Friday, October 12, 2018

Depression and weight loss

Hey guys, I was hoping you could help me out.

I suffer from depression and I’m in therapy and on medication (Buproprion) for it. While there are a few different factors, it is mostly centered around my weight - I am 5’4” and weight 225 lbs. In high school I had a decent amount of muscle and weighed about 155-160, and it suited me really well.

Due to my weight, I often don’t go to school because I’m so self conscious, I’ve become a homebody, and I’m just not living anymore. I’ll go a day or two without eating, eat one thing (a bowl of cereal or a sandwich) and repeat. Once in awhile I’ll do something like eat a whole pizza to myself.

I’ll do good eating healthy and/or exercising for a few days, then I’ll ruin it with the thought process of “I’m fat.. what’s the point?”

What meals/meal plans would be easiest for me to follow? I’m not one for cooking much (though I’m not against it), but with depression it is often very hard to put much effort into meals, and I’m on a college student’s budget. I’m also a picky eater, I don’t like the majority of vegetables or seafood.

I’m losing myself and am afraid of falling further down this hole

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An early death motivates me.

In 2012 I was at my highest of 238lbs while being 5ft 10" and 22 years of age. But I had had enough and started my weight loss journey and went down to 182lbs within 2 years. I was looking and feeling great and was so proud of myself!

However in October 2014 my father passed away due to a heart attack. He was a legendary man but was very unhealthy as he was diabetic and suffered 2 strokes. This left me really distraught as it was massive shock to us (even though he was unhealthy) and I had never lost anyone before and always just assumed my dad would be around forever. He was only 59 years old when he died.

I gained nearly all the weight back and became clinically obese again at 210lbs. However there is a silver lining as I found the love of my life and got married in 2017! Married life is great but with having a partner to do anything and everything with it meant that we ate out a lot and my weight creeped up to 224lbs! My wife and I are trying to have children now and it made me think that I don't want to have the same fate as my father did. Dying before I turn 60 was not an option! My father could not be at my wedding but I am definitely going to make sure I am here to attend my children's!

I am back on the fat loss wagon and leading a healthier lifestyle since June. I have so far lost around 15lbs and I feel like that would be more on the scale if I wasn't also putting on muscle mass! I haven't felt this good in years and I am looking forward to the future.

Thank you for reading.

Has anyone had any similar experiences?

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CICO is not as scary or emotional as I thought it would be. Any one else have a “I’m shocked this works” moment?

I’m finishing my third week counting calories and it’s not as difficult or emotional as I thought it would be. I know this is what some would call fat logic, but I honestly can’t believe weight loss could be as easy as counting calories.

I tried to count calories once in high school almost 13 years ago when I was 15ish and there wasn’t a lot of info on calories on the food I was eating, I didn’t understand how to measure things I got at the school lunch or my moms food. I always failed because online all of the calorie counting made it seem so unachievable. Crazy diets like : “1,000 calories is all you need a day!”, “Eat bananas all day”, “The cabbage soup diet!”, “eat 200 calories every two hours for 8 hours!” were all so discouraging

I couldn’t do those diets, I would fail and quit every time, so I swore off calorie counting because I always disappointed myself. I thought I’d have to starve myself on bananas to be thin

I realize now that most of the online sources I was finding were Pro-Ana, and I couldn’t follow their advice because I didn’t have that kind of relationship with food or my body. I didn’t want to feel hungry, I was already poor and in and out of homelessness. I didn’t want to be super skinny I just didn’t want to be fat.

Because I swore off calorie counting, I developed an unhealthy relationship with food, a childish one where I ate whatever I wanted whenever I wanted until i decided I’d have enough. I don’t binge, I just ate portions that were too large and never said no to treats.

I’m surprised I’m not well over my current weight of 185 (5’8” at age 27, nearly 28)

I’m really excited that I’ve decided to try again, this time with correct medically sound information on how to improve myself and my diet. And I’m so happy that for three weeks I’ve met my goals and haven’t had a hard time!

Idk why this went on so long, sorry! Just feels really great :)

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After working on losing weight for over two years today is the day I switch to maintenance*

When I got close to 200 lbs for the SECOND time in my life I was mortified. It’s been a long long journey. I’m in the best shape of my adult life but I want to be so much stronger. The capstone on this weight loss period was a cut on RP strength, which took me down the last 10 lbs and revealed that I actually have abs.

For the first time I’m switching to a true maintenance mentality, at least through the end of the year. I want to focus on improving my lifts and getting stronger through the holidays. I will probably do one more cut after New Years but it’s all vanity at this point. I feel like I’m finally at a point where I can focus on performance more than fat loss.

https://imgur.com/a/qMy1IWB

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[Challenge] Super Mario Fall 2018 Challenge - Week 0

Hello and Welcome to the LoseIt Fall 2018 Super Mario Challenge!

Your hosts this round will be u/Jameson1780, u/bananaslammock08, u/cosmam, u/sweetpsd, myself, and u/ThatCanadianGuy88 King of the Peasants!

Sign ups are still Open Sign Up Link Here!

Note: You will be randomly assigned to a team following the submission of your sign up form. Please visit the Challenge Tracker linked below to find out what team you are on. Please do not ask to be assigned to a particular team.

Challenge Tracker Tracker Page Here!

WEEK 0 WEIGH-IN HERE

Note: You can now submit multiple weigh-ins per week, however only your newest submission will be included on the tracker for the challenge. You can submit your weight anytime between when this form opens (on the Friday listed on the schedule, e.g., "October 12 - Week 0") until 7:59am EST the following Friday.

Teams & Captains:

Joining your team subreddit isn’t mandatory but it should be. Being active with your team keeps participation up and might be that extra little push you need to keep you going. It could be the difference between an 8 week grind or 8 weeks of fun and support to lose the weight you want.

Team Mario Subreddit Here! - u/sweetpsd & u/gan1lin2 & u/dylzim

Team Yoshi Subreddit Here! - u/bananaslammock08 & u/Vicariousgluten

Team Bowser Subreddit Here! - u/420spirit9 & u/revdrviking, & u/vampedvixen

Team Luma Subreddit Here! - u/capitulum & u/nukaprincess

Team Waluigi Subreddit Here! - u/ravenclawedo1 & u/Cadamar & u/Koehanna

Team Boo Subreddit Here! - u/ZeAltHealthAcct & u/Unconcernedlion & u/MrManBeard

If you have any questions, problems, concerns, ideas, or just want to drop us all a line, please use the message the challenge admin feature, which you can find in the r/loseit sidebar or by clicking here. Responding to this thread is great, but ultimately if you want to make sure all of us read it, the message the challenge admin feature is the way to go.

Please also note that we are not the r/loseit moderators. We’re volunteers and everyday users who run a specific aspect of one of the many interactive community elements of r/loseit. If you have questions about r/loseit that aren’t specific to the challenge, please take a look at the sidebar.

INTER-TEAM CHALLENGE WEEK 0 FORM

INTER-TEAM CHALLENGE TRACKER

The inter-team challenge is an optional round-robin style tournament where teams compete against different teams each week in exercise minutes, strength workout minutes, and step count.

Week 0 Match-Ups:

Team Yoshi v. Team Boo

Team Bowser v. Team Waluigi

Team Luma v. Team Mario

How points will be awarded each week:

  • 1 point to the winner of each 1 vs. 1 matchup
  • 1 point for the team with the highest step count for the week
  • 1 point for each team with a step count higher than 2M for the week
  • 1 point for each team with a total minutes count higher than 10k for the week

What are we doing/how are we doing it:

We are tracking exercise minutes, strength minutes and Steps. You have until Friday 8am EST of next week to submit your minutes and step count. We would like to point out this is entirely optional, so if you can't do it or it's not for you - that's cool.

You can submit them each day or wait until Thursday to submit them all. The form is re-submittable, but please only submit one form for each day - multiple forms for one day (e.g. 3x Tuesday) will be deleted. As with all things, if you notice an error or forgot to add something, tell us and we’ll fix it. That’s goes for everything - misspelled username, used the wrong unit of measure, transposed steps and workout minutes, etc. Please enter numbers only. If you jog for an hour, it's just 60. If you get 12,000 steps, it's just 12000.

What counts as Exercise or Strength Minutes?

Whatever you can do safely. For example, jogging outside, running on the treadmill, climbing stairs, going for walks, etc, all count as exercise minutes. Strength minutes include all types of weight lifting and strength increase workouts. If an activity is both cardio and strength focused, it doesn’t really matter which category you assign it to as long as you don’t double count it (aka don’t put the activity in as both strength and exercise). Also please don’t count strength or exercise minutes from during work unless they were measured by a fitness tracker. This is because the main point of the inter-team challenge is to encourage people to start exercising or doing strength workouts in their spare time, or to continue if they’re already going! If you have any questions or need clarification, please feel free to ask!

Safety is key.

Feel free to contribute as much time you can put in safely. Someone else might be running a marathon, which takes hours, while you can only squeeze out fifteen minutes on a treadmill - that is perfectly fine! Don't compare yourself to that person. Don't hurt yourself trying to help your team. Every minute is valuable to your team, whether it's 10 minutes or 100, so only do as much as you can handle without injury.

FAQs

What is the challenge?

The challenge is team-based competition that will last for 6 weeks (8 weeks from the beginning of signups to the results week) for which you set a weight-loss goal and then weigh in weekly, hoping to be at or beyond that goal by the end of the challenge.

What will I have to do during the challenge?

Weigh-in every week - each week begins on a Friday, so you will have until the following Friday 8am EST (when the next week is posted) to complete your weigh-in. You can miss the occasional week, but if you are going to miss two weeks in a row you must let the challenge admins know so they don’t remove you from the challenge. If you're a forgetful person, setting up reminders on your phone and/or joining the group discord chat might be a good idea.

How to succeed during the challenge:

  • Check what team you’re on by looking at the Challenge Tracker and searching for your username (control + f username).
  • Join your team’s subreddit, introduce yourself and be an active team member. Many captains have an online chat set up for their teams too!
  • If you have any questions, worries or need encouragement, lean on your team and if someone else needs some support, be supportive.
  • If you binge or have a bad week, don’t give up, log honestly and come back next week. Weight loss is not always linear and there will be ups and downs, but focus on the overall downward trend.

Rule Reminders

Missing Week 0 is an automatic boot. Do not ask for access to edit anything. All entries are submitted via form. The only people who can/should edit the trackers are the Challenge Admins.

Timeline

September 28th - Sign ups open

October 12th - Week 0

October 19th - Week 1 - Sign ups close

October 26th - Week 2

November 2nd - Week 3

November 9th - Week 4

November 16th - Week 5

November 23rd - Week 6/FINAL WEEK

November 30th - Results week (and break until January)

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7 Vegetables That Taste Best in Fall

Right now, stores are full of the widest array of fresh fall vegetables at the peak of ripeness. The cool days of the season bring out the best flavor in many crops—good news for all of us looking for great-tasting fall vegetables to enjoy each day as we stay on track to our weight loss goal.

5 Sneaky Fall Weight Loss Traps & How to Beat Them

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Here are seven of the best fall vegetables with a few healthy and delicious ideas for eating them:

1. Carrots

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

The crunchy roots taste great raw or cooked. While orange carrots are most familiar, many stores now offer yellow, red and even purple varieties. All are loaded with beta-carotene, a nutrient your body converts into vitamin A. It plays a key role in protecting your vision, supports your immune system and ensures that your body produces healthy new cells.

Nutrisystem category: Non-starchy vegetable

Serving size: 1⁄2 cooked or 1 cup raw

Try this: Carrots are easy to enjoy as a snack on-the-go—no mess or fuss necessary. For a bit of satisfying protein, dip carrot sticks in humus or herb-flavored yogurt. Shredded carrots add sweetness and fiber to muffins or fritters, while pureed carrots can be the foundation for a robust soup. Roasting brings out even more of their natural sugars. For a quick side dish, try our recipe for Honey Balsamic Glazed Carrots. >

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2. Brussels Sprouts

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

The little cousins of cabbage lose their bitterness after a light frost, which is why they taste best in fall. You typically see them loose on produce shelves, but just before Thanksgiving farmer’s markets and some stores offer whole stalks, so you can get them at their absolute freshest. A cup gives you more than 120 percent of your recommended daily amount of vitamin C and nearly 200 percent of your daily vitamin K needs. You also get over three grams of fiber.

Nutrisystem category: Non-starchy vegetable

Serving size: 1⁄2 cooked or 1 cup raw

Try this: Steamed Brussels sprouts are ready to eat in minutes and they have a mild, cabbage-like flavor. Add sliced Brussels sprouts to stir-fries and soups. If you prefer your veggies raw, shave or chop the small heads of Brussels sprouts and toss them with other greens to make a zesty salad. Slow-roasting Brussels sprouts turns them crispy and smoky. They also pair well with sweet fruit. Click here to get this savory Brussels Sprouts with Apples recipe. >

Superfood Saturday: Brussels Sprouts

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3. Butternut Squash

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

The oblong-shape, bulbous at one end and the pale orange skin make it easy to recognize butternut among the many varieties of fall vegetables and winter squash that are in-season. Removing the relatively thin skin on the outside and the seed cavity inside isn’t hard, but many stores now sell it peeled, seeded, cubed and ready to cook. Like other orange veggies, butternut squash is packed with beta-carotene and vitamin C. A single cup has 500 milligrams of potassium, a mineral that helps keep your body’s sodium levels in balance.

Nutrisystem category: SmartCarbs

Serving size: 1 cup cooked

Try this: The deep-orange flesh of butternut squash is lightly sweet and smooth-textured. It’s so naturally creamy, some bakers prefer to use it rather than its close relative, pumpkin, for making pies. That quality also makes pureed butternut squash a healthy main ingredient for soups or stews. It works well as a replacement for cheese in lasagna or enchiladas. It adds flavor, fiber and nutrients to this Butternut Squash Turkey Chili recipe, a family favorite on cool autumn days.

Superfood Saturday: Butternut Squash

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4. Kale

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

You’ve probably heard that this leafy green is a superstar of healthy diets and it’s also one of the healthiest fall vegetables because it is so nutrient-dense—high in vitamins and minerals, low in calories. A single cup has just 33 calories, but comes with more than 130 percent of your RDA for both vitamins A and C. It’s also a great source of calcium, a mineral that helps regulate your metabolism. While kale is available most of the year, it tastes best in fall because a few frosty nights soften its texture and reduce its bitterness.

Nutrisystem category: Non-starchy vegetable

Serving size: 1⁄2 cooked or 1 cup raw

Try this: When sautéed, kale becomes tender and mild-flavored. Add garlic or onions and mushrooms to make a savory side dish. If you want to eat kale raw, slice up an avocado and massage it into the leaves with your hands—this tenderizes the leaves and adds a creamy coating. Add kale to smoothies and you won’t even know it’s there. Or try snacking on this simple-to-make Crunchy Kale Chips recipe. >

Kale ‘Em with Greenness Smoothie

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5. Sweet Potatoes

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

These starchy tubers are a staple of fall meals because they are so sweet and tasty. They’re also significantly more nutritious than ordinary white spuds. An average-size sweet potato has around 50 calories and more than 150 percent of your RDA for vitamin A in a half-cup serving, along with healthy doses of essential minerals like potassium and copper. Because sweet potatoes are high in fiber and low on the glycemic index, they’re classified as SmartCarbs, so you need to be sure to follow the recommended servings for your plan.

Nutrisystem category: SmartCarbs

Serving size: 1⁄2 cup cooked

Try this: A baked sweet potato is simple and filling, but skip the butter and instead add flavor with no-calorie spices such as cayenne pepper or nutmeg. Oven-baked sweet potato fries or wedges are easy to make and fun to eat. Sweet potatoes work well mashed, too. With a spiralizer, you can quickly turn sweet potatoes into noodles that are a healthy alternative to ordinary pasta. Slices of the tuber are the sturdy base for this zesty Mexican Sweet Potato Toast recipe, loaded with tasty beans and low-fat cheese.

Superfood Saturday: Even More Reasons to Be Sweet on Sweet Potatoes

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6. Cauliflower

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

Most of us know the snow-white heads, but in fall you may also see orange, yellow and even green cauliflower on produce shelves. All have a very mild taste and are crunchy when raw and tender when cooked. Cauliflower is low in calories (25 in 1 cup) and high in fiber (2.5 grams per cup). It is especially rich in unique compounds called glucosinolates, micronutrients that have been linked to a reduced risk of cancers of the digestive tract.

Nutrisystem category: Non-starchy vegetable

Serving size: 1⁄2 cup cooked

Try this: Cauliflower is perhaps the most versatile of fall vegetables, making it a valuable ingredient, especially for people trying to lose weight. Steamed cauliflower becomes soft enough to be incorporated into mashed potatoes. It can be milled into grains that resemble rice or sliced into thick “steaks” ready for the grill. At snack time, try this Cauliflower Buffalo Bites recipe that have the same spicy flavor as your favorite chicken wings.

Creamy Cauliflower “Potato Salad”

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7. Spinach

Fall Vegetables To Add To Your Diet This Season

Cool weather is prime time for all sorts of leafy greens, including this nutritional powerhouse. The lower temperatures of autumn keep spinach leaves tender and bitter-free. Each cup has only seven calories, but 56 percent of your RDA for vitamin A. Spinach is just about the best vegetable source of iron, which helps your body produce red blood cells and ward off fatigue.

Nutrisystem category: Non-starchy vegetable

Serving size: 1⁄2 cooked or 1 cup raw

Try this: Raw spinach can be used in every way that you like to eat lettuce—in salads and on sandwiches and wraps. You can add the leaves to smoothies, too. Toss a handful or two of leaves into spaghetti sauce and no one in your family will know but you. For parties or snack time, try this Skinny Spinach Dip recipe. >

How to Eat More Leafy Greens

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The post 7 Vegetables That Taste Best in Fall appeared first on The Leaf.



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6 Slow Cooker Recipes You Need to Try This Season