Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Gained back 15 lbs of 40 lb weight loss, desperate to lose it.

My highest weight at 5'9" was 214 lbs, got down to 170 and then kept it off for two years. I LOVED my body at 170. I was eating well, lifting weights, and I'm naturally tall and muscular so I was so incredibly stoked over my appearance. I was obsessively at the gym all the time and I had never felt more confident in my life.

One terrible holiday season made me gain a bunch because I ate like shit, and since then I've been trying to lose weight. Currently at 186 and feeling like shit about myself. I didn't think 15 lbs could alter my appearance so much but my face is chubby again and my cute clothes dont fit anymore.

I meal prep every week and I'm going to start doing cardio several times a week at the gym and schedule eating times and prep healthier meals. It's hard for me to count calories because I cook everything from scratch mostly and I have a hard time figuring out how many calories are in things. I'll work on it.

I CAN DO IT, IT'S ONLY 15 LBS! I CAN BE A MUSCULAR AMAZON WOMAN LIKE I ONCE WAS!

Question: Should I do cardio or lift weights to lose weight? I love lifting weights but I thought cardio was better for fat loss. Thanks!

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30 Day Accountability Challenge- Day 6

Hi everyone! It's Tuesday and here in the US of A it's election day. Which means that a good deal of conversation has been had in the Joisan household over the last several days about the ballot measures and candidates we had to vote on. And to relate this back to fitness and weight loss, our local polling place was only about a 15 minute walk away so I went and walked over to drop off our ballots. In addition to that I finished baking the last of the pfeffernusse dough. I think in the end we got a bit more than 100 cookies in the batch. Thank goodness husband has a big office full of people to foist some of those off on, and we can also distribute a few to my in-laws, but in the meantime sneaking one or two into my daily calorie count actually isn't too bad. On an unrelated note, the past several days I've been having some pain in my hip when I run that I'm a bit worried about. It doesn't hurt me normally but whenever I run for any extended length of time it starts to feel sore. But not enough to actually impact my ability to run so idk? I'm still thinking I'm going to get an appointment with a sports medicine doctor if it continues to bother me by the end of the week. Luckily Boulder has a ton of good sports doctors. Given the number of very intense runners, cyclists, etc. that live here I can see why!

Weight: 137.5 again. At least I'm not back above 138! I've noticed that whenever I eat more than about 1600 kcal in a day I tend to go up on the scale even though I should still be well below maintenance.

Calories: Ended yesterday at 1742... approximately. There was a lot of guesstimating with the food I ate yesterday.

Steps: 15,119 including a 6 km run. I'm amazed... when I first started running in late July it would have taken me over 20 minutes to run 2.5 km, now I can run 6 km in less than 40 minutes. I find that sometimes I can get caught up in how far I still have to go and lose sight of how far I've already come.

Gratitude: I'm very thankful to live in a state which (in my opinion) has a fantastic election system compared to the other places I've lived. All registered voters get mailed a ballot a few weeks before the election date. Not just a sample ballot, the actual ballot. You then have plenty of time to fill it out at your own convenience, no waiting in line or having to worry about fitting it into your work schedule. Once it's signed and sealed, you can either return it by mail or at any of the ballot drop boxes distributed around the county. And if you like doing things the old fashioned way or you lost your ballot there are still polling places where you can go vote.

How about all of you? Has it been a terrible Tuesday? Terrific Tuesday? Just a typical Tuesday? Let's hear it!

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It's my birthday next week, Christmas is coming up, and I've lost my consistency

There are excuses I can give but I'm not going to bother because I know better, but the last few weeks I've eaten well half the days, crept above my calories a few times, and the rest I've gone way over. My weight loss has slowed right down/stagnated as a result.

First thing is a victory of sorts - my standard of 'bad eating' is way different to what it was 12 or even 6 months ago. My bad days would have been coming in at something like 2x my TDEE and I'd have been inactive to boot. This time I haven't dropped my activity levels and my max calories were barely 3000 and I felt physically rotten for it.

Second thing is a vow! I'll be doing family dinner Thursday week, drinks with friends the following Saturday, and dinner with my gf the following Monday. I've already mucked up today but I've got a full week to get back into my good habits. I'll pre-log all the food I can, but most importantly I will be sticking to it. I'm considering photographing all my foods until I'm back on track just for an extra layer of accountability.

I'm going to get there though! Catch you all in a week and a bit when I'm a year older and have eaten within my goals every day.

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My never ending battle with commitment and losing weight, please help.

I don't know what to do. I've sought out to lose weight for years now, and always come back to square one at my previous weight AND MORE. My first time actually accomplishing weight loss was a few years ago, lost about 30 lbs. I was incredibly motivated, worked out hard, ate a clean diet, read everything I could. When I started really noticing the results, and was near that threshold I reverted back to my old ways. That really hurt my psych after looking at all my hard work go down the drain, it made it difficult to start the journey again. I tried again, but this time with a trainer helping push me along the way, financially I couldn't keep that going forever, and I reverted back to my old ways. Now, I just get bursts of motivation, but can't even go a day without eating junk food and eating out. I'm always reading that people just cleaned up their diet and lost the weight, but nobody talks about how they overcame the emotional aspect of getting over this hump and staying committed. Would love any advice how you guys overcame the barrier I'm going through right now.

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Irrational fear of not checking the scale enough

So I've heard it being said a lot both on this subreddit, and pretty much everywhere else in the fitness and weight loss circles: only check your weight once a week, and don't become obsessed with the scale.

Well, I'm gonna be honest, I haven't really followed that advice too well, and sometimes the number on the scale can make or break my entire day. The reason I check it almost daily is because there have been a few times when I'd lose far less weight over a week than I wanted to, and I'd think to myself "If only I knew sooner that I was screwing something up..."

I'm deathly afraid of not checking my weight for a while, and seeing that it hasn't changed. Checking my weight daily allows me to see steady progress of dropping a third or quarter pound a day which kind of keeps me motivated, but I'm fully aware I might be getting obsessed with it, which could be unhealthy.

So I promised myself not to weigh myself this week. Last time I did was last Saturday, and I won't again until this coming Saturday. I still feel that lingering fear of not having lost weight come Saturday, and feeling like an entire week has gone to waste. This is probably a pointless thing to post about, but I just want to hear about you guys' experience with the scale, and how often you weigh yourselves and maybe just some advice on that matter.

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My first "oh, I can see it" moment

Image: https://i.imgur.com/CedhZvB.jpg

Note, I am tall which means changes take a long time to show up, they may be subtle, but I can see it. I am close to having lost 15 pounds and if I'm being honest my highest weight was probably more that 220lbs because by the time I weighed myself I had started to cut back on food a lot. I wouldn't be surprised if my starting weight was somewhere around 225 or more in the first photo.

I started noticing that clothes looked different on me just yesterday but it was today at work when I took a long look at myself that I realized I looked a bit skinnier, which made me super happy since the scale has been stagnant for the past 2 days. It gave me the motivation I needed to continue. So far I haven't done any calorie counting because portion control and instead of eating a huge dinner just eating a sandwich or similar has done a lot. I do I will have to start counting calories very soon to continue to see progress. I'm also thinking about intermittent fasting later at night and see how that works for me.

How far into your weight loss did you start noticing your body changing? When did other people take notice?

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SV + NSV + Major Milestone – I became a proud loser.

Progress pics:

https://www.reddit.com/r/progresspics/comments/9urq18/m28511_310lbs_198lbs_112lbs_the_growing_amount_of/

Over the past few months, I've started writing this post multiple times, but always felt I'm not "worthy" of being in this community, but today something clicked, I feel better writing these lines, though I'll still rely extensively on the guidelines to organize my thoughts. Hope you don't mind. :)

First things first, the data:

  • age: 28
  • sex: M
  • height: 182 cm
  • starting weight (SW): 140 kgs
  • current weight: 89 kgs
  • goal weight: around 90 kgs, with a better fat to muscle ratio.

After finishing university, I became a project manager 4 years ago, working 8–10 hours daily in an office. Due to the sitting lifestyle involved with this, I've started gaining more and more weight, which in turn caused health concerns, then a perceived inability to do any kind of physical activity, the stress being on the word "perceived".

I made myself believe that I cannot change anything, because "work is too stressful and my weight and health issues don't allow me to do any sports". I've basically chased myself into a downward spiral.

The health issues I've had may sound familiar to some of you (the list is not complete):

  • hemorrhoids
  • joint pain
  • diarrhea
  • sleep apnea
  • reflux, especially at night
  • high blood pressure
  • Fatty Liver Syndrome

Fast forward to 2017: I had a routine blood test, my family doctor thought that I may have thyroid problems, luckily, this was not the case, but all my liver related values showed concerning values, so I had to go to a hepatologist. Turns out I had a reversible but rather ugly case of FLS. The doctor told me that I shouldn't be overly worried, but I should try to lose weight.

This was the tipping point in my life because while I wished to lose weight, I couldn't make myself do it. However, my father passed away when I was 17 due to complications all coming from FLS, with his case progressing to liver cirrhosis, so while my case is still reversible, I've seen firsthand where neglecting the signs can lead. I've requested an appointment with a dietitian, to help me set me on my path.

With her guidance, we've determined the daily target calorie and fat amounts (among others, with these two being the most important in my case), plus the minimum amount of physical activity to aim for.

Currently I'm consuming about 1600-1800 calories daily, trying to keep my daily fat intake around 40 grams max.

I've also dropped all alcohol from my life, while I do enjoy being intoxicated, it affects my liver + alcohol contains too much calories.

In terms of activities, I went from cycling and walking at the first months to jogging, cycling, swimming, going to the gym and finally nowadays, rock climbing. I'm trying to build "functional" muscles, I don't care about becoming bulky.

Over the coming months, up to today, I've felt better and better. Back in April I've had issues with even jogging for 500 metres, Today 5 kilometres means a simple after-work relaxation session. I'm still slow, but endurance-wise I'm light years ahead of my past self. I am even chasing the dream of being able to do an iron man triathlon in two years, to celebrate my 30th birthday, although it's still a very (very very) distant goal, but it keeps me going. :)

As of today, I am calling myself a "loser with a twist".

I've lost 50 kgs, all the above mentioned health concerns except FLS (according to the doctor, it'll take at least 6 more months until the results are visible on my liver), lost the bad thoughts and lots of stress both in my personal and professional life, and also lost 4 X's from my t-shirt sizes – today I went to work in an L sized shirt for the first time in my life (the blue shirt with 2011. 04. 27. is back from Uni, I never got to wear it back then).

My story is still a considerable way from being complete, but I feel I've learned the lesson from my own mistakes to keep me going for the coming years. It'll nevertheless be a challenge to avoid gaining back what I've lost, but I'm positive I'll be able to manage. :)

__________________________

What was the biggest change you made that helped you meet this goal?

Counting calories and exercising, no magic involved. In terms of diet, I'm all for meat. deep-fried food, and sweets. It's not a very good combo for weight loss, but it can still be inserted in a healthy diet as long as it's a proper portion and not too frequent. I'll be honest, I still don't enjoy vegetables most of the time, but it's a very small price to pay for a better health.

What is one thing our users can do each day to mirror your success?

Find yourself a fair and achievable goal to follow, then be strict to yourself and make it happen. Don't want to lose 2-3 kgs a week, don't wish to be able to run a marathon in a few weeks, or you'll risk discouraging yourself.
Also, even all your friends and loved ones will probably become obstacles at one point or another on your weight loss way, without wanting to, to top it off, but they'll try to help in their own way. You need to resist the "oh, but just one muffin/chocolate/beer/liquor won't make a difference" and "you've lost enough, you should stop now" sentences. They are benevolent, but obstacles nevertheless.

Yes, you can accept that muffin, but you'll need to eat less to make up for it. Is it worth dropping a whole meal for one small muffin? Yes, sometimes it is, for your psychological well-being, but not too often. You'll know when it's a must.

How can other users apply this lesson to their life?

If you're overweight but still feeling healthy, please do a favor and do regular check-ups, FLS for example has no visible symptoms until it's usually too late.

Thank you for bearing with me through this wall of text, I apologize for any grammar mistakes, I'm not a native speaker. :)

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