Monday, June 15, 2026

Decentering Food

I just started my (85th) weight loss journey and I’m down 20 lbs so far. My goal is 70 lbs total and I really want this to be the time I lose the weight and keep it off so I’m working on changing my mindset and creating new habits. One of the things I know I need to work on is decentering food. Before, it seemed like my entire life and all my activities revolved around food in some way. Going to the farmer’s market on the weekends comes with a donut and a special drink! Meeting up with friends always involves a meal. Movies = popcorn. Going shopping? Get a pretzel! Pretty much all activities are linked with a food item in my head and these habits have been the hardest for me to break.

I usually don’t allow myself to have these treats, mainly because my goal is always satiety, and if I spend 400 calories on a donut, that’s a whole meal I could’ve eaten without going to bed hungry. But *not* having the treats contributes to feelings of deprivation, and I think I eventually overeat at other times to compensate.

Do you all have any tips for how to create new habits and rituals for activities/social outings that don’t involve food? I don’t necessarily want to take away food without replacing it with something else but I don’t have any ideas.
Thanks!

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Food noise

Start Date-9/16/2025 SW-349 CW-267.7 GW-215 M,35yr,5'9"

Hello all. I've made a few posts on here before. I found posting when I'm feeling a bit down, struggling or wanting to celebrate has been really beneficial and cathartic for my weight loss journey.

So like my title says, food noise. I'm sure everyone in here is familiar with the idea. When I was at my heaviest and eating unrestricted I never really noticed it because I ate whenever I wanted and I ate whatever I wanted. Now that I am meticulously counting calories with a food scale and MyFitnessPal (270 days of continuous tracking) The food noise is ridiculous.

So when I first started losing weight I was on a very strict calorie deficit of 1, 000kcal. At that time I didn't struggle with food noise nearly as bad just because my tdee was still relatively high and still feel like I ate a decent amount of food.

Right now I believe my TDEE is roughly 2400 to 2,600 so I jumped between a 500 KCAL deficit and a 1000 KCAL deficit every other week. The 500 deficit is definitely better but the food noise is still ridiculous. I wake up thinking about food. Next meal, thinking about when I'm going to allow myself to have a slice or two of pizza (and that's after having a slice or two of pizza on the weekend). Anymore. Feels like I'm lurching from one cheat meal that's within the confines of my deficit to another.

I'm really happy about the weight loss. I'm more confident I'm doing way more physical activities. I can finally close shop in the standard sizes instead of big and tall despite not being tall at all lol. That being said, this has made me realize that I will probably need to do some level of calorie tracking the rest of my life because of how loud my food noise is and because of how easily it would be for me to slip back into that mentality of eating whatever I want whenever I want

Has anyone else had the realization that food noise is very loud for them? And if so and how do you combat it?

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Sunday, June 14, 2026

For those of you on this weight loss journey fid you ever slip up and eat a ton more calories than you're supposed to?

Last night I ate way more calories than I used to. I had cupcakes and cookies and ice cream. This morning i got back on the beam and had ostmeal and eggs.

I had stuck to my calories goal 13 days in a row and then I trip up and eat all that ice cream and cookies and cup cakes. I feel discouraged because I tripped up and couldn't control myself . But I also feel like I should get over it and continue my diet

Do you guys ever trip up and eat way more calories than you should ? How do you deal with it ? Do you get discouraged or you don't really sweat it?

So far I lost 35 lbs and I'm continuing my diet. Just sometimes I trip up . There's temptation and I'm only human . I'll get over it . This is a marathon not a sprint . and no one does it perfect .

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Body composition scales.. Reliably accurate or grain of salt accurate??

I (42F) have been on a weight loss journey for 75 days now and have lost 26 lbs down, from 338lbs to 312lbs, so I still have a lot to loose. I do low impact exercises (due to a torn meniscus issue) 45 minutes 4-5 times a week. I count calories and am usually eating in the 1200 to 1400 range, which is well below my TDEE.

I was recommended the RENPHO brand scale and have been using it daily to track my weight and body composition information. So here is my question: Is the composition information on these types of scales reliable and accurate or is it more of a rough calculation/guess? I have been trying to research and understand all the data my scale measures so I can learn and make lasting health changes. But am confused by some of the readings I am seeing.

Any advice on how to understand and follow my body composition information better and what parts are more reliable is greatly appreciated!

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Sustaining weight loss and weightloss with unstable medication (not weightloss meds, but medication for other health issues)

I’ve been struggling with weight for a long long time, as a kid i was quite thinn, then i became quite big with beginning of puberty (normal for young girls, didn’t know that back then) lost a lot of weight very quickly and in unhealthy ways,

then started antipsychotics, gained a lot, like ALOT bmi of 37, lost weight healthy for 10kg, gave up, gained some, then began to loose weight, swayed a lot in weight very drastically, stopped the meds, quickly got down to bmi 20, with the mix of the stopping meds and unhealthy methods, but also worked a lot with my body, was finally happy in my weight, but at my lowest weight i was in the hospital with very severe dehydration and couldn’t eat for a week, had to start my meds again, went through a trial of many other antipsychotics and other medication associated with weight gain and a lot of hospital admission with little area to move, Gained weight, back to bmi 31, stopped my meds again, began my meds again, and a new adhd med associated with weight loss and now I’m bmi 28, and trying to loose weight down to

bmi 20-23, depending on how i will look at that weight, and Mabye higher bmi as I’m a person who gains muscle by just looking at weights, and also i work a lot with my body in farming and outdoors activity, and i rather not be too thinn as it dosent fit my lifestyle.

But does anyone have tips that with all these meds constantly being switched out and changed how I’m supposed to sustain weight and loose it healthy,
Any tips would mean the world to me

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Saturday, June 13, 2026

CONSISTENCY

I’ve realized by far my biggest problem is consistency.

I do not even care about weight loss anymore. I care about not being wildly inconsistent.

My daily calorie counts over the past week: 1876, 2922, 1457, 2613, 4315, 1865, 1241.

If that’s not the definition of inconsistent I don’t know what is.

I have a really hard time with making excuses for myself to not stay on track. “I need balance”, “if I go slightly over it’s fine”, “I need more energy to work out”.

My brain likes to act like it’s starving when I even eat at maintenance.

My goal is 2000 calories (maintenance) or less. That’s it.

I have 2 days of consistency so far. Based on my previous patterns that means I’m close to binging.

But I really want to stay consistent.

How do you guys do it and not talk yourself out of it?

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Did your shoe size/composition change a lot with weight loss?

Of course everyone’s weight loss is different, just looking for perspectives.

I’ve lost about 30 pounds so far, at least another 50 to go (maybe more- for reference I’m a 5ft 5 woman, 210 pounds currently). I’m asking because I’ve gotten into ice skating, and I’m at a point where I’d like to get nicer ice skates (like get formally fitted for them), but I’d hate to do that just to have them no longer fit in a year when I’ve lost 50 pounds. My feet are pretty wide/broad, and “thick”- like I have to wear wide fit, pretty spacious shoes. I’ve always been very overweight so I have no idea if this is just how my feet are or if it’s because I’m fat. I’ve noticed as I lose weight my arches got higher (I used to have very flat feet too), so I’m wondering if other changes await me lol

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