Monday, June 30, 2025

I hate how people switch up after I’ve lost weight

(18F) for most of my life since I was around 10 I’ve been overweight, and later at around 15-17 I was obese. Since may of 2024, I’ve been losing weight and have successfully lost 75 pounds. While I do enjoy not feeling helpless about my weight anymore, I hate the difference in the way people treat me. Some of my classmates began to point out my weight loss, and even had one of my “friends” tell me I look way prettier now. I know I should be happy about these compliments, but deep down they make me angry for my past self. In addition, I’ve noticed how family members treat me differently and don’t constantly bring up what I’m eating anymore. I’ve been taken more serious at doctors visits, and overall strangers are way nicer to me. After being ridiculed about my weight for a long time and having to deal with all the fat jokes and blatant disrespect, seeing those same people now treat me with actual human decency makes me feel ill. I did the weight loss for myself, but it ended up being a reminder of how shitty some people are towards others just based off of their appearance.

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The gym sucks

I'm 1 year into maintenance. I achieved my weight loss through calorie counting and running mainly, but also some weight training a few times per month (my old condo had a gym - moved ~9 mos ago). Since then, it's just been sporadic running. I've been realizing how much the running and weights helped me maintain my weight and more importantly, LOOK FIT. I'm only 3-5lb up from my best weight (which is ok, I have a range) but I look kinda skinny fat. This time last year I got many compliments for looking fit!

Anyways my husband has tried all the gyms in our area for 9 mos and took me to his favourite this weekend when my mom was in town and could babysit. Crowded, over stimulating, social anxiety triggers with people flexing in the mirror and taking pictures and me not knowing how to use machines immediately, but worst of all was the machine hogs!! The machine that would let me do hip thrusts was hogged by one girl for 45 minutes (on her phone 75% of the time) and even getting a bench was a struggle. My husband said it was average in terms of busyness. My current home isn't big enough for a home gym unfortunately.

Really just venting and admiring all you who put up with it 😂

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Sunday, June 29, 2025

New here, and excited that I've started!

Hi everyone! Just wanted to say hello and that I've been lurking the past two weeks since I started my journey. I've been through many weight loss journeys in the past that really haven't been successful or haven't been long, but I feel very confident about this one. I saw someone on here post about the Lose It! app which helped them a lot, and I've been successful in staying within my budgeted calories because of it for the past couple of weeks!

I thought I was just a little more than I really wanted to be until I stepped on the scale at the gym a couple of weeks ago and realized that I had no idea how I got to be 230 when I thought I was 205 at the most, so after a lot of crying to my partner and googling and finding this subreddit (and thinking "how could I possibly ride a horse if I get any heavier??" ... I haven't ridden a horse in 15 years), I've decided to make my weight loss journey more scientific-based, and I think that's helping me a lot. I've been a big numbers person my entire life, so thinking of it simply being a bunch of numbers has been a good mindset so far.

I'm doing a calorie deficit and weight lifting 3 days a week, and I'm walking minimum 7k steps most days, although I just got a walking pad in for when I work from home or play games on my computer, and I've absolutely fallen in love with it. I'm trying not to push myself TOO hard early on because I have a tendency to burn myself out, but as someone who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 3 years ago, I'm also telling myself that getting into these good habits now will keep me healthy for the future.

Anyway, just wanted to say hi, and I'm excited to be a part of this community! So far, around 7 pounds down, and I'm excited to see if I can hit my goal of 185lbs!

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Feeling uncomfortable

So I’m on a weight loss journey, I’ve found 1 pound per week is what’s good for me. I started at 192 and now I’m at 186 but I feel so uncomfortable. I hate being overweight and it’s taking forever to loose the weight at only 1 pound per week. I work out 5 days a week and stick to my allotted calories, I occasionally go over but I don’t count exercise into how many calories I allow myself so I think that makes up for it. If I want to loose 2 pounds per week I can only have 1200 calories per day and I’ve tried that, I usually end up bingeing because it’s too restrictive. To loose 1 pound per week I can have 1400 per day which I find more sustainable and I know I’ll get to my goal weight eventually if I keep going. It’s a life style change I don’t want to rapidly loose all this weight then gain it back after I want to be healthy, but at the same time I find myself hating my body. I’m 5’1 so 186 on me is a lot, I’m lucky I have an hour glass figure which I try to remember but I still feel so uncomfortable in my own skin. It’s summer time I want to go the beach and swimming but I just feel terrible putting on bathing suits. I also ate about 1000 extra calories the other night and I’ve been beating myself up about it since. Any tips or advice would be much appreciated I just hate feeling so discouraged when I know I’m doing things the right way.

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Saturday, June 28, 2025

My weight loss roller coaster

Warning: very very very long.

I’ve struggled with my weight and self esteem for a long time. In my teens, I started gaining weight, and proceeded to move from normal range to overweight to obese over the next decade.

It wasn’t until just before Covid started that I got a frightening wake-up call: I strained my knee running for a bus, at 27 yo.

Then Covid hit, along with a job loss, which ended up giving me a clear 1 year to balance job-hunting with eating better and exercising.

At the start, I couldn’t run, but I could walk. So walk I did - 5km a day as a start. Within weeks, that went up to 7-8km. Then I started adding running, using strap-on knee braces for support. It would be short distances - 50m at a time every few minutes. Then it became 100m, then 200m. By the end of that year-long stretch, I was running 5km straight, no pauses, no knee braces. I added light weight training and lots of stretching. My daily regiment was: 90min walk/run mix, 15min stretching, 15min weight training, all every morning, and then a 45min walk every evening.

At the same time, I was counting calories, not to starve, but to make sure I wasn’t overeating. I was shocked to discover, once I measured the ingredients, that one of my favorite salads was 1000 calories! And I was having that just for lunch! I swapped it with a big bowl of chili con carne that I would eat with a single slice of bread, when the entire meal came to 400 calories. I always ate the same thing for breakfast: muesli with plain yogurt, and some fruit. I made sure to maintain a reasonable calorie deficit, based on the exercise calories burnt, and the result was approx 1.5-2kg loss a month.

By the end of the year, I was down from 83kg to 65kg, and fitting into clothes I never imagined fitting into, and being so much stronger and fitter than I ever dared to imagine.

Since then, I gained all that weight back, as I was overcompensating with being unemployed and doing a lot of overtime, with no time left to cook again - the challenge was finding a rhythm that could work around my work schedule. It was very start-stop, and one time when a routine did start, it got broken because of an extended trip.

I am back to working regular hours and now have a new routine that works: morning run/walk for 45-60mins + 15 min stretching, going into office during lunch hour (hybrid work policy), plus meal prepping on Sundays. Every Saturday is cheat day, when I eat whatever I want, but always counting calories, even if they are “over the limit”. Got a cheap treadmill for home for rainy days so no excuses.

I’m down 6kg in 3 months, and I feel so much more motivated, so I think it’s sticking this time!

Sorry for the word wall, and even if nobody reads it, I’m so proud of me, I wanted to just put it out there. If it helps anyone, that’s a tremendous bonus!

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MyFitnessPal calorie goal doesn't seem to be creating a deficit

Edit: If I change my rate of weight loss goal from .5 lb per week to 1 lb per week, MFP is not recalculating my daily calorie goal. I am going to uninstall it an reinstall and re-set it up and see what happens.

I (F/60/5'4"/144) enter my info correctly and it says calorie goal is 1920/day. I am not choosing to increase my calorie goal daily based on exercise.

MFP says it creates the daily calorie goal based on a deficit in order to reach your weight loss goal: "Your daily calorie goal already accounts for your intent to gain or lose weight ... you can achieve your goal by eating the specified number of calories per day, with no additional exercise required."

Two days in a row I ate 1880 and 1900 calories, and when I hit "complete diary," it said, "if you ate this way every day, in 5 weeks you would weigh [.3 of a pound less than I weigh now]." How can I make it calculate a deficit to lose 3/4 of a pound or 1 pound per week? What am I missing? Thanks. (I know I can set the calorie goal myself, but I want the app to work the way it says it does.)

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Help setting up my workout schedule and exercises (29M) Gym+Padel

Hello!

I (29M, 114kg) am currently on my weight loss journey, from very obese (Max weight of 150kg) and my goal is to get down to around 80 Kg one day.

I started playing Padel once a week last year and have since started playing twice a week (Friday and Sunday) and currently signed up for a team training for padel on Tuesday which ends on the 8th of July.

Since starting to play I have been quite on/off in the gym but I would like to get back into on a more regular schedule and workout regime. Besides the padel and gym, I also strive for a minimum of 10k steps daily.

I have been working on my diet for a while and feel like I have got it somewhat in check as to what works for me, also in the long-term..

I work Monday to Thursday 6-14:45 and then have about a 40 minute bus ride home and Friday is 6-12 with a padel session afterwards.

I had a basic idea of about 3-4 workout days a week. Preferably not doing legs the days after a padel session as they are usually wiped out for about a day after.

As besides this I am a little unsure about how to go about the exercises, as I would like it to generally be about losing the weight, but also to help improve performance in padel, if that makes sense.

Previously I had done a basic PPL with decent success and wouldn't mind it again, with some guidance regarding the exercises, but I am quite open to ideas of the structure ☺️

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Friday, June 27, 2025

Question for my fellow short girls!

Hello! Relatively new to weight loss and I am finally committing to it for real this time! I'm just curious as I am 5'3 and weigh about 200lbs and used the TDEE calculator to figure out my deficit and it says to stay around 1500 cals a day. However when I see other short girls posting they say their deficit is around 1200 cals and that short women typically have to have a lower deficit. Am I doing something wrong by staying at 1500 cals? I'm not trying to lose weight super fast (although that would be great) I just want to make sure I'm doing this the right way so it'll stay off this time! Any advice would be great. I'm also committing to walking 7k-10k steps a day and doing pure barre 3x a week (this is all a new addition)

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Thursday, June 26, 2025

Reasons you may want to incorporate strength training in your weight loss journey

  1. Retain the Lean Mass you already have. Without weight training, your body will try to use all its energy stores in order to compensate for any calorie deficit. This means consuming both your excess fat and muscle. By weight training, it signals to your body that something in your environment means muscle must be a priority. So your body will target fat for weight loss. However, in extreme calorie deficits, your body will still consume much of its muscle.

  2. Calories Burned. Most weight lifting sessions are somewhere around 20-60 minutes. That's 20-60 minutes of elevated heart rate and increased heat production. This increases your calorie burn over that time.

  3. Improves strength and health. There is a very strong correlation between muscle mass and lower hazard ratio/improved Quality of Life. For myself, I find my joints behave better when under muscular tension when I'm working out regularly versus feeling loose when I'm not.

  4. Increased Density. Muscle is about 15% denser than fat. This means you can carry the same weight of muscle as fat, in a more aesthetically pleasing way, in less volume.

  5. Muscle has 3x the thermogenesis of fat. While fat consumes about 2 kcal/lb per day to heat itself, that same lb of muscle consumes 6 kcal/day. In other terms, for every lb of fat in your body you replace with muscle, your calorie consumption for that same pound just to keep existing at that same weight is 200% higher.

  6. Gives the skin somewhere to fill out. Anyone who's lost substantial weight knows the battle of loose skin and stretch marks. By adding muscle, it reduces these "bat wings" to some degree preserving some of the more aesthetic appearance.

  7. For the women, don't fear bulking. Many women fear weight training because they don't want to bulk up. First of all, women produce far less testosterone than men, so it is far more difficult for them to bulk up. Secondly, many men spend years in the gym trying to bulk up with only limited success. For women especially, you really have try in order to take on a more masculine appearance. Don't be afraid of the weights.

  8. Tying everything together. If you can replace some 25 lbs of fat with muscle over say 3 years, you will look better, feel better, occupy less volume, and increase your weight loss due to the calorie burn of the activity, and increase your BMR by 100 kcal allowing you to consume more daily calories without putting additional weight on.

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How do you navigate ice cream outings during the summer?

During the summer many people like to spontaneously go out for ice cream after dinner, or other high calorie foods. Many ice cream restaurants do not have calories listed since as they are not chain stores, though I know ice cream generally is very caloric and not nutrient dense.

Ice cream is honestly not my favorite high calorie treat, but twice in the last week I’ve gone for ice cream, bought the smallest size (still a large portion in my opinion) and eaten most of it.

How do people on a weight loss journey navigate the pressure of going for ice cream? It seems like a pretty co-dependent activity and I would feel like a bummer for saying no. If I were to really indulge calories-wise, I would enjoy a bakery item or nachos a lot more. I wish they sold fruit cups or something!

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What are some non-aesthetic reasons you want to lose weight? These are mine...

I want to be able to have a fun day at a theme park without my feet being in excruciating pain halfway through the day.

I don't want to get winded going up a flight of stairs.

I want to be able to run really fast someday.

I want to have more energy throughout my day.

I don't want to have high blood pressure anymore.

I want to feel strong.

I want to have a healthy pregnancy someday.

If I have kids, I want to be able to set a good example and teach them healthy habits.

I want to prove to myself that I CAN.

I deserve to be better taken care of.

I want a longer life. 😢

Looking good is a great outcome of losing weight, but at the end of the day my quality of life would improve immensely and personally looks was never a good motivator for me, so I'm focusing on these things a lot more. What are some reasons (besides looks) that helped you decide to embark on a weight loss journey?

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Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Will losing weight actually change my life or is it just in my head?

I’ve been thinking a lot about weight loss and whether it really changes your life in a meaningful way. I realized that if I had some kind of big goal or project with a deadline, something where I needed to be in shape, I’d probably be really motivated. I’d take it seriously and stick to it. But then I thought, isn’t that big goal just my life?

I connect so many things to my weight and how I look. I keep telling myself that once I lose weight I’ll feel more confident, I’ll dress better, I’ll be more social, maybe even approach people I’m interested in. I believe my quality of life would improve. But I’m not actually overweight. I’m close and my eating habits aren’t the best, but medically I’m still in the normal range. Still, I don’t feel good. I don’t feel attractive or comfortable in my body.

So now I’m wondering, would losing a few pounds really change my life? Or am I just hoping that a physical change will fix how I feel inside? Most of the stories I hear are from people who lost a lot of weight and say it transformed their lives. But what about people like me? Those who just want to lose a bit to feel better - did it actually help?

I’m trying to figure out if it’s really about my body or if it’s how I see myself no matter what. If you’ve been through something similar I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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Propananol & Weight Loss

Hi, I am on 80mg of propananol per day and can not come off this medication. I need to loose weight and have put a lot of weight on since starting this medication (around 1.5 stone in weight in around 2 years).

I eat around 1,000 to 1,300 calories per day and I eat healthy - 3 meals and no snacks. I dont eat cakes, crisps, chocolate etc - the thing I love is bread but I only have it now in the morning and it is brown bread (I also intend to stop this and go on to porridge).

The issue is I want to loose this added weight and have no idea how to do this? I have an exercise bike that I use and do 30 to 1 hour cycles on at a medium intensity. Ive been doing plenty of walks - especially up hill - all of this has done NOTHING!

I put all of this into ChatGPT and it told me it was likely to be the propananol and that I should focus on weight training rather than cardio for weight loss??

I am just looking for advise and also if there are others out there going through this or those who have found the answer to get their body to wake up and ditch the fat whilst still being on beta blockers? Any help appreciated - I am at my wits end with this now - I feel so tired from doing the exercise and to see it is not making any difference is soul destroying - my partner doesn't understand - he just tells me to go and see the dr and come off propananol (which I cant as this is for heart arrythmia brought on by the covid jab not bp).

Extremely grateful for any help/advise on diet and/or exercise

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Obesity and childhood food insecurity

So I've been going to therapy for the last 2 years or so after a cancer diagnosis (doing fine now, cancer free, woohoo!). We've discovered that I grew up with food insecurity due to neglect (I thought it was just a little abnormal, didn't realize how bad it all actually was), and this has a direct correlation with developing obesity and unhealthy eating habits.

Just wondering if anyone else has discovered something similar in their lives as they have been working on their weight loss too? Just. It's been a bit of a trip to realize that I have 100+ pounds to lose because of, essentially, being the victim of child neglect/abuse. It's completely reframed everything I thought I knew and understood, and it feels like it's lifted away this since of guilt or shame while also making me feel just so angry and kinda helpless because it turns out that it wasn't completely my own fault I got this heavy?

Sorry if this is too random or off topic for this subreddit. I'm just wondering if there are others out there who have experienced this too? How are you doing with all of it mentally, and how has it changed how you approach trying to lose weight in a healthy way?

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Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Where to find good info on weight loss surgery in Australia (Melbourne)?

Hi everyone,

I’m currently exploring the idea of weight loss surgery and still very much on the fence about it. I’ve been trying to find more info. Like there's plenty on what it is and who qualifies and all that but it's hard to know where to go when there are so many options and hard to find any info on pricing etc. And I don't want to have to book an appointment to get to know a surgeon and then decide they aren't a good fit. Does anyone know of any online info sessions, meet and greets or similar that are happening soon?

I remember seeing a few from clinics doing this a while back, but not sure if these still run or where to find the legit ones.

I’m keen to do more research before making any decisions. Any pointers would be amazing!

Thanks in advance 🙏

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An unexpected benefit of losing weight is my better sleeping habits

At the end of the day, after I've had all the food I've budgeted for, I tend to wanna stay up and scroll on Reddit or play video games. But the later I stay up, the sleepier/hungrier I get and the lower my willpower becomes. So instead of a late night snack ruining the day's progress, I've got some good motivation to go to bed at a reasonable hour.

What are some unexpected benefits of being in a deficit for you all? I don't mean the actual weight loss, but is there any aspect of your life that has improved simply by the act of losing weight?

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What's something you learned about weight loss really late? I'll go first

Hi eveyrone,

27F female here. Went through a chubby phase for 3-4 years in my mid-twenties, finally lost the weight, and am happy where I am. I was in med school for about two years, and I was dismissed because I wasn't progressing. During that time, I totally neglected my health, and rocketed up to weighing 160 lbs as a 5'3.5" woman.

I started working out again, as skipping it is the main reason I gained so much. I lost about 15 ish lbs just getting back into shape. I still had an extra ten lbs I wanted to lose. I realized that while going back into being active had allowed me to lose most of the weight, and my eating habits were fine as well, I was carrying that weight because it was leftover from my Couch Potato phase. I needed to go into a calorie deficit to lose it.

So I did two "rounds" of a small calorie deficit, just 200-300 calories a day. I did it May and June 2024, and then Nov/Dec/Jan 2024-2025. I lost the last ten lbs easily.

When I was teenager, I was a bit overweight after going through puberty, as I was sedentary and did not do sports. I got really into working out when I was 17, and lost some of the weight. Even though I was fit, in my late teens I was still a bit chubby, mostly on my stomach, For context, I am about 135-137 lbs now, but back then I was like 147 ish. I didn't understand that that extra weight was left over from being sedentary, and doing a calorie def would cause me to lose it. Ironically, when I was 20 I had some health issues that caused me to lose weight, so the extra weight came off and I was thin in my early 20's.

The way I lost the bulk of my puberty weigh gain was dangerous. I was 5'3.5' at 15, and for 5 months ate 1200 cals a day, even on days where I worked out. I came dangerously close to developing an eating disorder, which was why I couldn't bring myself to count calories at all until was 25. I was afraid of sliding back into those "almost ED" habits. However, when I did the calorie deficit this past year, I did it in a healthy manner.

I wish I could go back in time and just do a couple of months of a slight diet when I was 18, to lose that pouch I was so self conscious about. It is true that I did mostly cardio instead of leaning into conditioning workouts, that could have increased my yield and toned my stomach a bit more.

I look at old photos of myself, and my belly wasn't bad. But it was a source of self consciousness at the time, especially since I was in good shape, and most people who are still in their teens have that "youthful skinny" going on.

Anyway. Anyone else?

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Monday, June 23, 2025

I hit my new low weights! + Starting over on my weight loss journey.

I hit my new low weights + Starting over the weight loss journey.

F30. SW: 320. CW: 274 - 271. GW: 130.

So I am starting over with my weight loss and fitness journey!

Starting at 274. Yesterday morning I hit my new low weight at 271! I haven’t been that weight in YEARS. Even before I started at 275 3 years ago. I am so happy to be back at my starting weight again.

I plan to keep hitting the gym 3 times a week, and I would LOVE to go 4-5 times a week. Just like I used to before I lived here. I can’t wait to move out on my own again and have my own apartment. I just started a new seasonal job for the summer, Hoping to get hired after, So it might be a little hard to workout in the afternoons unless it’s after dinner time hopefully or on my days off. I only work 2 days a week so it is possible!

So I also plan to keep working out in my room with YouTube workouts as well, And getting my steps in daily. I think that getting my steps in lately + the gym has helped me lose these 10 lbs. I was stuck at 285 for most of the year. So I am so happy to be back at this weight.

I really hope to hit my weight loss goal in the next 2 years. I am fighting and working hard towards my goals! I really want to move out as well which I think living in a warmer climate again should help my weight loss a lot.

Wish me luck on my weight loss journey! Any advice is appreciated.

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Lost 100+ Pounds and then Nothing for 8 Months

37F | 5'4" | Starting Weight: 290.0 | Lowest Weight: 172.6 | Current Weight: 186.6 | Goal Weight: 145.0

I've struggled with my weight my entire life, and gained around 100 pounds from a medication I was on in my early 20s. I'm one of those people that lost and gained the same 30-40 pounds multiple times, but nothing ever "stuck." About 2 years ago, after being diagnosed with multiple auto-immune and arthritis-based conditions, I was basically desperate to do anything to try to feel better and reduce the pain/inflammation, so I started by focusing on whole foods, then walking daily, then following an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet. After a few months, I also started going to physical therapy multiple times a week and doing quite a bit of resistance training.

For the first time in my life, weight loss was actually easy! I routinely lost at least 5-10 pounds a month, and ended up losing nearly 120 pounds in about 15 months. Then in October it just completely stopped. At first, I wasn't particularly concerned because I knew I would probably hit a plateau at some point. I had also recently changed physical therapy providers and was lifting heavier weights so I thought that could be part of it. While I don't totally trust my body comp scale, it seemed to think I had gained 3 or 4 pounds of muscle so when I was weighing a few pounds heavier, I didn't mind as long as it was muscle. I hung out around 175 for a couple of months and since it was Thanksgiving/Christmas and we traveled for several weeks, I wasn't being strict about tracking calories or anything and planned to basically make a push to lose the rest of the weight after the first of the year.

January came and I became more focused on weight loss again, started tracking again, upped my walking, all the things, and nothing happened. Not only did I not lose any more weight, I was slowly starting to fluctuate up into the higher 170s. Around April, I started seeing weights in the low 180s again. After a last-minute cross-country trip at the end of May for a funeral, I came back home and the scale was 196.6. I freaked out about the prospect of being over 200 again, so for the last 3 weeks, I've been incredibly on track. I tend to get very inflammed when traveling, and I did drop the 12 pounds or so I was up within a few days. But despite doing all the "right things," I'm just not being able to budge from the mid-180s.

I have historically used MyFitnessPal, but I switched to LoseIt last week. I track and weigh/measure everything. I drink a ton of water (about 1.5 gallons a day). I do pretty well with my protein goals and great with fiber. I have been very strict about my anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet as far as no added sugar, tons of vegetables, only lean protein, no red meat, a good amount of beans, etc. A typical day is a smoothie for breakfast with something like strawberries/blueberries, lots of spinach, and pea protein, usually a bowl for lunch with something like chicken/shrimp, zucchini, beans, and rice, and normally something like fish with a couple of veggies for dinner. I'm not a big snacker, I usually have a coffee with Fairlife milk in the morning and possibly an Oikos Triple Zero yogurt in the afternoon, before or after physical therapy.

As far as exercise, I live in southern Arizona and temps have been 110+ lately, so walking outdoors has mostly not been an option, but I do typically ride my exercise bike 4-5 times a week. I also have physical therapy twice a week where I do strength training both with resistance bands and weights. I usually do additional sessions of that at home throughout the week. In other seasons of the year, I typically walk 5-6 days a week and hike 1-2 a week. I have been considering purchasing a walking pad to use during the hot summer months.

I've worked with a dietician for almost 2 years since just a few months into this weight loss journey. For a variety of reasons (mostly TMJ-related easting restrictions and then a serious bout of gastritis), there were times when my ability and desire to eat were affected so eating 1200-1300 calories was about all I could manage, but for the majority of my weight loss, I was eating more like 1500 calories. When my weight loss plateaued, my dietician initially suggested eating more like 1800 calories, but I feel like that's when I started gaining from 175ish back up to 185ish. I tried going back to around 1500 calories, but that didn't seem to move the needle either.

When I joined LoseIt, they suggested eating around 1350 Monday-Thursday and 1550 Friday-Sunday based on the parameters I provided. I tried that last week and that was fine, I averaged about 1440 calories (with exercise the average was 1200) and felt satiated for the most part, but I actually ended up gaining weight! It's so frustrating to me because I'm typically able to eat 100% at home Monday-Thursday and the scale will start trending down, but then the second I eat away from the home, I gain it all back and more. I obviously try to limit eating out, but the reality is that it is going to happen 2-3 times a week when I'm socializing with friends. Thursday night I attended a potluck, but I was incredibly mindful about what I ate. I brought chicken breast and a broccoli salad where I'd have something lean to eat. I only got one small plate. I had pre-tracked calories before I arrived to know how much to get. Same thing Friday when my husband and I went out to dinner. I picked a healthier option, I knew exactly what I was going to order, only ate half, tracked everything. And then Saturday I hosted a party, but same thing, was really mindful, stuck to the light options, really ate slowly and listened to hunger cues. And after all of that, to be up almost a pound and a half versus down the pound and a half I should have been is just so incredibly frustrating.

I recognize that the higher sodium in foods outside the home probably account for my weight being up and that it may drop again in the next couple of days, but I'm just so tired of feeing like I'm stuck in this cycle of thinking I'm losing again and then it just going right back up. I know that I'm working against my body as far as inflammation and that I do have physical limitations that prevent me from more aggressive forms of exercise, but I just feel like something is "wrong" at this point. My dietician doesn't seem to understand my level of frustration, my therapist seems to think I should just accept that this is my new "set point," and my husband thinks I'm massively overreacting since I'm literally 100+ pounds smaller than I was. But now that I'm smaller, every extra ounce seems to go straight to my stomach and I'm so tired of feeling like I look like I swallowed a basketball. I've worked so hard to just feel like I never look good in clothes or to feel like I'm still the biggest girl in photos.

And I'd be lying if I said I don't care about aesthetics/appearance, but really and truly, it is more about my health to me. With all of the health problems and diagnoses, I ended up developing high blood pressure and I desperately want to get to the point that I'm able to discontinue those medications. I also want to do everything I can to limit extra weight and stress on my joints. I also don't want doctors to ever be able to use my weight as an excuse of why I'm in pain or things like that. I also know menopause my not be far around the corner, so I just very much feel like now is the time to lose the rest of the weight as I know it will likely only get harder the older I get and the more my medical conditions progress.

I know that's a lot, but what can I do to lose another 40 pounds? I feel like I've tried everything. I keep trying to get to the bottom of what changed and the thing is there's a million variables. Around the time my weight loss stalled, I had quite a bit of medication changes. I had to discontinue my Celebrex (NSAID) due to the gastritis not healing, so it stands to reason inflammation is a bigger challenge (though last time my inflammation markers were checked they were in the normal range for the first time ever). As my gastritis healed, I was able to come off my high dose of Omeprazole and also decreased my Famotidine and I do think those had an impact on my appetite. Also with the gastritis, I had to discontinue some of my anti-inflammatory supplements like Turmeric and Vitamin D. Also last fall, I found out I was extremely anemic so I did have to do a round of high-dose Iron, but that has now corrected itself and is back in the normal range. I also had an unsuccessful procedure to get steroid injections in my SI joints in October and then surgery to remove an endometrial polyp back in December.

I'm just really at a loss as to what the issue is. I eat so clean and I focus so much on whole foods, that I just don't know what more improvements I can make at this point. I personally believe that things are not always as simple as CICO, but at the same time, the "math is just not mathing" at this point. Please help!

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5’11/M/27.. realistically speaking, how much more weight can I lose before my wedding in October?

As of today, I weigh 222 pounds. At my heaviest, I was around 250 pounds. I started my weight loss journey in December of last year. I got tired of hating the way I looked, and I got a lot of comments from others about my weight gain. I’ve had some setbacks (bad days, fast food, alcohol) but I’ve gotten better recently with cutting those things out (or at least limiting those things). I have noticed some physical results but not a whole lot. I still feel fat.

Anyways, I’m engaged and I’ll be getting married in October and I’d like to look nice for my wedding day. I was actually pretty thin for most of my life, so I really don’t like taking pictures after all this weight gain.

For exercise, I was mostly trying to get at least 10K steps a day and tracking calories. Last week, I started lifting weights at a local gym. I’m also considering fasting. My goal weight is 170, but I’m still 50 pounds away. I don’t know if I can reach that by October, but can I at least get close?

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Sunday, June 22, 2025

Surprising Result After Week-Long Break

I (29F, 5'4" SW 200lbs CW 173.6lbs) started my current weight loss journey at the beginning of march.

About 4 weeks ago I finally hit the milestone of going from 'obese' to just 'overweight' which was very exciting, but then I think I hit a bit of a plateau. I was fluctuating just over and under that mark for about 3 weeks afterwards.

Because of this apparent plateau, and because this past week I knew I had quite a few family events/meals out/events where I knew I'd be drinking, I decided I would take a week-long break. I didn't track as accurately and I let myself cut loose a little bit, while still trying to be mindful of what I was consuming. There were a couple days where I likely still within my deficit, a couple days where I was likely around maintenance, and a couple days when I was almost certainly in a surplus.

I was nervous about weighing in this morning, so imagine my surprise when I hit a new low!

I still have a long way to go, of course (I don't really have a goal weight; mostly just aiming to get to a good place with my appearance/how I feel), but this has definitely given me a boost!

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Feeling like a failure - cannot maintain consistency - desperate for advice!

Hi Loseit community, I could really use some insight. I'm feeling like such a failure right now.

I’ve been stuck around 162lbs for over 6 weeks now (down from 173lbs since Jan 2025). I’m F/34/5'6", and aiming to hit 150 by September, so I know I need a consistent deficit, but I keep averaging 13,000–13,500 calories per week when I need to be closer to 12,000 to lose at my current weight.

Here’s the problem:

I start every week strong, logging, weighing, eating max 1700 calories. I weigh and track everything I eat.

Then Thurs–Sat creep up: fatigue, social plans, feeling “deserving” of a break

I rarely go way over...more like 200–400 kcal per day, but it adds up

End result: stuck in maintenance limbo week after week

I’ve already tried:

  • Eating more fibre / more protein

  • Higher calories on social days, lower on others

  • Not eating after 8pm

  • No takeaways this year (at all!)

  • Low-carb days

  • Tracking everything accurately and meal prepping

  • reducing alcohol

  • Exercise 3–5x/week (mix of strength, cardio, walking)

  • Daily weigh-ins and weekly averages

  • Being really honest about portion sizes

But I still can’t seem to keep my weekly calories under 12,000. I’m not bingeing. I’m just slightly over most days, and the weight loss just isn’t happening. It feels like I’m constantly putting in 80–90% effort but not getting results because ultimately I'm still overeating and unable to stop myself. I feel like a failure every Sunday and its really starting to get me down.

How do you actually lock in consistency week to week?

If you cracked the code on breaking through this kind of mental/behavioural plateau, how?

What helped you stay at 1700 max daily (or whatever your number was) without sliding?

I’m open to any mental strategies, mindset shifts, boundary setting tips...anything that helped you stay within your weekly budget consistently.

Thanks in advance. I really want to make this work and finally move the dial.

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Saturday, June 21, 2025

Is there an app for visually tracking progress?

I just watched Mr. Beast’s latest video about weight loss and it really got me thinking. There was this montage they showed, tracking progress over time and it honestly looked like the kind of thing that would be super helpful for staying motivated. I’m wondering if there’s an app out there that lets you log your journey like that. I feel like seeing those gradual changes in one place could be the thing that keeps me going on days when I don’t feel like anything’s changing. Has anyone used something like this? I’d love to hear what’s worked for others.

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Is it really water weight?

I have been on a calorie deficit for around 3/4 weeks now and i have been reaching to just eat healthier and overall look better. I have been eating around 1500kcal a day while also working out my core every other day. I have been making really good progress, already losing 10 pounds but when i went to weight myself i saw that instead of losing i instead gained 2lbs. I thought i was gonna be 3 pounds lighter since that what the routine had been everytime i weighed myself but i was confused and first looked at reddit and other stuck looking for an answer.

I came to the conclusion that it might be water weight but its the next day from and i still havent gone down. does it usually take longer for water weight to go down or did i actually gain more weight? I also have a weird sort of physique to where weight loss isnt completely noticeable and im just tryna sort out any type of explanation.

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Success, even when I treated myself!

I attended the funeral of a co-workers farther today. I didn't know it but it brought up a lot.

Along with a very hot day, the result was my husband and I going to the pub. I'm massively cutting down on booze on this weight loss journey but today was tough so I gave in. As a comprise,we walked there both ways. The result was 11k steps.

I added every pint to my calorie counter app and when I knew another would leave no room for dinner, I stopped. My goal is 1500 a day, (female)

Dinner even ended up being a takeaway but I deliberately ordered from the only place that includes calories on the menu. It's 10pm and I still have 100 calories to spare I think I'll drink a big water and hit the hay.

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I feel like a real person again

I’ve lost around 20-25 pounds since January, and a couple weeks ago it felt like a switch flipped in my brain. All of a sudden I felt like I was living in my body for the first time inside of being trapped inside my head. When I looked in the mirror, it reflected how I see myself in my mind— it was an incredibly validating and confidence-boosting feeling. When I look down at my hands or catch a glimpse of my reflection in a window, it actually feels like me. It’s so freeing to be out of a cycle of inner hatred. I’m still planning on losing more weight, and I’ve been very private about my weight loss journey, but I just wanted to share and see if anyone else has come to a similar realization!

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Friday, June 20, 2025

How to beat the urge to eat?

Hey guys! Currently on a weight loss journey and 20/40 lbs down. Although I can plan my meals pretty well to be stuff I enjoy, doing low cal swaps and being consistent in the gym, one thing I’ve been struggling with is resisting the urge to snack and treat myself. It isn’t necessarily the fact that I’m hungry I just crave a bag of chips or a sweet treat especially now that’s it’s summer and my schedule is very open (I’m a student). I’m finding it harder to resist the urge although what’s keeping me motivated is my upcoming vacation however once that’s past I don’t know. I can try and fit more snacks into my deficit but I rather prioritize eating actual meals since I’m doing an aggressive cut since I rather lose weight quicker. Sorry for the long message and let me know what has worked for yall :)

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Little big win: I said no to a donut!!!

Donuts are my #1 ultimate comfort food, and Friday is usually a guaranteed donut day to celebrate the weekend. I decided to treat myself to an iced tea instead because I do enjoy the ritual of it all. But... I made the mistake of going out hungry and stressed and then I got stuck in construction traffic. By the time I finally got to Dunkin', I had talked myself into a donut and even logged it in LoseIt.

When I got in the drive through, I ordered my iced tea and THEN... I said "that'll be it." It felt AWESOME!

I'm in the first week of this round of weight loss so every win feels enormous, but this definitely felt like a breakthrough!

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I’m almost at my goal weight but I want to lose more

Anybody else get close to their goal or hit it and realize that they would be happier if they lost more? Well I’m in this situation now. I’m 5’11 (female) and my goal weight was 165 pounds. I’m now 167 pounds (about a 40 pound weight loss)

I want to lose more but everyone says I wouldn’t be a healthy weight if I lost anymore than what I’ve lost, but I disagree. Anybody can go on google and see that according to my bmi I’m barely in the healthy range for my height. I think if I lost 10 more pounds I would look exactly how I want to look. Opinions or advice?

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Thursday, June 19, 2025

My weight loss trends are super weird

Hey everyone!

For reference on the post, I’m 26 M, 5’7 and 195lbs currently, 22% BF

So about a year ago I cut from 226 to 186. 6 months later I popped back up to 204 because I burned out on the gym since that cut took so long and I just ate whatever.

I’ve been back at it for 9 weeks now and my weight loss trends are all over the place. I get about 10-15,000 steps a day according to my Fitbit (haven’t dropped below 10k in weeks), workout 5-6 days a week and play volleyball 1-2 times a week as well (I walk my dog everyday for about 45+ minutes as well).

I’ve been back in the gym and all of my lifts have gotten back to pre-break levels, some even heavier. Problem is, at 1800 calories a day I’m only seeing about 1 lb of loss a week.

That would make sense, but I must be undershooting like crazy because every TDEE calculator has me at about 2800 to 3000 calories for my activity level.

The OTHER problem is, this deficit is WAY too steep. I can’t sleep, I’m super anxious all the time and have heart palpitations that go away when I bump the deficit up. I’m also tired all the time.

The OTHER OTHER problem is, when I lose weight I probably go 4-5 weeks at a time losing maybe 0.5 lbs a week or less, then drop 4 in one week. I understand it’s not linear but it’s ridiculous.

So what gives? If I’m only in a deficit of about ~500 calories, after weighing and measuring all my food, putting me at 2300 calories despite the high activity level, why do I feel so awful? Is it muscle being added that’s deceiving? Water due to stress? What should I do?

TL;DR 5’7 M 195lb 22% BF, workout 5-6 times a week, play volleyball twice a week, walk dog every day, 10,000- 15000 steps a day. Measure relatively accurately and put myself at about 1850-2250 calories a day. Losing 1 lb a week but dealing with symptoms of a deficit that’s too big (severe anxiety, lethargy, awful sleep). Something isn’t adding up. Do I cut the deficit or take a break? As of rn it’s unsustainable

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Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Breakfast Holding Me Back?

Hi. I wanted to clarify that I’m loosing weight. After being sick, I’ve recovered but noticed my weight loss has slowed. I’m 14 pounds overweight so I should be able to progress at my normal rate.

After looking closer at my diet, I think the Jimmy Dean Eggwiches I eat for breakfast might be slowing me down. They fit in my 1,300 calorie limit but have a higher sodium level. Does anyone else eat these and have the same problem?

I love the taste and how convenient they are. But they may not be the best fit for me at this point.

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Curious about a challenge.

Hi all, so I have a forerunner 255 and I workout moderately Id say I also work in hospitality. According to the watch app, I burn about 3170 calories average daily (active and rest). My body weight at last weigh in (feb) was

94.7kg 24.8% body fat

My question is if I opted to go hard on cardio ( I do occasionally at gym) but like burned an extra 1800 or so cals a day from it without changing my current calorie intake of 1750- 1950. What kinds of weight loss could I hope for in say a month or two from now?

Cheers for any advice

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Haven’t touched the cheesecake in the fridge

I just wanna humble brag how proud I am for not eating ANY cheesecake I made on Friday for my husband

The biggest issue on making progress on my weight loss journey was binge eating and food noise. I would just mindlessly eat and eat until I was grossly full. But I started counting calories 4 months ago, even when I was being “bad” and going over.

Counting calories alone has helped me make better food choices. My “dessert” is homemade Greek yogurt, honey, chia seeds and delicious frozen cherries. I very much look forward to my dessert and it does the job of hitting my cravings

I’m just so proud that I have my food cravings under much better control. Now I just have to work on … working out lol. Fuckin hate it haha

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Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Starting a weight loss journey, but I’m very discouraged and overwhelmed.

Hello all, to start off I’m 29(M) and sitting around 330 pounds. I’m a blue collar worker which has kept me active to the point where I have pretty decent strength and stamina so I don’t really have trouble doing many things. At the start of this year my wife and I were determined to change our lifestyles in order to get fit/healthier. Made changes to our diet, really paying attention to what we are consuming, started going to the gym at least 3 times a week (For me it’s about 5 miles of cardio, 2.5 miles walking with incline and 2.5 flat jogging) It’s not much but we had to start somewhere! Consistency wasn’t the best when we started, but now we are halfway into the year and have gotten into the groove of things and doing great at maintaining our new lifestyle. The problem lies more with me, I get so overwhelmed and discouraged so often. I want to start adding extra exercises to help lose weight and build muscle. Mainly body weight exercises but there is so much fitness information out there that’ll contradict each other, I feel like I gained nothing when I’m done researching things to help me lose fat. Every time I look in the mirror without a shirt, I HATE what I see and just start thinking “what’s the point, you are too far gone anyway”. It looks as if all my weight is in my torso/stomach region, my arms and legs look completely opposite. It feels like an endless cycle! This subreddit is very inspiring, I came here in hopes of hearing if anybody has a similar story and what helped you through, maybe even some tips. If not, then at least I got the chance to vent!

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Lost 30 pounds so far!

It's been a journey so far and these are a year apart!

What sparked my motivation was me crying in a fitting room because even an XL wouldn't fit

Here's was worked for me:

• counting calories • eating at least 20-40 g of protein per meal • a snack must have at least 10g of protein • high fiber meals (15-20 g of fiber a day at least) at around 1600-1800 cal a day

• watching skinny influencers / skinnytok / weight loss YouTubers. Some are controversial, like Liv Schmidt, but these kinds of videos really helped me lose that last pant size, even if it feels corny to listen to

• holding yourself accountable. Do it every day! I logged calories every day, even if I ate over. At one point, I was logging calories and significantly (700+ calories) going over my restriction for a few months, but keeping at it helped me remember I had a goal

•still ate everything I loved to eat, but only eating 3/4 of my "normal" portion. At first I was still feeling hungry for maybe 15 more minutes, but then after that I would feel content! It's really easy to overeat if it's all you know

• resistance training 2-3 times a week. I joined an f45 class that I go to every week and slimmed in a few weeks. Muscle passively burns more fat than cardio! 3 hours a week is literally all I do

• weighing myself every day. Kept me accountable to my goals

• drinking water when I think I'm hungry. I'll drink 2-3 cups of water before deciding if I'm ready to eat. Never realized how often I was dehydrated rather than hungry. Sometimes I get bored of just water and would add some mío, sugar free electrolytes, or make a tea out of it

More * unethical* ways (can't say I recommend them but they worked FOR ME):

• telling myself "I'd rather be skinny than eat that" when faced with a craving

• Liv Schmidt said something once like "eat something until it stops tasting perfect" and it really spoke to me. I use to find myself finishing things I was bored eating even when it stopped tasting as good, now I'll stop once it stops tasting like that first bite.

• I have a tendency to binge eat, so I avoided events or places that I tended to over eat at. I had to avoid my best friends house for a few months while I was cutting because her family always had the best treats and snacks :/ we still hung out, just not at her place!

I went from a XXL to a medium, Jean size went from a 14 to an 8, and I lost a total of 6 inches on my waist. 26F, 5'10 and currently 160 (started at 190!). I did this all in a year and probably only spent 3 months in total being "strict" but I always kept it in the back of my mind that I had a goal. Good luck everyone

https://imgur.com/a/nTtT32N

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Weight loss after trauma?

I was sexually assaulted a few years back, and I've had a number of other traumatic events over the course of my life. Because of this, I've gained a lot of weight and I'm struggling to lose it- my therapist thinks that I'm avoiding activities that would help me lose the weight (cooking, exercise, etc) because of my trauma. She's suggested that I'm using the weight as a shield, because part of me thinks that the trauma won't happen again if I'm not conventionally attractive. I think she's right. I need to lose weight for a trans-related surgery (mastectomy specifically). I've tried to stick to a diet etc, but I can't do it- I take it too far, restrict down to a few hundred calories, and then I snap and go back to eating junk. Part of the sexual assault happened in a gym changing room, so I really struggle with transitioning into or out of exercise. Has anyone else had similar experiences? What worked? What didn't? Help ;-;

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Going back to maintenance?

It's been nearly 3 months since my last post, and I'm happy to report that I lost 20+ lbs! I'm F, 22, 5'8, started at ~174 lbs and am ending my deficit now at 152 lbs. I was eating at a 1,650 calorie budget living a moderately active fluctuating lifestyle.

My question is: I've heard from many that you should take a break and shift over to maintenance after 12 weeks of eating at a calorie deficit to allow your metabolism some time to recover — is this true? I'm pretty satisfied with my weight loss journey, but I feel like I've almost become addicted to this lifestyle. My TDEE says my maintenance is around 2,220, but after this long, that seems a little steep? Can someone ease my fears about this? Is this recommended? My current plan is to start eating a bit under this for a few months and then begin another deficit to lose another 10 lbs before finishing.

Looking for whatever advice anyone has!

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Monday, June 16, 2025

Looking for a weight loss buddy

5’6, 240 lbs, F

I’m looking for a weight loss buddy! Ideally someone I can keep in touch with daily, one-on-one. I’d love to share meal pics, workouts, and weight changes through Discord, WhatsApp whatever works for you! I do have some health challenges, like eating disorders and thyroid issues, so dieting has never been easy for me. Plus I’m just tired of starting over and failing, over and over again. This time, I really want to stay consistent — and I’d love to have someone to keep in contact with every day so we can motivate each other and stay on track together.

If you’re looking for something similar, I’d be so happy to connect!!!!💌

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Added in 10k steps per day and weight loss has slowed down

Hi!

I started my calorie deficit in October 2024.

I'm 30 years old, 5ft 8, my starting weight was 219lbs, my current weight is 152lbs, and my goal weight is 140lbs. For most of the deficit I've been sedentary.

My calories since October have been 1,350. I track on myfitnesspal, and I use a food scale religiously. I think it's important to add that I should have probably began a slower, smaller deficit. I think I understand that tdee should also be recalculated every ___ lbs down?

When I recalculated today, my cut should be about 1,250 calories. I'm already pretty hungry as is, so I'd really prefer not to dip that low.

About a month ago, I started walking 10k to 15k steps five to six days a week. Though hungrier, I have been meticulous in tracking my calories. However, I've noticed my weight loss has slowed down.

I'm disappointed because I finally added some form of movement and I feel like my progress is slowing. In the past two weeks, the scale has only gone down 0.8lbs.

I'm curious if anyone has any advice, or similar experiences? Do I need to reverse diet back up to maintenance and then cut calories again later? Is this a plateau? Do I need to touch grass? 🫠

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Vacations are so hard - family constantly on me about when to eat

I would like to preface this with the fact that I have been consistently dieting since October last year. I have lost 45+ pounds and as a SAHM I have my own routine and use to serving other food and not eating myself because I would eat my calories at a certain time. A time that would best suit me and keep my hunger at bay so I can stay pleasant instead of hangry.

Also my mom knew I was on a diet months ago but has never congratulated me about my weight loss or said anything about it. Which is fine, I have other supportive people in my life. However I hate talking through my deficit to people but she has heard the spiel from me telling another family member about it. She doesn’t agree with low calorie only low carb. But she’s almost been on a diet near the same time as me and hasn’t noticeably lost weight.

Anyways she makes everyone a breakfast in the morning which is my family, herself and my dad, and my brother and his wife. She makes a big deal who doesn’t eat and who is wasting the food she cooked. Also if you tell her you don’t want what she is cooking she will make it anyways and tell you to eat it like 10 times and be stand off ish if you don’t.

Fo lunch she will make something or she has premade food in fridge and if she is eating lunch and you aren’t she said are you not going to eat lunch?? A ton of other questions and commands telling you to go get something to eat. She saw me eating something early what I considered lunch but to her I didn’t eat lunch cause it wasn’t enough.

Then for supper she will buy take out or cook again and again with the ‘better get something’ non sense. And just keeps saying something about it like come eat, you’re missing out, you’re gonna wish you had got some. If I hadn’t been on my defect for so long I would’ve cracked. There no polite way to decline and she just gets mad. Suddenly I remember my childhood to young adult life at my mom’s house.

Im deeply family rooted but my mom just isn’t understanding but I don’t want to cut her off just rant.

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tips/advice on weight loss after having PPD

I had my son almost 3 years ago and I am ready to commit on losing the (not so baby anymore) weight. I gained around 15 pounds after having him, but got PPD and gained another 25 pounds. I didn't realize I had it until a year and a half later and the damage was done. I was emotionally eating, especially late at night, and now I'm nearly 200 pounds when I started at 145. I have been trying to hit my 10k steps daily and on a calorie deficit to start my journey.

I am a working mom and my husband works evenings/nights so going to the gym everyday isn't an option. I have thought about mat Pilates to start with at home. Unfortunately my son goes to bed around 9-10, so that only leaves me with about an hour and half to work out, which means either doing my steps or doing a workout.

In your opinion, which is more important - cardio or weight lifting? I am not looking to lose this weight overnight but be consistent. I understand it may take a year or more to go back to my prebaby weight. I will also take any tips on how not to overeat or snack, and mental advice too. I read somewhere where I may be hungry after eating and that is ok.

Thank you in advance!

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Sunday, June 15, 2025

I hit a milestone!

So as the title says, I’ve hit my second major milestone a few days ago! I started my journey on February 10th starting at 267.8 lbs. I hit my first milestone on March 8th loosing my first 10 lbs. Just the other day I hit a big one, 25 lbs! I really just wanted to share this with everyone as all through high school I struggled with being overweight and now I’m finally making the positive changes in my life to finally love and accept myself. Following this sub really helped me figure out all the things I need to improve and change in my life to get the results I want.

I’ve been eating 1,500 to 2,000 calories a day and go on regular walks. I’ve also taken up running with my friends whenever possible. This all has helped me reach a steady pace in terms of weight loss.

Thanks to everyone who gives advice on this sub and also good luck to everyone with their journeys as well!

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Saturday, June 14, 2025

How important is hitting protein goals in a calorie deficit?

I struggle to hit my protein goal each day as i don’t enjoy protein powder, eggs and eat very select meats. Some days i tend to skip breakfast and go right to lunch as i work as a baker and by the time i get home it’s around lunch time anyway. So typically I only eat lunch and dinner and maybe a few snacks here and there like fruit or a mini chocolate bar. I’m just wanting to know, am I stumping my weight loss by not being so focused on hitting my protein ? Should I be working on working toward hitting a protein goal more regularly? I also found using a calorie calculator that I should be aiming for under 1900 calories, I am an 18 year old male, 190cm height and 94kg of weight.

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Frustrated with slow progress

Hi everyone — I’m feeling a bit discouraged and could really use your advice or support.

Background: I’m 29 F 5’8¾”, started my weight loss journey at 190 lbs in Sept 2024, and got serious in November at 180 lbs As of today, I’m down to 166 lbs. My goal is 140–145 lbs

Routine: From Nov to Jan, I was strict with tracking, walking 15–20k steps/day, and eating in a deficit. February: still very active but tracked food less carefully. March: setback month — less movement, ate freely, gained ~6 lbs. April & May: recommitted hard — ate 1500–1700 cal/day, walked 10–15k steps/day, and lost most of the regain.

My issue now is with May & June — my weight loss has slowed significantly.

Here’s a breakdown of my recent weigh-ins April 1: 178 lbs (post-binge) April 26: 169.8 lbs May 13: 168.6 May 27: 165.8 June 13: 166.2

So from April 1 to June 13, I’ve lost ~12 lbs, but the pace slowed from 2 lbs/week in April to less than 0.5–0.6 lbs/week in May and June.

I’m staying consistent — eating 1500–1700 calories, walking 10–15k steps/day, drinking water, and trying to keep sodium reasonable.

Questions: Is this slowdown normal? Do I need to adjust calories again now that I weigh less? Should I start strength training or change something else to speed things up?

I really want to reach my goal, and I’m committed, but I’m starting to feel stuck . Any help or advice would be appreciated 🫶🏾

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Lost 12kg in 2 months and I still eat pizza and burgers

Honestly, I used to think weight loss had to be torture. No carbs, no sugar, chicken breast and sadness. I’d try to “eat clean”, hold on for a week, then end up bingeing and hating myself for it.

This time something finally clicked. I stopped trying to be perfect. I just wanted a way to eat that didn’t make me miserable.

I came across a simple app that helped me build meals around stuff I actually enjoy like pizza, wraps, noodles, even desserts. Just helped me not go overboard.

I didn’t change everything overnight. I just started eating in a way that felt normal, something I could actually keep doing.

Two months later I’m down 12kg (~26 lbs).

And the wild part? I never felt like I was “on a diet.” I still eat the food I love just with a bit of balance. No guilt, no rules, no punishments.

I’m not at my goal yet, but for the first time, I feel like I’ll get there without hating the process.

If anyone’s struggling with the same stuff or just wants to talk about it happy to share more, it’s been a game-changer for me.

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Friday, June 13, 2025

Stated taking my weight loss more serious 3 months ago

I’m 36M, 5’11”, went from 222 to 198. Started taking my dieting more serious back in March, I have lost a total of 24 pounds. My goal is 175, people have complimented me but are now saying I don’t need to lose anymore, I’m going to be too small, I’m losing weight too fast. I feel incredible, I make sure I am taking in enough calories but not too much and I know self happiness is what really matters but it’s like no matter what, people will always have something to say. I’ve been 175 before, that’s when I was at my healthiest.

Anyone else experience this from others?

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Strategies needed! Failing at lowering calories mid-weightloss

I am female, 5'5", 54 with treated hashimotos and in perimenopause. I have gone from 185 to 166 over the past 8 or 9 months on about 1500 calories per day. GW is 140-145.

I am a slow loser, and I am mostly OK with that, though sometimes it gets frustrating. I am active. I walk an average of 1200 steps daily. I lift heavy things at work. My fitness watch says I currently burn about 2200-2400 calories per day, though it is probably somewhat inaccurate due to my metabolic issues. I aim for an insulin balancing diet of high fiber and protein with lots of veggies and moderate whole carbs. What I am doing is working (slowly) and I feel good. And yes, I weigh and measure everything. I follow 16:8 intermittent fasting.

My conundrum is this: I use the Loseit app, and now that I have lost almost 20 pounds, it has dropped me to an average of 1300 calories per day.

I am not adapting well to this.

Psychologically I am having a hard time, and deprivation thinking has kicked in. I keep "sneaking" small handfuls of nuts or other little snacks which is obviously counter productive and erasing whatever extra deficit there was and then some. I am hungry again in the late afternoon, a time I find particularly challenging. It is mostly mental, though I am hungrier, too. Weight loss has not surprisingly, stalled out the past couple of weeks.

Obviously I don't have to do what the app suggests and can re-calibrate my calorie goals and still stay in a deficit.

What should I do? Try to eat slightly less (1400 cals)? Try to figure out how to stick to 1300? Go back to 1500 but try to burn more every day? I could add intentional strength training, for example.

How have you all dealt with this mostly mental hurdle of eating less after you have lost some weight?

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No one tells you how different people treat you after losing weight

I went from almost 80 kgs/176 pounds to 59 kgs/130 pounds (im 170 cm/5'6 inches) as a teenage girl who was harassed in school. I was ignored by classmates and teachers. Kids made fun of me cuz of the way I looked, even my parents were constantly insulting me and not caring about all of the things i was going trough with my mental health. I became so depressed i lost all my apetite. I also started hitting 10k steps a day and stopped starving myself. Didnt hit the gym at all. Everyday i tought about my revenge over everyone who made fun of me because of my weight.

I lost all of the weight in aproximately 6 months. When i came back from school from summer break, the bullies stopped with the agression and started "befriending me". The same people who were ignoring me started giving me compliments over "how good i looked". People who didnt want to go out with me before now want so. My parents brag to their friends or relatives about my weight loss and started taking me more seriously.

What was wrong with the old me? I was still the same person. Turns out everyone in my life only cared about looks.

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How long does it realistically take to lose 10 kg? (20F, 168cm)

Hi everyone,

I’m a 20-year-old female, 168 cm tall, currently weighing 60 kg (132 lbs), and I’ve recently decided to take weight loss more seriously. My goal is to reach about 50 kg (110 lbs), so I’m aiming to lose 10 kilograms (about 22 pounds) in a healthy and sustainable way.

I know weight loss depends on many factors like diet, exercise, sleep, and consistency, but I’m curious:
How long did it take you to lose 10 kg, and what kind of routine did you follow?
Also, is there a healthy or recommended timeframe for this amount of weight loss?

I'm not looking for any crash diets or extreme plans—just something sustainable and healthy. Any tips or encouragement would also be really appreciated!

Also, if anyone is on a similar journey and would like to be weight loss buddies (to check in, motivate, or just share progress), feel free to reach out! I'd love to support and be supported.

Thanks in advance 🌟

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Thursday, June 12, 2025

tiny non scale victory ♥️

I've only lost 15 pounds, I have 25 to go.... so I hadn't really looked for any noticable changes yet. just keep on trucking ya know. but this morning I was packing to move, came across a pair of jeans in the closet that I forgot to return for being too small. receipt still in the pocket, I tried them on fully expecting to not even get them above my thighs like last time.... but they freaking fit! that was such a surprise and a great feeling that made my day.

good luck to anyone continuing their weight loss journey this week 🤍 keep going!

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Higher metabolism after exercise - fades with age?

I am 63 and I have been exercising vigorously (600-1200 kcal) for 25 years 3-6 times a week. I've noticed just recently that right after exercise my metabolism is clearly faster as I don't need warm clothing on a cold (60°) night in California. But starting at age 60 after only 2 hours I suddenly start freezing! I have to run for a hoodie - my metabolic slowdown is very sudden! I think my body used to run at a higher metabolic rate for up to 24 hours after exercise! It is well known that this "after-burning" of calories is a key source of weight loss after exercise!!

Is this another reason why weight loss gets harder with ge?

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Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Has anyone had to get lipo or any type of surgery to remove excess flab after their weight loss adventure?

I don't know if this question belongs here. I'm searching for some non-Google feedback about this topic. I do know that when people tend to lose weight and at a rapid pace, there's excess skin that sometimes can't be fixed with working out. I'm suffering from the nasty bat wings; even when I have a lot more weight to lose, my arm flabs are really upsetting me, and I have a feeling I may turn to lipo to get them removed. It would sadden me to go through all this work and I still have fat bags hanging from my arms.

Has anyone decided to go this route after their weight loss?

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Lack of self control makes it impossible to lose weight

I have technically lost some weight in the past, going from my highest weight of 235 pounds to 215-220. That was over the course of about 6 months, not very impressive but I lost the weight regardless. Now a year and a half later I sit at around 215-210, sometimes I’ll maybe get to 209 but that’s it. You could say I’ve hit a weight loss plateau but realistically I’ve hit a self control plateau, at the very least I haven’t gained weight, but that doesn’t change the fact that I absolutely still need to lose it which is why I’m reaching out. I’m at my wills end now when it comes to losing weight, it feels genuinely impossible to have any sort of self control, I don’t get it. Most days I’ll wake up, tell myself that I’m going to stay under 1800 calories today, but by noon I’ve already consumed half of that, and then ill have something else to eat which i know will leave me no calories for the end of the day but that’s something for future me to deal with right? And I’m 15 so I obviously live with my family and we’ll usually have dinner, and of course I’ll have that leaving me at around 2500 calories which gives me no progress the next day.

I just really need to figure it out, compared to some my goal weight of 170 pounds seems so attainable, and with consistency could be done in under a year, but my complete lack of self control holds me back. And living with my family where I don’t get to decide what sort of food and snacks we get, it’s double bad. Most of the time that I do eat and try to control my portions it’s like I can’t stop myself (I know I can and I shouldn’t give food that power over me, but seriously I don’t know how to not let it). Maybe I need to see some sort of weight loss therapist about this? I don’t know but I just need some sort of help or guidance.

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Mental spin out after weight loss?

First time ever posting… 47 year old man who has been over 300 lbs since I was a young teenager, unable to buy cloths in “normal” stores since junior high, that big and tall life. In the last three years I have lost over 240lbs thru diet and hard exercise, with 110 of it being in the last year (590lbs to 350lbs) . I feel like I’ve hit a good feedback loop now where I’m trying to eat better to workout harder and I’m feeling like a million bucks compared to the pain of just being that big, I know this time I might have a chance to actually reach goals I could never think to before. However I have had some real mental hurdles thru this, I still see the fat guy, In the mirror and in my mind. Today was a weird milestone, for the first time in…ever, I went to Walmart and tried on a 3xl shirt and it fit comfortably, I broke down and cried in the changing room for 10 minutes. I cannot accept the person in the mirror as me, no matter how much I tell myself or others tell me how good I’m doing. Just random strangers or people who haven’t seen me in forever telling me how good I look makes me feel worse. No one complimented me ever on my looks, just “ you have such a great personality” and now it happens a lot and it’s a hard pill to swallow. It’s almost is starting to feel like a slap in the face. I actually feel less confidant in this new body I’ve worked so fucking hard for and it’s starting to drive me crazy a bit. Maybe this was a rant I need to get off my chest… maybe I’m asking for advice.. I don’t know anymore.

Thanks for listening.

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Losing 1lb per week but Personal Trainer wants more and I feel defeated

I, 27 F (5’7”), have gained about 30 lbs, reaching my heaviest at 260 lbs over the past 2 years. I've struggled with weight and body image most of my life but this year I’ve had enough. The last couple of years were especially stressful, and I coped with food (more than usual), which led to the increased weight gain and lack of motivation.

Three months ago, I decided to put my health as a priority. I hired an online personal trainer to help me build structure and stay accountable. When I started, I wasn't going to the gym, barely hit 3,000 steps a day, and ate without much thought. Now, I go to the gym 3-5 times a week, walk 7,000-9,000 steps a day, do cardio 2-4 times a week, and track calories/macros almost daily.

Program Overview: Started at: 1968 calories | P: 172g | F: 60g | C: 250g Steps: 9k/day Cardio: 3x/week, 15 mins @ HR >135 Strength: 4x/week

Now: 1826 calories | P: 145g | F: 55g | C: 190g Steps: 10k/day Cardio: 4x/week, 25 mins Strength: 5x/week

What I Actually Average: Food: On track with current macros Steps: 7k–9k/day Cardio: 2–4 times/week Strength: 3–5 times/week

I’m doing a lot better with food and consistency, but I struggle to hit all movement goals. I work a full-time desk job and try to stay active, but a lot of the time, I feel like there just isn’t enough time to accomplish everything.

For the first 1.5-2 months, I didn’t lose scale weight, but I noticed fat loss and muscle gain from progress pictures. My trainer said I was likely doing a body recomposition and losing fat/gaining muscle at the same time. Over the past month, I’ve consistently lost about 1 lb per week (about 6 lbs total now) and I feel so much better. My clothes fit better, I’ve gone down a belt notch, and I’ve only used food to cope once, which is a huge win for me.

The Issue: Lately, my trainer has said things like “If you’re not hitting cardio, the least you can do is walk,” and “You get the results from the work you put in, if your happy with where you’re at we can just maintain. If you want to lose more, you need to put in more effort” This has made me feel kind of defeated. I was feeling proud of how far I have come, but now I’m second-guessing everything. Like, why am I spending all my free time in the gym if it’s never enough? Evey week I still am losing weight (1lb) but for some reason, my trainer keeps upping my cardio keeps and decreasing my food…. I already was having trouble meeting initial goals but now I’m expected to do more.

I always thought 1–2 lbs/week was healthy weight loss. To clarify: I don’t necessarily have a goal weight or timeline. I just want to feel healthier and build sustainable habits, but it seems like my trainer expects faster progress and burnout.

To clarify, I work a full-time desk job and try to be intentional about moving throughout the day but it doesn’t always happen as much as I would like. After work, I am usually slammed by meal prepping, going on a walk, going to the gym or normal household chores.

Question: Am I wrong for feeling this way? Should I suck it up and meet every single goal? Or what would you do?

Thank you for taking the time to read this!!

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