Friday, July 31, 2020

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Welcome adventurer! Whether you're new on this quest or are towards the end of your journey there should be something below for you.


Daily journal.

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Community bulletin board!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3fnbB6N

The first week of getting back on track is always the hardest.

I lost 15 pounds, took a break, then 10 pounds, took a break, lost 5, then took a break and now I’m trying to lose the last 20 pounds.

The first week after a break is always the hardest. I feel like I expect to see body changes right away and I get discouraged when I don’t even though I know this happens EVERY time. I feel so unmotivated and sad the first week, maybe 9 days, thinking I’m not losing weight and before you know it, 2-3 weeks in, I SEE IT! I see and feel the weight loss.

I just had to rant because I’m officially a week back into dieting and I am dropping this last 20 pounds. It’s so difficult starting for me because I just want to see results and it’s so funny because I know results will come if I stay consistent and it’s always an amazing feeling. Whenever I see and feel the difference I’m like, ‘wow, I’m so happy I started 3 weeks ago.’

Just had to let it off my chest. I’m super close to my goal weight and the gyms are open again so I’m ready. Just impatient Lol

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2DrVcAJ

Here’s my take on starting your weight loss journey

After yo-yo-ing back and fourth between a very restrictive diet and just binging, I realized that weight loss should be a lifestyle.

I’m pretty sure some people already know this, but I just wanted to share just in case.

Instead of going on a diet, it’s better to change your current diet and maintain it rather than doing big changes for short term results. If you want to stay at your GW, you can’t go back to your original lifestyle.

My advice: Start by changing one of two things. 1) limiting portion size. This way you can still eat the foods you love, but are also taking steps towards weight loss. Nothing drastic.

2) Swapping out unhealthy foods for healthier alternatives. Don’t go cold turkey, slowly swap out certain foods starting small.

3) exercise. However you choose to do it, just be active.

And that’s it! Pretty simple, but it took me a while to figure out that small long term changes were the way to go.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3gjwWiT

30 Day Accountability Challenge - August Sign Ups!

A new month & new Daily Accountability Challenge!

For the newbies to the sub reddit, please start here, so much good info!

https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/wiki/quick_start_guide https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/wiki/faq

And hey, maybe it’s not a bad idea to review them anyway to you returning conquerors. I do occasionally to remind myself of the basics.

Here’s what we do in the DAC my friends!

This is the sign up post to outline your goals, weight loss, self care, creative, whatever keeps your motor going.

There will be a daily update post for you to chime in about how day whatever is going!

At the end of the month, there is a wrap up post to reflect on the progress you made or didn’t make & what you learned. Learning is progress my friends!

We try to foster a supportive, caring place to discuss the actual day to day of deficits & counting & caring so much about how we fuel our bodies & lives. So be kind, interact if you like & hopefully you feel supported by the internet version of a push up bra!

Leading by example, here I go!

Weight by end of month (199 lbs, preferably trend weight): No weigh in this morning. 201.5 lbs trend weight.

Stay within calorie range (1500 weekdays, maintenance weekends):

Exercise 5 days a week: Habitual, as always I want more intensity & strength. X/X days.

Self-care journaling (once a week, 60 minutes): Need this for sanity.

Self-care time (working on love journals, beauty treatments, drawing X/X days): I’ve been neglecting this. Bad loser.

Try a new recipe once a week: X/5 weeks.

50 pages of The Body Keeps the Score: Tough gig. X/50 pages.

No fast food or candy from the work dish: Streak day 6.

Be present in my body & accept the sensory feedback:

Be more mindful & express gratitude, avoid the hedonic treadmill:

Your turn!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2EBlAZD

Is it possible to lose 50lbs + through diet and walking alone?

I am a 5’7 23 yr old female, and I currently weigh 203lbs. My starting weight was 245 lbs.

I just had a conversation with the person who encouraged me to go on a fitness journey, and she congratulated me on my 42lbs lost so far. I told her I wanted to lose about 45 more pounds and she said that if I continue only walking as my exercise, I won’t lose any more weight. That large amounts of weight loss only happen when you do more hardcore exercising.

I’m kind of shocked. Walking is my utmost favorite form of exercise and it’s the only one I look forward to. Is it impossible to lose 85lbs through walking and a calorie deficit alone? Has anyone done this?

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/39MwhUY

Lessons learned after 4 months, and 60lbs lost

Finishing my 4th month on 1500 cal/day, 60lbs lost, averaging about 0.45lbs/day. Male/50+

Lessons learned ..

  1. Don't try to force it. We can only lose a certain amount of fat per day, and "trying harder" does nothing but cause problems. The amount of fat we can lose per day is set, and it is determined by how much fat we have ... so if you have 100lbs of fat you can lose close to 1lb per day, but if you're much smaller and closer to goal you may only be able to lose 1lb per week. It is what it is. Imagining that you're going to be some kind of super-dieter, that you're going to be the one who lives on 500 calories a day, that you're going to be the one who only weighs 150lbs and still loses 1lb per day ... it's a recipe for disaster, all you're going to do is walk around light headed, dizzy, confused, losing muscle mass, crying and emotional all the time, hungry (until you even lose your appetite), binge eating, and generally just screwed up. So all we can do is figure out the potential we have for weight loss, calculate the deficit we need to hit that number, then watch the pounds come off over time and be glad for what we get.
  2. Willpower is not the key. Motivation is not the key. Enthusiasm is not the key. All of that will fail you at various times. The KEY is soldiering on, .. it's stacking days up one after the other with small weight losses each day until over a long period of time you reach your goal, it's as simple as that. Nobody is perfect, and occasionally we all screw up, but to stack up days over the long term you have to recover from your screw up, cut yourself a break, not feel guilty about it, and just get back to it and try to stay on track. You can't use your inevitable screw up to break your diet for a month, you have to just recognize that nobody including you is perfect, that the screw ups are inevitable, and that the key is consistency over time. Just get back on the right track, and get back to the day to day slog. Screw ups are not failure, ... failure is using that screw up to go off your diet for a month, a year, .. a decade, instead of just accepting that you screwed up and getting back to it, which, lets face it, isn't always easy once you've sucked down a few pizzas. Just push the empty pizza box away, use a napkin to clean up the corners of your mouth, get back on your diet, and it will all work out.
  3. Personally I don't think it matter what you eat. Don't imagine I've been walking around eating rabbit food because I haven't. I started my diet end of March because of Covid-19 quarantine, the reason I started losing weight is because obese people have terrible outcomes if infected, and I didn't (and don't) want to be a statistic. So I haven't been getting fresh salads, vegetables, fruits, etc, this whole time during lock down ... what I've been eating is chunky soup, candy bars, beef jerky, oatmeal, canned fruit, and whatever else I can get my hands on. It's just calories to me, as long as I hit my numbers I don't care. Now I will add this ... eating a lot of sugar does make me hungrier, so I try to keep the candy bars to a happy minimum, but I'm sorry (sorry, not sorry!) but I just want some candy sometimes, and as far as I'm concerned for long term diet success chocolate has to be included, so I include it.
  4. I don't think exercise is necessary to lose a lot of weight, and I hate exercise, so I'm against the whole idea. I have not exercised at all this past 4 months except for some walking around (i.e. "normal life activity") and doing some light gardening on occasion. Now I'm not swearing off exercise ... it may be the case that the closer you get to your goal weight the more you'll have to consider exercise to get rid of the last of the weight, I don't know .. but I know for a FACT you don't have to exercise to lose 60lbs in 4 months if you are fat.
  5. Binges may happen. I did not expect that, but it happened to me twice. I don't mean "hey, let's have a cheat day" ... I mean like a voracious physical need to eat food that just makes you go insane, like some kind of blood lust in battle, except with food. Twice it has happened to me, the first time it lasted a few hours and in the end caused me to go 3000 calories over. Second time it happened was for a few days and I went 14500 calories over. Shit happens. Get back on the horse. It doesn't do any good to dwell on it ... bodies are weird, and if your body drives you that insane it needed food and there's really not anything your brain can do about it sometimes. Just let it go and get back to the grind. You can cut down on this by following lesson learned number (1) above ... which is don't "force it" by overly restricting calories, because your body will drive you insane if you do.
  6. To stay motivated as much as I can I have a method I use to get "accurate" weight readings. Once every 10 days or so I spend two days eating very specific foods and not drinking any water so that I can get a repeatable weight reading. The food I chose for that is for two days I eat a jar of peanut butter, which I love ... it's high in fat, low volume, and so combined with not drinking extra water means that at the end of the second day I have a low weight reading. I'm SO GLAD that I did this over time, because the noise of everyday weight readings is just a chaotic mess, .. but I can literally use a ruler on the weight loss graph and draw a straight line through these low weight readings and see EXACTLY how much weight I have lost. I mean its super accurate .. and I can even see with this ruler line what my weight is going to be in a week, or two weeks, to within like 1/2 of a pound. This strategy may not be for everyone, but it works for me and I'm sticking with it. Outside of those "accurate" readings my weight jumps around all over the place and could be anywhere ... if I drink a lot of water and eat a lot of low calorie high volume food that retains water, I might weigh 10lbs more than these minimum readings, and I have weighed up to 12 pounds more because of the weight of the food and water in my gut. I believe its easy to think you have hit a "plateau" because of this ... because the weights are so random that any actual fat loss is lost in the noise for a week, two weeks, even three weeks ... eventually it will show up in the readings over time and your weigh will trend down, but the scales mean nothing over a period of a few days. I think the worst thing anyone could do is get up, step on the scales, and get upset because they didn't lose weight since yesterday ... that's just pointless. If all you want to do is see a weight measurement go down ... spend two days eating your calories as high fat foods, and don't drink any water, and the scale reading is going to drop like 5 pounds overnight. The reason I think this is important is because I have seen so many people get frustrated because they don't see the scales move and then the first thing they inevitable do is cut calories even more in an attempt to "jump start" their weight loss or "break through the plateau", etc ... which then starts to cause it's own problems. Don't let the scales make you crazy.
  7. Just be nice to yourself. You're all you have. Guilt, regret, .. none of this shit is helpful, so lay it down, just do the best you can reasonably do, try to stick with it over a long period of time as best you can, and stop trying to be perfect. Nobody is perfect. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Good is good enough.

That's about all I can really think of at the moment.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2XdWRRA

Reassessing your goal?

23F, 5’10 SW: 165.5lbs, GW: 143lbs, CW: 147lbs

Hi! So, I’ve lost a fair bit of weight over the last few months, and I’m just a couple of lbs away from my goal weight now (I usually use KG which is why it seems like a weird number).

However, I don’t feel that a look quite as slim as I thought I would at this weight. I weigh slightly less than I did before starting university, but definitely don’t look like I did then. I know some of this is due to being older and body composition changing.

I’ve only used diet for my weight loss, but have joined the gym now they’re open (and am in fact very sore rn from my first class yesterday!!), so I’m hoping some muscle gain might help with my appearance, but I was wondering if people have shifted their goals before meeting them?

I want to be able to celebrate when I get down to 143, but I just don’t think I’ll be quite happy with my body. Does anyone have any recommendations about what my goal could be - 130lbs would put me at an underweight BMI so I don’t want to go too close to that. I’m also aware muscle weighs more than fat so the gym may help me look better without losing weight (but this will be a very slow process I think).

Thanks!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2PfqNbL

All of a sudden I'm hungry all the time

As the title says, anyone else experienced this? I've lost about 64lbs and for about 1 month I'm just trying to maintain my body weight without CICO and been losing about 2lbs since then. But for the last few days, I've been constantly hungry. The last time I ate was 4 hours ago and it was a normal-sized meal and I'm currently so hungry my stomach hurts.

I started my weight loss journey by only eating 1500-1800 calories a day (I burnt about twice that amount) and sure I was hungry all the time but my stomach never hurt like this and I'm currently estimating that I eat about 2300 calories per day.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3k0az4s

I give myself leeway when I get compliments about my weight lost.

Hello guys!

Has anyone had this problem when someone compliments you on your weight loss, you give yourself kind of an excuse or leeway to eat unhealthy. It keeps happening and I am going back to my old habit and I really don't want to go back. The more compliments I get the more I know I will give myself more leeway and eventually go back to my old ways.

To counter this, I told my friends that I meet on a regular basis not to compliment me and I don't weigh myself, only after every 3/4 weeks and it's been working, but meeting friends that I haven't seen in a couple of months they bring up my weight loss. Why is it discouraging me from my diet instead of encouraging me? Is it because I look for gratification rather than doing it for myself? but I feel like I am doing it for myself I feel so much better! I don't know please help me

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/30YIdi4

So. Close. To. Goal. People were right about the last couple pounds being the hardest!

Hi y’all! I’m 20F, and 5’4”. My SW was 220lbs; and now I’m around 142lbs. I’ve been loosing weight for about 13 months now.

Just recently I made it under 145, which put me at a healthy BMI for the first time in my adult life. Now I’m nearing the end of my weight loss. I’m thinking I might settle around 130-135lbs, and then work on recomping to loose a little more fat and pack on some muscle.

Loosing this last 10-15 lbs is tough! I’m staying with my partner’s family right now and although I’m very thankful that they’ve taken me into their home; it’s near impossible to eat healthy here. Almost every night there’s some combination of red meat, cheese, bread and potatoes for dinner, all covered in butter. And then dessert. I try to eat small portions at dinner and eat low calorie throughout the rest of the day, but lord is it an uphill battle. I’m doing it though! My partner and I have been hiking and doing yoga together, and some days we go to the park so she can skate and I can jog. I’ve also been getting really into body weight fitness with my new gymnastic rings. I think working out every day has been keeping me on track.

Growing up I wouldn’t touch a gym with a ten foot pole, but somehow in the last year I’ve completely rewired myself to love fitness. I love having the strength and endurance to pick up new active hobbies I’ve never been able to enjoy before! And.. on a more superficial note I love being able to see my muscles and collarbones and jawline in the mirror!

I’ll update again once I officially reach my goal. I might post my progress pics too, with my face cropped out. Good luck with your journeys wherever you guys are at :) stay safe

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/33eTAWc

From 500 to 208 to 394 to 348

I've posted before about how I went from over 500 pounds to about 208 without surgery. I kept the weight off for a while and stayed around the low to mid 200s for a while. But then from August to January of last year I went from about 280 to 380. I'm not sure why to be completely honest. I mean I know its from overeating but I don't know WHY I did it.

I kept going "well once I hit 250 pounds I'll get back on the wagon." Which came and went. Then I went "well that's not bad, when I get to 300 I'll for sure make myself lose weight again." Which at that point I just kinda stopped weighing myself since I wasn't doing anything.

In January I moved in with my girlfriend. In February my mom got killed in a motorcycle accident. Also in February I quit teaching and changed career paths. Then COVID happened. It's been a hectic year and I kept pushing off my weight loss.

I'm currently 90 days in a row of tracking my calories. Just like the first time there was no huge turning moment. Literally just me going "I'm tired of this, it's time to change."

It hasn't been perfect. I've binged a few days and watched my weight skyrocket by 9 pounds overnight and have to spend a few days to get it back to a normal weight.

Things I've done to lose weight:

Track everything, including bad days.

Walk 2.5-5 miles every day.

Stretch.

Take care of myself.

It's a stupid hard process but that's what it is, a process.

Some pictures: https://imgur.com/a/gjyalvR (Kinda NSFW, man in boxers)

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/30ilEGi

Quarantine Motivation?

I just loath looking back at photos of me pre-quarantine and seeing how much my body's changed. I've developed bad habits over these past few months spent indoors -- got lazy to workout at home, ate too much junk, ordered take-out one too many times. I'm the biggest I've been in YEARS.

But I'm also very tired of constantly feeling like shit about myself (yesterday I had a mental breakdown because I've never felt so unattractive in such a long while).

How do you keep yourself motivated during quarantine? Any fun workout videos on Youtube that get you pumped to workout? Any useful apps for tracking weight loss (I just downloaded MyFitnessPal)? Absolutely ANY tips will be highly appreciated, but please keep in mind I have no access to a gym rn given the whole COVID-19 situation

Thank you

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2XgGdAR

It’s early days but I feel confident

I love the fact that I’m doing this with my gf and we are there to support each other. I wanted to do it for a while but she was holding back. Now I feel like if we are both there for each other we can both do it. I want to be one of those weight loss couples you see in magazines. I started at 95kg 5’10 and now down to 90kg after a few weeks of ups and downs (I went from slimming world diet to CICO and found it a lot easier) and I can’t speak for my gf but I know that she’s lost over a stone and she’s still on slimming world. I like sharing ideas with her and always staying optimistic and positive about it. I feel like I’m not punishing myself too much as I get a lot of steps in through my job which means I can still eat plenty of food. My girlfriends a brilliant cook but I’d say that’s my one down fall. I will often grab a quick lunch out of the fridge that doesn’t require much preparing when I get back from my job in the early afternoon. I’m so tired by then that cooking doesn’t appeal to me. Anyway I just wanted to share my story and say hi.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3fcjxaZ

Weight Loss & Body Type: All About the Pear Shape

We’re all different. From our head to our toes and everything in-between, humans are all individuals with unique qualities that make us who we are. Bodies come in all shapes and sizes and there is no one-size-fits-all approach to weight loss. How and where you carry your weight is an important factor to consider when trying to drop pounds and reach your goals. That’s why Nutrisystem has created personalized plans that consider your personal body type. “Pear shape” and “apple shape” are two of the most common body types. Keep reading to learn more about the pear body shape and what it means for the weight loss journey.

What Does Your Body Type Mean?

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What Does Pear-Shaped Mean?

body type

If you’re the classic pear shape, most of your weight is below your waist in your hips, buttocks and thighs. Your waist may be more defined and narrower than your hips and thighs. While body type depends on many factors, women are more likely to be pear-shaped then men, says ScienceDaily. Men tend to more apple-shaped, storing excess fat around the middle in the abdomen.

Your pear-shaped body may be beneficial for your overall health. One study found that postmenopausal women with a pear body shape may have a lower risk of heart disease than apple shapes, even with a normal Body Mass Index (BMI). “Women who stored fat around their middle were three times more likely to suffer from heart disease than women with the opposite body type,” says Patient.info.

Researchers theorize that a pear shape may be protective because of where body fat is being stored. Apple shapes tend to store fat around the belly where many organs reside. According to Patient.info, belly fat around the organs is associated with an increased risk of Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Genetics and Hormones

pear

According to a study, published in Nature Genetics, body shape and how someone carries extra weight is determined by genetics. The study found 24 genetic variations which helped separate apple-shaped people from pear-shaped people, says Medical Xpress.

You may have inherited your pear shape; However, the other culprit for your hourglass figure may be estrogen. “The pear body type is more common in pre-menopausal women and some men and is associated with estrogen dominance,” says the American Council on Exercise (ACE). According to HuffPost Canada, pre-menopausal women with excess estrogen tend to have this shape. In both genders, extra estrogen is considered a risk factor for obesity.

Exercising for Your Shape

pear

Regular cardio and toning exercises are key to managing a pear shape. Cardio will help you burn fat all over. You can also add regular resistance training—the kind where you’re moving your body against the resistance of your own body weight, gravity, bands or weights. That will help you firm up your muscles. You may always have a pear shape but you’ll look and feel better by incorporating regular exercise into your routine.

How to Get Toned Legs (No Running Required!)

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Dressing for Your Pear Shape

pear

There are a few things to keep in mind when shopping for your pear shape. Nordstrom Trunk Club recommends tops and jackets that accentuate your top half and defined waist. Choose bright colors and prints that balance your silhouette. When it comes to pants, select darker colors and “slightly roomier” styles that aren’t too tight. A pointed shoe can elongate your legs.

Eating for Your Pear Shape

pear

You can enjoy a diet slightly higher in carbohydrates than other body types. However, be sure to focus on those that are rich in dietary fiber. Protein will help you to feel full and satisfied but be mindful of the amount of dietary fat you consume. Check out the list below for some smart choices for each gender:

Smart choices for women:

  • Low fat, high-quality proteins, such as salmon, egg whites, chicken breast and cottage cheese will keep you feeling full and satisfied long after you finish a meal.
  • Choose high fiber carbohydrates like quinoa, barley and hummus.
  • Blueberries are an ideal fruit choice for your body type.
  • Eat vegetables such as cauliflower, kale and spinach for loads of nutrients and few calories.

Smart choices for men:

  • Salmon, chicken breast, eggs and cottage cheese will provide you with high-quality protein to fuel your day.
  • Fill your plate with high fiber carbs like brown rice and corn.
  • Fruit like blackberries and apples (with the skin on) fit well into your meal plan.
  • Make your salads and sides with broccoli, spinach, asparagus and cherry tomatoes.

Personalized plans from Nutrisystem take your personal body shape into account, creating a weight loss program designed for you. Our menu is filled with delicious, high fiber and low fat options that are lower on the glycemic index. This helps to simultaneously curb your appetite while helping your body lose weight, according to a June 2013 study, published in Obesity. Study participants who followed a low glycemic diet lost more body mass than volunteers eating a high glycemic diet, including the dangerous fat that’s tucked in and around the abdominal organs.

If your pear-shape is at least partly caused by estrogen, limiting foods that boost blood estrogen may help you lose weight, says ACE. They recommend avoiding high-fat dairy products, alcohol, caffeine, trans-fats, unfermented soy products and non-organic meats. Instead, opt for low-fat dairy, organic protein and healthy fats from whole foods like nuts, seeds, avocado and olives.

You should also stick to high-fiber options. “Fiber, which is found in fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, legumes and whole grains, slows insulin release and aids in the removal of estrogen from the body,” says ACE. Always speak to your doctor before making any dietary changes or if you have any questions or concerns about your estrogen levels.

5 Reasons Nutrisystem is the Best Diet Plan to Become Your Best You

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The post Weight Loss & Body Type: All About the Pear Shape appeared first on The Leaf.



from The Leaf https://ift.tt/2Dm7Am4

Trouble Drinking Enough Water? 10 Hydrating Foods You Need to Be Eating

Water does much more for your health than just quench your thirst. It keeps your metabolism working steadily, so you’re burning calories all day—even when you’re “at rest.” It also helps fill you up, so that you’re less likely to mistake dehydration for hunger. Nutrisystem dietitians recommend you get about 64 ounces of water every day. But, that doesn’t mean you have to chug down glass after glass to keep yourself hydrated. The hydrating foods you eat also contribute to your daily intake.

Water makes up more than 90 percent of the weight of 10 very popular vegetables. All of them are non-starchy sources of your greens, meaning you can enjoy as much of them as you want and stay on track with your Nutrisystem weight loss plan. Eat them raw or lightly steamed to really maximize their moisture content.

Fill up on veggie nutrition with these 10 hydrating foods:

1. Cucumbers

hydrating foods

Water content: About 96 percent
Try this: Substitute juicy “cuke” slices for lettuce in your favorite sandwich and skip the mayo.

2. Romaine lettuce

hydrating foods

Water content: About 95 percent
Try this: Fill firm romaine leaves with a whole grain and bean salad for a quick, nourishing lunch you can eat on-the-go.

3. Celery

celery hydrating foods

Water content: About 95 percent
Try this: Dip stalks in a fourth of a cup of hummus (a SmartCarb on Nutrisystem), instead of peanut butter, which has more than five times as much fat.

4. Radishes

radish hydrating foods

Water content: About 95 percent
Try this: Get crafty with the Fresh Radish Salad on The Leaf. Or, top a slice of whole wheat toast (one SmartCarb on Nutrisystem) with a tablespoon of creamy, mashed avocado (an Extra) and thin slices of zesty radish.

5. Zucchini

zucchini noodles hydrating foods

Water content: About 95 percent
Try this: Look for zucchini “noodles” in the produce section at the grocery store or make your own with a spiralizer. Your Shrimp Scampi couldn’t get healthier!

6. Tomato

tomatoes hydrating foods

Water content: About 94 percent
Try this: Carve out the tomato’s stem and a few inches around and below it, then fill the opening with tuna! A half of a cup of water-packed tuna counts as a PowerFuel on Nutrisystem.

7. Bell Peppers

bell peppers hydrating foods

Water content: About 93 percent
Try this: Toss diced peppers with splashes of vinegar, a teaspoon of oil (one Extra on Nutrisystem) and fresh herbs to make a simple relish for sandwiches.

8. Cauliflower

cauliflower hydrating foods

Water content: About 92 percent
Try this: Steam florets until tender, then whip them with non-fat milk to make a healthy alternative to mashed potatoes.

9. Spinach

spinach

Water content: About 91 percent
Try this: Add a handful of spinach to smoothies for an extra-hefty dose of vitamins and fiber.

10. Broccoli

Broccoli

Water content: About 90 percent
Try this: Shred the stalks (the stems that are often discarded) and use them as the base for a tasty variation on coleslaw.

How Much Water Do You Really Need? How to Know

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The post Trouble Drinking Enough Water? 10 Hydrating Foods You Need to Be Eating appeared first on The Leaf.



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Stuck at 40 pounds.. help

Hey everyone! This subreddit has been so helpful/supportive during my weight loss journey. I began in January and lost my goal weight of 30 pounds!!!! My next goal was 40 and I achieved that goal by May! When I lost 40 (146 pounds), I only kept that number for about a week and then it went to 150.

The only problem is that I have been STUCK at 150 (151ish) pounds since end May. It’s like my body literally said no to losing more weight. I am doing everything the same (except for 1-2 weekends where I was celebrating my recent engagement 😀😀)

SW: 186 CW: 150 GW: 135-140 Height: 4’10”

Is there anything that I can do? I have been running a lot, counting my calories, staying away from carbs, and doing a weight workout about 2-3 days a week.

I hate being stuck in this rut!!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/39IiTB3

Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Friday, 31 July 2020? Start here!

Today is your Day 1?

Welcome to r/Loseit!

So you aren’t sure of how to start? Don’t worry! “How do I get started?” is our most asked question. r/Loseit has helped our users lose over 1,000,000 recorded pounds and these are the steps that we’ve found most useful for getting started.

Why you’re overweight

Our bodies are amazing (yes, yours too!). In order to survive before supermarkets, we had to be able to store energy to get us through lean times, we store this energy as adipose fat tissue. If you put more energy into your body than it needs, it stores it, for (potential) later use. When you put in less than it needs, it uses the stored energy. The more energy you have stored, the more overweight you are. The trick is to get your body to use the stored energy, which can only be done if you give it less energy than it needs, consistently.

Before You Start

The very first step is calculating your calorie needs. You can do that HERE. This will give you an approximation of your calorie needs for the day. The next step is to figure how quickly you want to lose the fat. One pound of fat is equal to 3500 calories. So to lose 1 pound of fat per week you will need to consume 500 calories less than your TDEE (daily calorie needs from the link above). 750 calories less will result in 1.5 pounds and 1000 calories is an aggressive 2 pounds per week.

Tracking

Here is where it begins to resemble work. The most efficient way to lose the weight you desire is to track your calorie intake. This has gotten much simpler over the years and today it can be done right from your smartphone or computer. r/loseit recommends an app like MyFitnessPal, Loseit! (unaffiliated), or Cronometer. Create an account and be honest with it about your current stats, activities, and goals. This is your tracker and no one else needs to see it so don’t cheat the numbers. You’ll find large user created databases that make logging and tracking your food and drinks easy with just the tap of the screen or the push of a button. We also highly recommend the use of a digital kitchen scale for accuracy. Knowing how much of what you're eating is more important than what you're eating. Why? This may explain it.

Creating Your Deficit

How do you create a deficit? This is up to you. r/loseit has a few recommendations but ultimately that decision is yours. There is no perfect diet for everyone. There is a perfect diet for you and you can create it. You can eat less of exactly what you eat now. If you like pizza you can have pizza. Have 2 slices instead of 4. You can try lower calorie replacements for calorie dense foods. Some of the communities favorites are cauliflower rice, zucchini noodles, spaghetti squash in place of their more calorie rich cousins. If it appeals to you an entire dietary change like Keto, Paleo, Vegetarian.

The most important thing to remember is that this selection of foods works for you. Sustainability is the key to long term weight management success. If you hate what you’re eating you won’t stick to it.

Exercise

Is NOT mandatory. You can lose fat and create a deficit through diet alone. There is no requirement of exercise to lose weight.

It has it’s own benefits though. You will burn extra calories. Exercise is shown to be beneficial to mental health and creates an endorphin rush as well. It makes people feel awesome and has been linked to higher rates of long term success when physical activity is included in lifestyle changes.

Crawl, Walk, Run

It can seem like one needs to make a 180 degree course correction to find success. That isn’t necessarily true. Many of our users find that creating small initial changes that build a foundation allows them to progress forward in even, sustained, increments.

Acceptance

You will struggle. We have all struggled. This is natural. There is no tip or trick to get through this though. We encourage you to recognize why you are struggling and forgive yourself for whatever reason that may be. If you overindulged at your last meal that is ok. You can resolve to make the next meal better.

Do not let the pursuit of perfect get in the way of progress. We don’t need perfect. We just want better.

Additional resources

Now you’re ready to do this. Here are more details, that may help you refine your plan.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3jU3MsW

I'm finally losing belly fat!

To preface, I am female, 21 years old (yesterday was my birthday!) my starting weight was 85kg, current weight is 61kg and goal weight is 55kg. Edit: forgot to add my height: 163cm!

It took long enough, but as soon as I stopped stressing about maintaining a certain deficit, an exercise routine and got my anxiety and life in control, I am finally losing the belly fat. In other words, STOP STRESSING. Stress causes cortisol to release which makes it harder to lose belly fat. I know it's not that easy, but you can start with small actions like trying to meditate and eating only a little under your daily burned calories. With the latter it helps to have a fitbit or something similar, because some days I burn 1800kcals and sometimes close to 3000. And even with that I'm not super strict, some days I go a bit over the calories I burned and that's fine. I was one of those people who stressed about the scale and everything else, but as soon as I started to weigh only once a week or less, I got into a really good mental space about it. I have battled against my mind for so long, but once I started working with it and meditating, my anxiety has diminished greatly. It's a long road, I know, I was battling against mental illness for over 6 years before I got to a good place. It also took me 3 years to even consider losing the weight I gained from my first medication, and once I did, I was committed because it came from within. I haven't actually lost any cm on other parts of my body in a while, nor have I dropped massive amounts of weight since the belly fat started to reduce, but I just know that not being stressed out constantly is the reason that's the place all the fat is coming off from. And also because I am on the last stretch of my weight loss to be truthful. With exercise, listen. I love exercise, but also sometimes I just don't feel like doing exercise. And that's fine. On those days I let myself rest so I can have all the energy to do it on other days. And I've been eating pretty much intuitively, and towards the end of the day I count the calories. Surprise surprise, more often than not I am on a deficit. And if I'm not, a simple walk can help minimize the damage. I'm happy, I'm stress-free, and my belly fat is going away. I wish I had more advice on how to live life stress free, but its up to you to figure out what makes your life happy. I can't tell it to you, unfortunately. And also, my first year of vocational school is coming up, who knows what kind of stress that is going to bring. Life takes you where it takes you. Trust the process.

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I did it. I lost weight.

[13F] I've recently started working towards losing approximately 70 pounds and then I went on vacation and I was afraid that I wouldn't have lost any weight since then because I didn't eat the healthiest on vacation. Today I decided to weigh myself and I lost weight. It's not a lot but knowing that I'm capable of losing weight makes me so happy. I'm not comfortable sharing my weight loss with most people so I figured I'd share it here. I started watching my calories and I would essentially speed walk on the treadmill for about an hour everyday. I'm sorry if I'm rambling a bit in this post, it's 3 am here and I'm tired.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2X8pHTx

Increasing my daily calorie intake, will this help with weight loss?

Hey all, over the last few weeks I've noticed I've started becoming more and more hungry, at this point I've lost around 18kgs, although I have not weighed myself in nearly 2 months so that number may not be accurate. I am 22 years old, a male, 187cm and around 120kgs. I exercise late at night after I finish work (around 10-11pm).

When I started my weight loss journey, as with a lot of people they start off low with their calorie intake, and I was eating roughly 1200-1400 calories a day, however in the long run obviously this isn't sustainable and I knew I would have to make an increase to this eventually, so I'm now trying to increase my daily intake to somewhere around 1800-2000 calories.

I've used a TDEE calculator, and it says my maintenance calories would be roughly 3500 calories a day, now obviously I don't really want to be eating up around the 3000 calorie mark as I don't think this is necessary nor sustainable, however I just wanted some of your guys advice as to whether eating around 2000 calories a day will still help me lose weight. I will also add that my daily exercise consists of being at home during the day, going to an office job at night, and then going to the gym at night with a focus lifting weights and a light walk at the end of the session. My fitbit tells me that I burn around 3500 calories a day including my BMR and the exercise I do.

Any help is greatly appreciated.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/33b5P5W

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Doc wants me to go Vegan...

The title pretty much sums this one up.

I’ve been doing very well on a CICO diet, and have lost over 15 pounds thus far with 5lbs to goal weight.

That being said I’m still having some mild blood pressure issues. I am within a healthy BMI, (5’ 3” w/130lb trend) and eat very well with minimal salt intake. I run between 12 to 15 miles a week and eat gluten free and whole foods.

My cardiologist wants me to experiment with going vegan for a few weeks. This will be a huge adjustment for me because I eat quite a bit of meat. I primarily eat turkey, chicken and fresh caught fish. I also love me some eggs and yogurt. I am gluten-free by necessity.

Anyways, I’m a little worried about the switch to a higher carb diet. Yes I am aware that I can get plenty of protein eating plant-based but it just doesn’t measure up to what I get eating animal products.

Anyways, I’m looking here to see if anyone has switched diets this dramatically mid weight loss journey. Or, if anyone has any tips or tricks. My fridge is stocked with high protein veggies, tofu nuts, and leafy greens. What else can I do?

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UPDATE: Took me 2 kids to look the way I always envisioned myself. (Dammit, it's another long one)

Hi everyone,

I was here 6 months ago where I posted a history of my weightloss. It can be found here if you're interested with pics and all that.

TLDR: Lost all the weight by doing CICO and without exercise, progress photos in previous thread. Kept diet the same and added in 100% bodyweight workout regimen and later jogging, and completely transformed. Pics below

2 months after I posted my original progress, the world turned upside down. It's quarantine time and I got 2 kids at home, one of whom is a remote learning Kindergartner and the other is a toddler. I have to work from home while managing them and the household, and my husband continues to go into work. It was not ideal by any means (I learned that I am a shit teacher, motivator, and seriously remote learning can go straight to hell), BUT, I also found myself without having to commute, get ready for anything (which gave me an extra 3 hours I didn't have before). With proper planning, an hour of quiet time when the toddler naps and my older daughter needs a break, I found my opportunity to finally dedicate to some fitness goals. I had nothing particular in mind, I just wanted to stop being so mushy everywhere.

At the beginning of the pandemic, I started noticing an emergence of at home, minimal/no equipment (later, the no equipment portion completely exploded) workouts on Instagram. This was right up my alley! I remember from my CrossFit days where interval/cross training was a big part of, I did not need a lot of time to get the heart rate

I aimed at 20-30 minute routines, scaled where I needed to (but made sure I'm always challenged), used only my body. My goal was to get to 5 workouts a week (3 on 1 off, 2 on 1 off), but it felt so good to get my body after being sedentary for so long, I stopped relying on a schedule and just listened to my body. I only take rest days if I feel run down or like I need one. (I took 4 this month so far) After about a month, I added jogging as well (originally, the jogs started off as walks to make sure I get 10K steps that day, but then I realized jogging would get me those steps faster haha). I started jogging several times a week and sometimes I would do 2 workouts a day - I really enjoy them!

In 4 months time, I completely transformed my body and only lost about 5lbs of fat. Crazy. I do not recognize myself at all. I have never looked like this and I never imagined that I could. To have a visible 6 pack and sculpted arms? Especially as a mom of 2.

More importantly, there's been a huge shift within me, where moving my body and working through those hard reps no longer became something I am forced to do. I used to think that I NEEDED to do CrossFit (or any structured class), because if I didn't have someone cheering me on or make me do the workout then I wouldn't do it. It's funny because about roughly a month leading up to me finally starting, I was plagued with indecision and fear about not working out the 'right way' or using the 'wrong muscle groups' until I finally just stopped planning for it and started doing it. One day led to the next and I just kept finding new workouts to keep things interesting and it became part of my day.

Showing up for myself in this way made me so much happier. Yes, the physical changes I saw constantly (newbie gains are fast/easy) were validating, but more importantly, I realized that I'm happier because for the first time I was really keeping the promises I made to myself. And the reason my weight loss/fitness issues before were so big was because it was a physical symptom of me giving up on myself and not doing the thing that I said I would do. I will not let it happen again.

Next steps would be to add weights to my routine. I think I'd like to build more muscle and get a toned lower body look. I know that the only way to do that is to build muscle. My lower body has more fat in it and while I'm not sure I "need" to lose more fat, I know for sure building muscle will recomp my body more. Overall, I'm happy with my results so far. I am also very realistic about my body - I'm 37, I have two kids and some loose skin as well as more fat in my butt and thighs, so I think I can only take myself so far without plastic surgery. And I'm perfectly ok with that too :)

4 month recomposition, only 5lbs total fat loss month to month progress Day 1 of a fitness competition I entered 3 weeks ago 10 years in the making

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/339KN7E

Slow and steady wins the race. Be kind to yourself and you’ll be stronger for it.

Started at 260, now I’m down to 200! Overall I’ve lost 60lbs. But this has been over about 5 years. The first go round I lost the 60 but gained 30 back. The. I lost 15 and maintained that for a few years. Now I’m down the last 15lbs back to a total of 60lbs lost.

This latest go around I’m only losing about 2lbs ish a month. Which is fine. I’m looking at the long run, not immediate satisfaction. We all get hung up in this instant weight loss, all these fancy diets and hard core calorie restriction aren’t maintainable. You fall off the wagon and sometimes you don’t feel like getting back on. Log those ‘bad days’ keep yourself accountable, but make it something you can do in the long run to make sure you’ll stick with it.

I’ve done paleo, OMAD blah blah blah. What really works, at least for me, is CICO, BUT, I don’t restict myself to a specific number. 1300-1500. This way if I go over, it’s not really over. I’m still in a caloric deficit, but I can enjoy what I eat without feeling bad about it. This has led me to very few ‘bad days’. I eat things like pasta, ice cream, chicken and waffles. Delicious food without the feeling of guilt because I ‘ate something I shouldn’t have’ the more you hype yourself up, the more likely you are to stay on track. Even if you aren’t losing a ton of weight all at once, keep going. You’re not done until you say you’re done. One healthy choice at a time is all it takes. BUT this is also the only life you’ll ever have, so enjoy it while you’re here. Have your cake and eat it too.

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I finally left a morbid obesity support group! + taking the stairs

A few months ago (at the start of my weight loss journey, 3-4 months ago), I joined a fb group for morbid obesity support. It was partially a weight loss group, partially a “help with navigating the world while obese” group.

Today, I left that group because I realized I’m no longer morbidly obese!

Their qualifications were “100+lbs overweight”. I have 80lbs to go until I’m a “normal” BMI, but I won’t be mad if I end up in the overweight BMI, as I’m trying to build muscle + strength.

I also was looking at old pics of myself, and I didn’t realize how... Miserable I was? Today I went to a doctor‘s appointment, and opted to take the stairs to her clinic instead of the elevators. And I’m thinking about starting the couch to 5k journey. I never thought I’d ever get to a point where I was active almost every day, but here we are!

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So close to 200lbs, yet seemingly so far...

30F, 6'1" | SW: 292 | CW: 210 | GW: 160-170

Hi everyone,

I've been having a little trouble breaking a plateau I've had for a few months now. I've been on a slow and sustained journey for about 2 years that has come from mostly a change in diet (keto initially) and generally portion control, etc. Since coronavirus happened in March, I've been at home and largely didn't feel very motivated to walk or be active at all, mostly from anxiety. I tried to just be mindful about what I ate in the interim, and ended up losing about 15 pounds from March to now from intermittent fasting.

I've since moved to a new area, got on some anti-anxiety medication (buspirone - not an SSRI), and have felt more inclined to go for long (3 mile) walks every day. My goal for 2020 was originally to build more muscle for fat loss... but COVID really threw a wrench in that idea.

I'm not consistently logging food, but maybe I should be at this point if I really want to see the scale change. I'm not sure if the medication I'm on is sustaining this plateau, if I'm not eating enough to trigger some loss, if I need to add in some more rigorous exercise, or what. CICO and calculating what a good deficit would be at this point in my weight loss journey be has been a little confusing.

If anyone has been in a similar frustrating place, could help me with a TDEE/deficit, any advice is very welcomed!

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I'm 21 and trying to reach a healthy weight since I'm 12 years old! Will I make it this time?

Hey guys, I'm Nicki and I've been lurking this thread for a while because seeing others succeed and have the same struggles as I do can be really uplifting. I felt like posting today because I feel like a failure and can never really open up to friends who don't know how it feels to be obese/overweight for sooooo long. Sorry in advance for any mistakes, I was born in the USA and did learn english through my mom who lived in the USA for a long time, but I don't have to use it as often, growing up in Germany.

A bit of backstory: I was raised by a single mom with two other siblings and I gained weight quickly with 11 years old (loneliness maybe? idk), so quickly that for the first time my grandma talked to me about it. My lovely grandmother worried about me and took me to the doctor. I got on the scale and weighed about 250 lbs/115 kg at about 5'5 ft.

Soon after that I got sent to a psychosomatic clinic. A lot of exercise everyday and getting taught how to limit food intake. It was easy for me with the guidance the clinic workers gave me and I lost 22 lbs in a month. After that I did manage to lose more weight on my own without much help from family members, but everyone knew I wanted to continue my weight loss journey. When I turned 16 or 17, I reached 165 lbs, my lowest weight ever. I wasn't happy with my weight then, I still hated my body, hated myself, felt like I didn't do enough. I could hold my weight just fine because life was alright and stabile, although not perfect.

Then I moved in with an abusive boyfriend and things started to go downhill. He kicked me over night (even though I payed rent, I did not want to get physically hurt anymore) out after a year and a half and I moved back to my mom's place. My mom's mental health started to get really bad (started smoking again after more than 10 years of quitting, started smoking weed and got diagnosed with bipolar disorder after more than one time of staying at psychiatric clinics) and I had to stay in my aunt's small apartment with my two older siblings. We don't really get along. Food started being my safe place again because of the loneliness and sadness, lacked motivation and I didn't have a space for myself where I could workout, nor did I have the money to afford a gym card and my lungs hurt when I tried going for a jog.

So I gained weight back. I was back at 185 lbs. Once again, my grandmother helped me out of the situation and found a small place I could afford with the small money I earned. I still felt lonely and abandoned and didn't start working out until April this year, one and a half year after getting my own place. I found Chloe Ting's workout programs and saw all the people who found success while doing her workouts and gave it a shot. I love her and her programs so much and I still do them at the moment! I'm happy I found hope and strength again to continue my weight loss journey. But some days, like today I just feel like starving myself so I can stop dealing with it faster. I won't do it of course, but it's always in the back of my mind.

I'm at 178 lbs now and hope I can maybe reach my goal weight (130-140 lbs) at the end of this year. I try to eat 1400-1500 calories every day, even though it's hard and feeling alone makes me want to binge VERY often. I know I can't change the past anymore but I can try to stay strong enough and continue losing weight so I can finally feel healthy and comfortable in my skin in the near future.

I know, my boring story is probably way too long and I'm not a good writer when talking about personal stuff. But if you read this far, thanks for being a part of this community and showing me that I'm not alone with these problems. Good luck with your journeys and I love you all! I hope I can share my before and after pictures with you guys very soon. I don't have any at my highest weight (thanks to self-hatred and all), but will definitely include ones of my current weight.

Have a good day <3

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Is CICO real? Is it ALL about calories?

This sub seems to treat CICO like a deity and I just don’t know if I should join the cult or nah.

Is 1200 cals of veggies really the same as 1200 cals of fries? Weight loss wise, I mean. I know it’s better to eat only healthy fats but if we follow the logic of CICO, is it true that as long as it’s 1200 cals the weight loss is the same?

Because I haven’t eaten anything yet (I hate eating) and I was wondering if it was okay to eat 1000 cals of McDonald’s for dinner (I love cheeseburgers). And to do it several times a months. I really really love cheeseburgers. So, would it be considered a cheat day since it’s fat or an okay day since I’m staying under 1200 cals?

Also I had another question... I’m having the hardest time believing this:

Maintain weight 1,790 cals/day

Mild weight loss 0.25 kg/week 1,540 cals/day

Weight loss 0.5 kg/week 1,290 cals/day

Extreme weight loss 1 kg/week 790 cals/day

Like uh? I feel like if I eat 1700 cals a day I’m just gonna gain weight, not maintain, this sounds way too much for a 5’7 woman. I’m « European » kinda tall, not « haute couture model » kinda tall. I used this https://www.calculator.net/calorie-calculator.html?ctype=metric&cage=20&csex=f&cheightfeet=5&cheightinch=10&cpound=165&cheightmeter=170&ckg=69&cactivity=1.2&cmop=0&coutunit=c&cformula=m&cfatpct=20&printit=0&x=83&y=32 calculator. And I just don’t buy it. Is it saying the truth?

For reference I started my weight loss journey in May. I started at 600 or 700 cals a day and stayed like that until late June where I just gave up and said, whatever man, counting cals makes me too anxious. And it’s exhausting.

So until now I worked by weighing myself CONSTANTLY and setting goals, like « if I weigh more than 70.5 right now I’m not allowed to eat until it goes down ». Well guess what... I’ve been maintaining roughly 69kg as my « real weight » for a month now. So yeah, I’m thinking of trying healthy CICO I guess. Because 600 cals a day is more starving than CICO and I think I just lost water weight, and then regained and then lost real fat in the last two weeks. But isn’t 1000 cals a day better than 1290 if I want to lose weight? All these numbers sound too big, i don’t know.

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Looking for new ways to get over the plateau!

F 5’7 | SW: 193 lbs | CW: ~169 lbs | GW: 150 lbs

I didn’t think it would happen but I hit the plateau! I lost ~ 20 pounds from April to the end of June and I was hoping that July would be about the same. However, I’ve been fluctuating between 168 and 170 pounds for the entire month of July! I track my foods meticulously, I work out 5 or 6 days a week, I go on walks almost daily, and I’ve been drinking about 74oz of water daily.

I’ve tried upping my calories for a week and then going back to deficit and that didn’t work. I’ve also tried drinking even more water daily. I’ve tried reducing the intensity of my workouts every other day but I’m still the same weight.

I’m starting to get discouraged and I’m looking for new or unconventional ways to kickstart my weight loss again!

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Advice for my sister?

Both me (F25) and my sister (F32) have been obese most (if not all) of our lives, along with most women on our mothers side of the family. After over ten years of losing and gaining weight, eating disorders etc. my body stopped cooperating completely, so my doctor felt that weight loss surgery was the best option for me if I'd like to have children. While I started that process, my sister started her own weight loss journey roughly at the same time.

We've not always been able to play nice, but doing this together has been very motivating for the both of us. She has no problems getting motivated for physical activity, but struggles in regards to food and diet. Meanwhile, since I've had surgery the problem is the "opposite" for me. Having her motivating me to be more physically active has been great, and I've been motivating her to make nutritional and healthy meals for her entire family.

Recently she has, like many others, let her good habits slip. It's been a good mix of the situation with COVID-19, and now summer holiday. During the past few months she's gained everything back, and I can see it makes her absolutely miserable. I'd like to motivate her without making her feel bad about it. Shame generally doesn't motivate anyone, especially not my sister. After all this is something she likes to do and is passionate about. She's still physically active, but they buy great heaps of junk food and candy more or less every day. Does anyone have any tips? What would you have liked to hear to motivate you in a situation like that?

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The optimal/fun equation of weight loss

I was reading this email newsletter about decision making as you approach a new project and it struck me how applicable it was to weight loss. For those who don't want to read, here's the gist:

If you are excited about the optimal approach, that’s awesome and definitely the best option. But more frequently, you find yourself (or your kids) deciding between box 1 (exciting, but not optimal) or box 3 (optimal, but not exciting). We opted for the excited/non-optimal approach. The alternative was hope we could convince her to like something she hadn’t show interest in prior.

He's talking about teaching his kid how to ride a bike, but the same applies for those of us working to lose weight.

It's easy to get caught up in figuring out the absolute best way to lose weight, build muscle, exercise, etc. But what's most important is what's sustainable for you, what you can commit to long-term once your starry-eyed beginning motivation wears out.

For me, this time around, that's losing weight at .5 lbs a week. Is it the most efficient, optimal way to get to my goal weight? No. But it is way more fun than any other way I've tried to lose weight, and I'm still sticking with it 3 months in. Choose what the method you're excited about, get started, and let the rest of the changes flow from there!

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Starting and haven’t seen any progress

18F// 5’6”// CW 156lbs // GW 130lbs

So i’ve struggled with my weight and body issues for the past 2 years while also struggling with a binge eating disorder. I’ve been worried about my weight for a while now because I don’t feel 100% confident like I used to than when I was 130lbs. My BMI is also in a higher range than it needs to be. And I also just miss wearing cute clothes that don’t fit me that well anymore :/ . Recently I decided things needed to change. Through quarantine I’ve been slowly improving my relationship with food and recently (mostly) defeated my BED (haven’t had a bad binge in about a month)!! My problem is that I’m struggling to see any improvements on the scale or in person.

I’ve been continuously counting calories and working out 4-5x a week and making sure I have a deficit of 500 cals a day. There’s been a couple slip ups where I eat at maintenance but not too many. However, I’m just not seeing anything happen with my numbers or body and it’s been about 2 -3 weeks which is really disappointing and demotivating :((

Do you guys have any advice for me to change something in my routine or plan? Or should I just stick through it because it might take a little while to see results when it’s a more shaping weight loss? Lmk your thoughts!!

Also btw this community is great and very encouraging I’m very glad I joined the sub :))

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my face is getting chubbier while I'm getting slimmer?

so basically what the title says? I've always had a round face with chubbier cheeks, they started slimming down when I was about 18-19, and now at 21 they're puffing back up? it's completely noticeable in the mirror, in photos, when I'm talking or looking down I can even feel the chub that definitely wasn't there a year or two ago.

and it's not from rapid weight loss, I've lost 25lbs over the course of a year. I don't THINK it's my diet, I'm a vegetarian and I cook 80% of the things I eat from scratch and stay very clean and healthy with food, MOST of the time I don't eat any kind of diary or eggs either. I chug water all day long, on average about 3-4 liters, usually more. the only thing I'm consuming that I would think is contributing to it is coffee, no sugar, but I've been chugging coffee consistently for like 5 years so I wouldn't think it's affecting me suddenly now. the only thing that's changed is that I've been completely slacking on actual exercise and just relying on weight loss/maintenance through diet, (I eat between 1,200-1,300 calories a day) since about April, but I'm starting back consistently now. I'd be surprised if exercise is affecting my face that much but I guess it's possible?

that's about all of the info I can think of that would be relevant and I'm at a loss? it's not like it's crazy amounts of chub, as in, I don't think it's any type of medical problem. it's just that my cheeks are chubbier now than they were 25lbs and two years ago and I'm kinda worried?

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I am not sure how to start my weight loss journey...

Hi guys! Can you give me some advice? I have been insecure about my body and my weight my whole life. The thing is: I am not obese, to be honest I think I have a pretty normal body. I am muscular but I have some extra fat here and there. I think if I could lose 10 kgs I would be satisfied. I have been struggling with my weight for such a long lime, I lose like 5 kgs all the time but they always crawl back again. I am running and cycling a lot, so I am pretty muscular and I would even say I am eating healthy, but still I cannot lose weight.

I don’t know where to start, I think I should change my eating routine completely.

I am a 20 year old female, and I have pretty broad shoulders and am naturally muscular, so I dont want to gain muscels I just want to lose fat and be more ripped.

What is your advice to lose 10kgs in a healthy way?

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Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Thursday, 30 July 2020? Start here!

Today is your Day 1?

Welcome to r/Loseit!

So you aren’t sure of how to start? Don’t worry! “How do I get started?” is our most asked question. r/Loseit has helped our users lose over 1,000,000 recorded pounds and these are the steps that we’ve found most useful for getting started.

Why you’re overweight

Our bodies are amazing (yes, yours too!). In order to survive before supermarkets, we had to be able to store energy to get us through lean times, we store this energy as adipose fat tissue. If you put more energy into your body than it needs, it stores it, for (potential) later use. When you put in less than it needs, it uses the stored energy. The more energy you have stored, the more overweight you are. The trick is to get your body to use the stored energy, which can only be done if you give it less energy than it needs, consistently.

Before You Start

The very first step is calculating your calorie needs. You can do that HERE. This will give you an approximation of your calorie needs for the day. The next step is to figure how quickly you want to lose the fat. One pound of fat is equal to 3500 calories. So to lose 1 pound of fat per week you will need to consume 500 calories less than your TDEE (daily calorie needs from the link above). 750 calories less will result in 1.5 pounds and 1000 calories is an aggressive 2 pounds per week.

Tracking

Here is where it begins to resemble work. The most efficient way to lose the weight you desire is to track your calorie intake. This has gotten much simpler over the years and today it can be done right from your smartphone or computer. r/loseit recommends an app like MyFitnessPal, Loseit! (unaffiliated), or Cronometer. Create an account and be honest with it about your current stats, activities, and goals. This is your tracker and no one else needs to see it so don’t cheat the numbers. You’ll find large user created databases that make logging and tracking your food and drinks easy with just the tap of the screen or the push of a button. We also highly recommend the use of a digital kitchen scale for accuracy. Knowing how much of what you're eating is more important than what you're eating. Why? This may explain it.

Creating Your Deficit

How do you create a deficit? This is up to you. r/loseit has a few recommendations but ultimately that decision is yours. There is no perfect diet for everyone. There is a perfect diet for you and you can create it. You can eat less of exactly what you eat now. If you like pizza you can have pizza. Have 2 slices instead of 4. You can try lower calorie replacements for calorie dense foods. Some of the communities favorites are cauliflower rice, zucchini noodles, spaghetti squash in place of their more calorie rich cousins. If it appeals to you an entire dietary change like Keto, Paleo, Vegetarian.

The most important thing to remember is that this selection of foods works for you. Sustainability is the key to long term weight management success. If you hate what you’re eating you won’t stick to it.

Exercise

Is NOT mandatory. You can lose fat and create a deficit through diet alone. There is no requirement of exercise to lose weight.

It has it’s own benefits though. You will burn extra calories. Exercise is shown to be beneficial to mental health and creates an endorphin rush as well. It makes people feel awesome and has been linked to higher rates of long term success when physical activity is included in lifestyle changes.

Crawl, Walk, Run

It can seem like one needs to make a 180 degree course correction to find success. That isn’t necessarily true. Many of our users find that creating small initial changes that build a foundation allows them to progress forward in even, sustained, increments.

Acceptance

You will struggle. We have all struggled. This is natural. There is no tip or trick to get through this though. We encourage you to recognize why you are struggling and forgive yourself for whatever reason that may be. If you overindulged at your last meal that is ok. You can resolve to make the next meal better.

Do not let the pursuit of perfect get in the way of progress. We don’t need perfect. We just want better.

Additional resources

Now you’re ready to do this. Here are more details, that may help you refine your plan.

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Announcement: We Only Look Thin Podcast AMA!

The awesome hosts of the We Only Look Thin podcast, Catherine and Donald Wygal will be hosting an Ask Me Anything Event in r/loseit on Sunday, August 9th at 3:00PM Eastern Standard Time!

Catherine's Bio: Hi, I’m Catherine and I’m 50% of this weight loss gang. I work full time, am a full time mom, a full time wife, and a full time inspiration to all those around me.

I’ve struggled with food issues and my weight since I was 5 years old when I tricked my parents into leaving me at home alone so I could binge-drink a gallon of chocolate milk; it was 1980, so parents let kids stay at home alone back then. While in college, I let myself get up to 300 pounds and have zig-zagged up and down the scale dozens of times, until now, where after two years of incorporating slow, sustainable habits, I’ve settled in to my lowest weight since 5th grade.

THIS time, with the help of my super-inspirational husband, I plan on keeping the weight off. You see, I used to think of weight loss like a syrupy-sweet Hallmark Channel movie, all happy endings and sunsets. THIS time, I realize that permanent weight loss is a lot more like the Friday the 13th movie franchise. You watch the first Friday the 13th movie and you’re like, “Phew, he’s dead!”, and then the sequel comes out and you’re like, “Oh, damn… he’s not dead!” and then the third movie comes out and you’re like, “SERIOUSLY?!! How can he STILL be alive!?!?!”, and then the 4th movie comes out and you’re like, “Okay, this dude is never going to die so we just have to learn to run faster than him and not go camping.” Join us, won’t you?

Donald's Bio: I was born in the last month of the 1960’s, but that doesn’t make me a hippy. I’ve been happily married to my wife, Catherine, for 17 years. We’ve been married a total of 21 years, but 17 of them were happy. We, along with our daughter, live in southern California where we often say heart-felt hellos and good-byes to each other. Well, Catherine and I are heart-felt…. our daughter mostly rolls her eyes and winces at our very existence.

I’ve struggled with my weight and have been a yo-yo dieter for as long as I can remember. At some point in 2015, I had decided that I was going to give up and just let myself get as heavy as I was going to get. I was successful in this endeavor and I reached the heaviest weight of my life.

In March of 2016, I went to my doctor for a routine physical and I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes which does NOT run in my family. I was devastated, and I had no interest in losing any weight. However, my doctor told me that if I didn’t do something, I’d very likely go blind or lose a leg or succumb to any number of complications from diabetes.

Thankfully, Catherine had already been seeking outside advice and had already started losing weight. She was able to help me adjust my attitude and my thinking and I began taking “baby steps” in the right direction. It took me two years, but I managed to lose a little over 100 pounds and my blood sugar numbers went back into the normal range.

Now, together, Catherine and I embark on the next phase; keeping the weight off forever! And being inspirational! And using exclamation marks! Join us, won’t you?

Mark your calendars, and get ready for a super-inspirational(-ational, -ational, -ational) AMA with two accomplished (weight-)losers who are in it for the long haul!

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Weight loss plateau, need to correct eating habits

TL;DR: I've got a weird pattern of skipping meals and binging like crazy, haven't lost weight with consistent IF for months, need some suggestions on food I can either prepare quickly on demand or prepare in advance if necessary.

Notes:

I'm a 24 year old male.

My apartment doesn't have an air conditioner, so using an oven is really not the best option for me. I do have an instant pot and a great set of nonstick pans, however.

No cholesterol or blood pressure issues, my bloodwork has always been 'great' according to my doctors, surprisingly.

I can eat meat and I'm not allergic to anything.

I'd prioritize taste over effectiveness and cost. Honestly feel like my goal right now is to eat 'normally' rather than to lose weight, just figuring it out is hard.

I've had luck feeding myself with egg sandwiches in the morning and pasta for a late lunch. Variety would be super helpful, as would vegetables..

Boring stuff:

Hello,

I was normally 165, lifted and worked out to 143, gained a bunch of weight over a year of antidepressants and job loss and whatnot to 181, and adopted intermittent fasting and a bunch of water to get down to 155. I'm trying to get below 150 before I start eating enough to maintain(even if that's overweight for my 5'6" height)

I've kept up the intermittent fasting for the past few months though and haven't really seen my weight change. Kind of worried that I'm either eating too much or too little depending on the day. I have the issue where since I'm working from home I'm always being pulled into meetings and the like, so I don't have a ton of time to eat properly, so I might skip meals entirely on some days depending on how timing works.

For example, some days I can get by with just a cereal bar. But other days, I'll end up eating half a large pizza and delaying my fasting windows.

I feel like I can maybe solve this through some meal prep, so I want to accomplish the following:

Prep meals that I can pick up and eat at my desk, either through advance meal prep or through quick meals that will allow me to keep losing weight.

Bring my metabolism back up to speed by eating more consistently to avoid binge eating/metabolism slowdown

Accommodate a cheat day so I can get takeout or do bubble tea or whatnot.

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