Monday, October 15, 2018

Scared of being an obese truck driver

Hi i admit i did try to do r/loseits begginer weight loss guide but i did stop usin the my fitness pal app and counting calories because i fail everytime i do try and start losing but today i did a physical to get my cdl and am now the heaviest i ever been in my life. Im in trucking school and as a daughter if a truck driver i know how easy it is to gain weight and not care. This is the first time i will be without my parents or anyone to cook food and make that decision for me so does any truckers on here have any tips about staying healthy and fit on the road? Im 22f, 219 lb, 5'2 and my bmi is now 40.1.

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My job made me lose 7 stone

Hi all. First time posting here, but figured if my story helps I may as well share it. I was working in retail for about 4 years. In that time it became easy to look for what was reduced around the shop or just buy snacks and keep myself going with that kind of energy. I told myself that being on my feet all day was enough, and that I was in decent health. Coming up to 4 years ago, I changed jobs to working inside a warehouse, which means being on my feet all day but moving aswell, basically 10 hours a day of walking. I'd spent 4 years telling myself I wasn't going to lose any weight, that I was doing what I could, that there was not much point in trying. Fast forward 4 months and I'd lost 7 stone (which is about 100lb for americans) simply through my job. I wasn't eating any better (in fact probably more) but the active work had it's effect. So dont give up with Weight loss! It might come from anywhere, for me a simple job change! I have a picture on my phone, but no idea how to upload it here :)

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A year in review from a tiny person - 57 pounds down (240 - 180), 5 foot 2, female, 45 years old. Here's what's been working for me.

Facebook tells me it’s a year to the day tomorrow since I started to make a lifestyle change. I was just over 17 stone, which is a BMI of 43 on my 5 foot 2 inch frame, and I’d been slowly putting weight on over the last 10 years since running away screaming from calorie counting as too hard - no more than a pound a quarter, but it was relentless. More importantly, my cardiovascular health was terrible. I was basically sedentary, and any exercise at all left me out of breath. I was already heading towards trying to make a change, but a holiday in Croatia was also the kicker - I couldn’t go up bell towers to see the views and walking anywhere hurt. My joints ached most of the time, I was starting to feel actively disabled because of my weight and my lack of cardio fitness, and enough was enough.

One year on, and I’m 57 pounds down (just over 4 stone) - still overweight, in fact technically obese, but I’ve lost the equivalent of more than a fully loaded item of airline hold luggage - the weight of which really struck me when I was lugging one around on my recent trip to Canada. More importantly, I’m now a person who can comfortably run for an hour or more on the elliptical cross-trainer, and my VO2 Max is well within the healthy range for a person my age and heading towards the athlete section of the charts. My joints no longer hurt, and I can now tackle things that I would have simply not attempted before as they would have been impossible. For example, we went for a four hour hike through rough terrain when we were in the Algonquin Provincial Park, which was tiring but doable, and I thought nothing of racking up 30,000 steps one day when visiting Toronto.

It’s been quite a ride to get here. I really dove into the research and learned a lot about how to eat in a way that satisfied me and still got me towards my goals, and exercise in a way I can, if not actively enjoy, tolerate and work into my day to day life. I’ve listed out the main things I think have helped as much for myself as anything. This is very much a work in progress and probably a journey I’ll be on for the rest of my life, so I’m trying to work out a permanent lifestyle that suits me, not a once and done “diet”.

I got my shit together - a lot of my work has been to understand why I got fat and unfit in the first place, and a lot in the past has been to do with low grade depression and eating and drinking my feelings, with a side order of too little physical activity, an ex husband that ate like a toddler, and putting half of the food on my plate not a third of the food when dishing up. Wising up to the fact that I clearly suffer from SAD has helped. A daily dose of reasonably high concentration (5000 UI) D3 has been an utter game changer, and without that I probably couldn’t have even started to try to fix other things.

I am kind to myself- so many of my weight loss attempts in the past have come from a mindset of self-hatred and punishing. I grew up with a mother who clearly has undiagnosed orthorexia, my food culture was fucked up, and I’d internalised a lot of fat hatred. Weight loss attempts in the past were faddy, clearly dysfunctional starvation diets leading to reactive bingeing. A lot of work has gone into believing I’m worth taking care of, even down to simple little things such as making sure I take my vitamins every day. If I don’t achieve my goals one day, I don’t punish myself, I just get back on the horse. I think it’s also been helpful that I’ve been framing this far more in terms of cardio health and overall wellness - the number on the scales has not been the be all and end all at all.

I calorie count and track everything - when I started I made a commitment that I would track everything for one year, both the days I’m on track and the days I am very much not. This has been invaluable in understanding what’s going on when I go off the rails, and also in limiting the negative thoughts when it happens, because I can see rationally I haven’t done that much damage at all to my progress, even in my worst moments. It’s also essential for me because I’m so tiny. My caloric requirements as a sedentary apart from planned exercise 5 foot 2 45 year old woman really aren’t that high, and something as small and simple as a tablespoon of peanut butter can really put a spanner in the works! With the individual TDEE calculators that float around Reddit it’s also made it clear to me that I run cold and my actual requirements are a couple of hundred calories less a day than estimates would give. This is probably partly due to my PCOS and partly because my NEAT (non exercise activity such as fidgeting) is really low. It’s as annoying as hell and part of my journey this year has been learning to accept this. I might get frustrated when I see somebody talk about losing 100 pounds in 3 months because keto, but my journey is my journey, and a pound a week is more than acceptable for a tiny person who takes regular diet breaks. Comparison is the theft of joy, as they say, and I’ve had to learn that. Calorie tracking has also come on in leaps and bounds in the last 10 years in terms of simplicity and usability. I use the MyFitnessPal app and website, but I’ve also heard good things about Loseit and Cronometer.

I intermittent fast - I don’t like breakfast, never have done, and given my limited calorie budget I vastly prefer two slightly more luxurious meals a day versus three pathetic stingy ones. I exercise in the mornings in a fasted state, and generally find I don’t get hungry until about 2 p.m. I then eat my second meal between 6 and 7 p.m. and then stop eating. This seems to suit me very well and I don’t get very hungry. I’m more relaxed in terms of hours at weekends when my husband is home (he works away in the week).

I eat a lot of protein and limit refined carbs - there’s a reasonable body of evidence that lowish carb diets are good for PCOS and at a personal level I find refined carbs make me really hungry and crave more. I’m better off staying away altogether. I eat the odd baked potato as a treat. Most of my calories are from protein and veggies. If I’m eating out and want a dessert I will have a dessert, however! Sugary things are a rare treat though, as is bread.

I cook a lot from scratch - I think this is really helpful as I can prepare meals that go in the freezer to my requirements.

From Monday - Thursday my lunch is often a portion of chili, curry, or perhaps a bolognese on veggie noodles. I eat a lot of skyr on top of things for extra protein. Dinner is usually fish or chicken with a veggie. I use a lot of things like capers and herb vinegars for acidity and flavour. I’m super stingy with oil and butter, not because I’m scared of it, but because I can’t fit it in calorie wise. I’m a volume eater so I tend to shoehorn a lot of mushrooms and courgettes into my recipes. I also repeat meals a lot, particularly dinner, so they are logged in MyFitnessPal and logging is a single click. My Instant Pot is a godsend for meal prep.

Friday - Sunday I am more relaxed and my meals will include a roast dinner on Saturday and a cooked breakfast on Sunday - just portion controlled and I try not to generate leftovers. I’m fussy about quality over quantity for most things - one amazing sausage and one slice of bacon for a cooked brekkie beats larger amounts of poor quality products any day. I’d much rather make a burger than go to McDonald’s. I eat poussin because it’s delicious rather than skinless chicken breast. Nothing that I dislike or feel is a chore to eat goes in my mouth.

I also plan my meals on a weekly basis just before I do my shop, and I shop online, which has helped with finding good products as I can figure it out at my leisure, not grudgingly in the store, and it’s saved for next time!

I exercise every day if possible - right now I run on the elliptical and use that as my time to watch TV - in fact it is rare that I watch TV when not exercising these days. A show is usually 50-60 minutes which is perfect. Before I built up to that I did more yoga (Yoga with Adriene on YouTube is amazing) and I also signed up to Nerd Fitness to get access to their excellent bodyweight workouts. I’ll probably move more to those once I get to maintenance to tone up. Exercise obviously fits my cardio health goals, it’s a great mood enhancer, and it really helps change my caloric budget from miserable to doable. The joys of being a tiny human :)

I got a fitness tracker - my Fitbit has been invaluable to me. My caloric burn is radically different between sedentary days where it can be as little as 1600, to a busy day with exercise, which looks more like 2500, and understanding that has been really helpful.

I track my weight and my TDEE - partly because I just like spreadsheets and pretty graphs! I weigh daily and use a weight smoothing app (Happy Scale) to iron out the day to day fluctuations - I also track against my menstrual cycle to try and eliminate the fluctuations from water retention. This has really helped me trust the process. I also take photos and measurements on a monthly basis.

I use cyclical dieting and take regular maintenance breaks - there’s some evidence that this is helpful in reducing adaptive thermogenesis. Plus I’ve found it really helpful for keeping my sanity - there’s no way I could just plug away on 1,200 a day as some people do. What this means in practical terms is I eat closer to maintenance on Fridays and Saturdays and lighter in the week, and I’ve taken regular breaks of a couple of weeks or so - often to coincide with holidays. I also track my caloric deficit on a weekly basis rather than worrying too much about the daily numbers.

So there you have it.

A few people / sites I’ve found helpful along the way:

Lyall McDonald / bodyrecomposition.com - Lyall trains bodybuilders / fitness competitors and has lots of interesting things to say about fat loss, in particular female fat loss. He introduced me to the concept of the diet break, and he’s careful to show his research.

Aadam Ali / physiqonomics.com - Aadam is a mouthy no bullshit Londoner who talks a great deal of sense - I enjoy his writing style a lot. He has a mailing list you can sign up for. He shills (not unfairly) for his coaching business but it’s not obnoxious.

Reddit - mainly r/loseit for support and /r1200isplenty and r/1500isplenty for recipes and food ideas, but also, r/fatlogic, which I thought would be a hate sub when I first encountered it, but there are some incredibly supportive people, particularly within the daily threads (with the caveat that don’t go anywhere near it if you have eating disorder-y tendencies - it’s not that the subreddit promotes it, it doesn’t and actually the mods stomp hard on that stuff, but you do have some disorder-y people floating about there at times). It is also a fantastic place to rant :D

There you go. I hope that is of use to someone. I've gotten so much valuable information from this sub it seemed like time to give back :)

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M 6' 198 -> 184 (3 months)

I started working out in August last year. Before that I didn't know what the inside of a gun looked like and never worked out. I decided to bulk and probably ate more than I should have. I would workout and then come back and eat a whole pizza. I went all the way up to 198 from my initial weight of 175 in a period of 10 months.

I definitely bulked too long and too much. This is definitely a good lesson to learn that you shouldn't bulk beyond a point where you've got too much fat. I definitely was too fat by the end of the bulk and felt a nice big tire around my waist, and generally hated myself.

I then decided it was time to cut and started eating at a deficit. I didn't maintain a specific deficit, but I would check my weight week to week and adjust calories according to whether I lost enough weight. In this time I also started playing basketball once a week and I think this is what helped the most with my weight loss. Because of that I didn't have to eat too little (since basketball burned a lot of calories). I advise anyone wanting to cut to incorporate intense cardio instead of trying to ear less to compensate for the lack of cardio. I feel like this approach makes you overall more healthy and fit rather than the other way of eating less. I would aim to lose about 1.5-1.7 pounds a week since anything faster than that will probably be too drastic and result in muscle loss and waste as well, and you don't want that.

Also, I ate about 110-130g of protein almost everyday. I think this should be enough, although some people suggest eating more. Next bulk I'll definitely try to eat more protein and see if that helps

As for lifting, I followed the PHUL routine from start to finish through both bulk and cut.

Before: http://imgur.com/OpUO4Fd

After: http://imgur.com/PBgWp2y

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(NSV) I did it.

Photo here

Late 2017/early 2018 was one of the worst periods of my life. Without going into detail, I made a lot of mistakes and nearly destroyed everything I've been building for the past 7 years since my mom died. Everything came to a head earlier this year, and while I'd stopped making the mistakes, I could still feel the repercussions, and I was left broken and lost.

6 months ago, I'd reached a point in my recovery where I needed to find a new way to self care- I was tired of lying in bed watching Friends, eating disco fries (aka New Jersey Poutine), and feeling sorry for myself. I'd been following a friend's fitness journey, and although I was skeptical that I'd stick to it, I figured it would be a decent start and at least get me out of the house and moving.

It was hard. It was so hard. I've always wanted to be a fitness junkie but depression, anxiety, and general executive dysfunction meant that I couldn't get myself to commit to any sort of fitness regime for more than a month at most.

This program, Kayla Itsines' Bikini Body Guide which I did via the Sweat app, wasn't any easier. I had to do the beginner program, which is a 4-week mini program to preface the main 12-week BBG 1.0 program, twice because I fell out of the habit for two weeks and I refused to let myself go into 1.0 without being consistent with the beginner program. And even when I did go into 1.0 after following the beginner program consistently, I had a very hard time. I was incredibly sore all the time for the first few weeks, I skipped cardio a lot, and I had to talk myself into going to the gym almost every day.

But, little by little, it got easier. I still had days where I had to force myself to go to the gym and even days I just completely skipped, but I'd just do that week again if I didn't finish all the resistance training for it. I still skipped cardio a lot. But most importantly, I kept going. And even when my weight loss progress stalled, I refused to let it stop me.

On Saturday, I finished the BBG 1.0 program. I (relatively) consistently worked out for 6 months straight. It's an enormous accomplishment for me, as someone who gets discouraged so easily, and I am so proud. I still have a long way to go to reach my goals, but seeing all this progress in my strength (I can almost do a full pushup!) and stamina has kept me going. I feel better than I did when I was constantly moping, and I can work through my emotions in a healthy way now.

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The downsides to eating an extreme calorie deficit?

For a while now I've been doing IF and OMAD, on top of lazy Keto. I know pretty much none of those things are really well received on this sub, but I figured my question still applies.

What are the potential downsides to eating an extreme calorie deficit? I'm a 29 6'1" 265lb M, and for about 6 weeks now, I've been eating around 700-1000 calories daily. I'm pretty sure I should be at least double that. I started my weight loss journey at around 310lbs, and as stated earlier I'm already down to around 265lbs. The results are addicting, but I'm scared of what might potentially happen if I keep this up in the long-term. To ensure I'm getting my nutrition, I've been taking a multi-vitamin and it helped tons. I feel fine mostly and I never feel overly hungry, though sometimes I'll find my heart pounding for no apparent reason.

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Sugar Makes My Body Fall Apart

So I have some interesting stuff going on. Let me just tell you I have been CICO for almost 2 years and lost around 100lbs. When I started I had High BP, Chronic acid re-flux, and was trying to diagnose several symptoms from vertigo, chronic neck pain, heart palpitations etc.

During the course of my weight loss everything went away...Everything. My doctor even took me off the High BP medicine, and I have maintained normal BP since. The neck pain comes back every once in a while but usually when I neglect my exercise for more then a couple days. Also during the course of this I had several glucose tests and never showed diabetes or Pre diabetes.

All this said however, my body will no longer tolerate sugar. I took two weeks of for a Vacation we took earlier in the year. During that time I got a rapid onset of vertigo, dizziness and heart palpitations. I had been eating sugar. It was so bad I thought I was having a tumor and went to the hospital. They couldn't find anything, and suggested I see a neurologist.

After being home three days and back on the plan it all suddenly went away, the only thing remaining were the thousands of dollars in hospital bills. My doctor could not explain this to me.

So back on the program again I took a night off, figuring one scoop of ice cream could not break the world. Today I have little blisters on my fingers (which often happens with me and sugar), I can barely keep my eyes open, and my inner ear pressure is all messed up. Needless to say sugar is no longer going to be a part of my day off regimen. But the fact remains I cannot find an actual medical name for this. Its very strange. Has anyone else had anything like this?

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