chance at a healthy pregnancy. It's not about becoming a certain size before then. It's about becoming a healthier version of myself.

For the first time, I don't feel deprived. I don't feel like I'm "on a diet." I'm just learning balance. One thing that really helped was finding volleyball again. I started playing a few nights a week, and for the first time in years, exercise was actually fun instead of feeling like punishment. Then about 7 weeks ago, I sprained my wrist pretty badly. I couldn't play volleyball anymore and I was worried my progress would stop.

Instead of giving up, I doubled down on tracking my calories. I realized that while exercise is amazing for my health, my calorie deficit is what determines whether I lose weight. Even with a lot less activity, I kept losing because I stayed consistent with my eating. Another thing that's completely changed my mindset is that I track everything.

Literally everything.

If I eat 1,800 calories, I track it.

If I eat 2,700 calories, I track it.

If I have a birthday, a holiday, or even a ridiculous 4,500-calorie day, I still track it.

I don't pretend it didn't happen. I don't wait until Monday to start logging again. I don't tell myself I've ruined everything.

I log it, accept it, and move on.

One high-calorie day doesn't erase months of consistency. In fact, I think learning to keep tracking on those days has been one of the biggest reasons I've been successful this time. I've also stopped chasing perfection. Some days I eat really well. Some days I don't.

Some days I go for a long walk because I genuinely enjoy it now. Some days I spend the whole day relaxing. But I don't quit anymore. I've also started noticing victories that have nothing to do with the scale.

My resting heart rate has dropped.

Walking feels easier than it used to.

I can actually feel myself getting stronger.

My mom says she can see the weight loss in my face.

I have more confidence that I can actually do this.

For the first time, this doesn't feel like another diet.

It feels like I'm slowly building habits that I can actually keep for the rest of my life.

I still have a long way to go, but these first 23 pounds have taught me something I wish I had understood years ago: You don't have to be perfect to lose weight. You just have to keep showing up.

If you've lost weight before and gained it back (like I did), don't give up on yourself. Sometimes the biggest lesson isn't learning how to lose weight.. it's learning how to keep living your life while you do it. For the first time, I genuinely believe this isn't just another attempt.

I think this is finally my lifestyle ❤️

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I just cannot keep the weight off. I am done and exhausted

I always had a bad relationship with food. Basically my entire family is obese and I was also very obese as a child. I managed to lose most and come down to a reasonable weight.

I am now 21, 188cm and around 105kg. I lost and regained around 10 kgs of weight three times in the last 10 times. During my weight loss periods, there would be days I ate nothing. And then right after, i would (unsurprisingly) overeat. Now I am past my previous peak weights. I am so done, I am so exhausted. Even the thought of following a diet evokes a visceral sense of dread. I’m not talking not wanting to do it or something, it’s literally in my nightmares.

I am constantly hungry, even though I get plenty of protein. I love most veggies and all the healthy stuff you could think of, every single one of my meals is filled to the brim with vegetables and salad greens. I don’t like fast food or junk food. My diet seems healthy at least from a distance. But I just cannot keep the weight off. And I am constantly hungry. Like ravenous hungry. And my willpower has just come to its limits. I’m done.

I don’t know what to do

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★OFFICIAL DAILY★ Daily Q&A Thread July 04, 2026

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Friday, July 3, 2026

Seeking advice on InBody accuracy given my weight loss history

Hi all, I’ve (25M, 5 ‘10) on a weight loss journey for about 3 years, started at 300 lbs and currently sitting at 215 lbs. I lift consistently and my strength has gone up significantly over that time.

Just got my first InBody scan done today (InBody 380, fasted all morning) and the results came back at 22.4% body fat with 96.3 lbs of skeletal muscle mass and 167 lbs of fat free mass. My InBody score was 88.

The part that concerns me is whether the results are accurate; I still feel like I am more than 22% body fat when I look at pictures online of people at that level of fat; most of my fat is concentrated around my stomach and lower back (not sure if this is more prevalent among south Asian folks), while the rest of my body is significantly leaner.

I’ve read quite a bit suggesting InBody tends to underestimate body fat percentage in people with central fat distribution specifically because the electrical current travels differently through trunk fat. Given my history of significant weight loss and simultaneous muscle building, I’m wondering how reliable the fat free mass reading of 167 lbs actually is and whether the bf% is likely higher than shown.

My nutritionist wants me scanning every 3 weeks to track progress. Is the trend tracking reliable even if the absolute numbers are off? And has anyone with similar android distribution compared their InBody results to a DEXA scan?

Would really appreciate insight from people with experience here.

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Confused about calculating what my calories should be in a deficit (trans on HRT & disabled/very sedentary).

Hi, I'm sorry if this is a really stupid question but I'm kind of a stupid person.

I am 5"7 and 87kg. I am a trans man and I've been on HRT for a year, but I found out a month ago that for at least 2 months my T levels had dropped back to my pre-T range (which was in between the female and male range because I have PMOS). I am also disabled and have been in and out of mental health crisis so I have literally been spending most of my time just lying in bed or on the sofa without really moving (so more sedentary than the 'sedentary' option on TDEE calculators). I've started trying to work out a bit at home but it's only 20-40 minutes a day and not every day, a mix of yoga and basic bodyweight strength exercises.

I started at 110kg and was eating around 1500kcals and the weight loss was incredibly slow, with weeks of maintaing and then a small drop, sometimes even gaining slightly.

I then got sick and stopped being able to tolerate food at all really and quickly dropped to the weight I am now. During this period I was eating 1000kcals a day for about a month, and then a month of around 250-500kcals.

I've started a new medication that's helped with the symptoms I was experiencing but I've also had to massively limit my fibre intake as it was giving me horrendous stomachaches. The trouble is my appetite has started to come back but I'm still only really able to have soft foods and soups, plus crackers, plain biscuits, and bread etc. If I eat 'proper' food I feel really awful (yes, I'm waiting for a hospital appointment).

I have been trying to keep under 1200kcals a day. I don't feel 'actual' hunger (I actually still feel quite sick and get full really fast) but I have insatiable mental hunger and with the limited amount of stuff I can eat at the moment it's made staying in a deficit harder, weirdly. It's like there's a gremlin in my brain that wants to eat stuff like cream cheese and yoghurt and biscuits. I'm finding it hard to stick to this deficit (I think not being able to mindlessly munch on stuff like lettuce is making it harder). I've stopped weighing myself for the last 2 weeks because it was lowkey freaking me out.

I'm wondering if I should be aiming slightly higher, but when I try and do the maths I get confused. I assume I should be taking 500 off my BMR, and that my BMR should still be the female range, but that puts me at 1100kcals which seems impossible to sustain? I'd appreciate any advice on whether I should stick with the 1200, or if I need to be calculating differently.

Thank you :)

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Struggling to lose weight

Im already a fairly small girl, but I have an average body fat and I look fairly skinny fat. I'm not really happy with it because I want to tryout for tennis and because I just kind of want to look leaner out of my own wishes.

The only issue is I've been using a weight loss app (loseit) and I'm noticing now that I don't know if its being accurate. I checked my macros online to see if it was the same amount of calories as the app was giving me, but my app was undershooting by about 100 calories. I'm a bit upset because I can't tell if I've been doing any of this right. I've been able to sleep faster, I have slightly more ease doing difficult tasks, and I've had overall better digestive health compared to 30 days ago when I would order out food at least four times a week and eat ramen all day. I'm happy about this, but I know I shouldn't be too hasty when it comes to expecting results. I haven't seen any changes in the mirror, and I don't have a weight scale for both measuring food and mt body weight so i try my best to use measuring cups for fluid things and portioning out my food beforehand. But i have no idea if ive even been in a deficit at all.

I did workout 10 days out of the 30 so far, and the only thing im upset about is I have no motivation to workout. When I went cold turkey no more ordering food every single day (I order it occasionally, but even then I don't exceed more than my calorie limit for the day) I exercised almost four times a week and it was exhausting but the thrill of a new diet and fixing my life made it worthwhile. Now that I'm 30 days in, I feel burnt out. I walk outside for 30 minutes twice a week, I play violin for an hour four times a week, spend three hours a day cooking three meals, but I never do dedicated training because I have many issues with motivation and because I am very weak its so hard to do anything. Even after thirty days, I collapse one second in to a pushup. I lost an inch off my waist, but im pretty sure it was just water weight. Im glad I can say I've been eating healthier because I do feel it, but I really hope I'm just not screwing myself over. I dont really have any money for a food scale but I am gonna get a job soon so I might buy one and I hope it will be enough to help me get on my feet more.

Should I lower my calories any further? I eat 1440 calories a day because thats my sedentary amount, but my bmr is 1200 calories. I would go to 1200 calories, but I think I would be miserable eating that little which is why I tried to make a deficit by activity. Am I judging too soon? Advice is greatly appreciated.

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