Thursday, November 15, 2018

junk food, redbull, coffee and cigarettes, dangerous weight loss

basically this is all I have been consuming for a while, like month or two, I kinda started to loose weight when I stopped using antidepressants, benzos etc stuff. But now it's getting pretty scary, I eat almost every junk food, few weeks ago I was eating only mcdonalds, drinking coffee, redbull and smoking 2 packs a day. A couple of people been telling me I look skinny and now I kinda see it. It's not healthy, somedays I feel like shit because I am kinda addicted to caffeine now, but I am also starting to worry that I might have some kinda of cancer or something.. It's scary, jeans that used to be good 3 months ago now are falling off even with belt...

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How to deal with annoying co-workers?

I had a really uncomfortable situation with a co-worker today, we’ll call her ‘Jane’. So Jane has somewhat of a reputation for being quite loud and abrasive and many of my other colleagues have complained about how annoying she is. For context she is a normal healthy weight, and about 16 years older than me (which she frequently points out to me). Anyways so I went over to Janes desk today to ask her something work related, and she literally took one look at me and shrieked and exclaimed (so that everyone in the vicinity heard) ‘oh my god you’ve lost so much weight!’ I smiled and said something like ‘oh yeah thanks I have lost a bit yeah.’ She then got this really weird look and continued: ‘no no you’ve lost so much, and way too fast. Too much, too fast!!!’ I said that I hadn’t lost very much, and that it’s taken me over 5 months; all the while trying to diffuse the situation as Jane was basically shouting and causing a massive scene. I kind of just shrugged it off, and tried to change the subject to a work issue which worked for a few minutes and then she just goes ‘I barely recognise you, you’ve lost so much weight.’ I pointed out that we see each other nearly every day in kind of a jokey way, and then she just goes ‘okay but don’t lose anymore okay?’ in a kind of fake concerned tone. I kind of just smiled and changed the subject back to work again, and then managed to escape back to my work area.

Besides the fact that this whole scene was pretty embarrassing for me, it’s the last comment that really pissed me off. How can a normal weight person (or anybody really) tell an OBESE person to not lose any more weight? That’s so fucked up…I really wanted to tell her that my BMI is 31 and that I need to lose more weight for my health, and that it’s not a vanity thing but the whole thing was so embarrassing I just wanted the whole conversation to end.

I know it’s going to come up again, and she’ll probably cause another scene as I still have about 40 pounds to lose before I’m even at a healthy BMI. My question to you guys is have you dealt with similar situations with colleagues/friends/family members and how do you deal with it? Do you explain your weight loss journey or just shrug it off or what? I just can’t get over how messed up it is to tell an overweight person to not lose weight. Why would she say this?

TLDR: co-worker made a massive scene at work about my weight loss and then told me (an obese person) not to lose any more weight. How to deal the next time she does this?

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I want to lose weight but I can't count calories

CW - eating disorder

female, 5'6", 155 lbs

I had a very severe eating disorder for almost 6 years, and have been in recovery for the past 3. However, during this time, due to medications and other mental health issues, I've gained about 20 pounds. I feel that I would be much happier if I lost the weight, though I am not inherently unhappy at this weight (so it feels different than ED motivated weight loss desires to me).

However, counting calories is very triggering for me, and all of my weight loss attempts that included calorie counting ended in me having to give up weight loss and take a step back in my recovery, either gaining the weight back or stagnated at a minimal weight loss. I eat extremely healthy (as validated by a doctor, not just personal opinion), so I'm not sure how to lose this weight without counting calories. I run every other day and am very active in general.

Any advice/similar experiences?

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Personal Trainer - worth it?

Hi all,

I’ve been a lurker for a little while and I love all the inspiration in this sub!!

I am on a weight loss journey not nearly as impactful as some / most of you. I graduated college at around 200 pounds and made the change to start exercising. In two years I lost about 30 pounds, but I’ve been plateaued for a year now and I’m slowly gaining back despite eating better and exercising the same amount.

I feel I’m not being effective in my exercises!

I recently switched to LA Fitness and went through a fitness assessment yesterday. It was extremely informative and eye opening - who knew you should do strength training before cardio??

Long story short they have a personal training program that I could join. 1x a week but they help make a schedule for your other workouts as well and provide insight to what works.

Money is not a problem, but I’m curious what your all thoughts are on personal trainers? Are the worth it or should I save the money and use an online resource?

Thanks!!

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SV - Half way!

First proper post here but long time lurker. TLDR: Lost 5 stone (70lbs/31kg)

Started losing at 25 stone(350lbs/158kg) on 1st Jan 2016, no real seismic event prompted it, I just realised either I got off my arse now or stayed a fat mess for the rest of my reduced life. I injured my knee playing rugby in my teens and that just snowballed into eating like a pig and avoiding exercise like the plague with my knee as an excuse.

Beginning with joining a gym and not stuffing my face, nothing too crazy, as every time I've tried to lose weight prior I've done too much too soon, set my knee off and failed. Walking on the treadmill, and doing some weightlifting, always enjoyed weights when I played rugby so I think that also helped. Made a bit of progress, lost a stone and a half, but results started to slow, and eventually plateau.

CICO with MyFitnessPal was the difference.

I know for some people (and me now) this is obvious, but honestly, I had no real idea how many calories some things contained. I knew about calories etc, don't get me wrong, but I was wilfully ignorant. Macros? Only macro I cared about was on World of Warcraft for stance dancing my Warrior xD

I know you hear people say you cant outrun a bad diet, and they are 100% correct. I alternate between 1800 cals on a rest day and 2000 cals on gym days. If I am genuinely hungry, I eat. I don't beat myself up, I don't have junk food, I will just have something healthy and/or a protein shake. I do have cheat days, but these are reducing in frequency, I find I enjoy 'bad' food less and less, and regret tanking my gains more than I enjoy eating. Never been a home drinker anyway so luckily didn't have to deal with this, but if I go out with friends, I don't count cals, I just jump back on the horse the day after.

I use a fitbit for the gym to track my heart rate and my actual workouts, I have hit the point where I genuinely look forward to going (apart from leg day, my knee still grumbles even though I know I've strengthened it), and I am now focusing more on the weightlifting than just losing weight, doing a proper split, focusing on my macros as well as calories, and even using a little a7 notebook to track weights and sets. I know I will have saggy skin, but if i can reduce it with a combo of moisturising and building muscle it's worth a go.

I'm about to hit 30. I have spent the last few months really cracking down to get under 20 stone so I can start my 30's 'right', and I've now hit it. Anyone just starting, or thinking about starting, its not a race, its a marathon. You have to change how you view food, fight the mental battle with your inner fat person, and just stick to it. It's worth it!

Biggest thing for me though, you have to do it for yourself. Sure its nice when people notice your body changing, its great to hit those milestones, but if you can walk out of the gym and know you've put a shift in, that's what matters. If you expect everyone to be happy for you, you will be disappointed. There may be people that don't give a shit, there may even be people who want you to fail. Fuck these people, cut them out if you can, ignore them if you can't.

My target at the moment is 15 stone, this may get reevaluated closer to the time, but for now I'm gonna try to slow the weight loss down a bit, build some muscle, and give my skin chance to catch up haha.

Appreciate all the people in this sub, I might not post much, but its nice to see other people succeeding, its really motivating.

If you read this far, thanks!

Chris

Link for progress pics between march 17 and nov 18

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My Journey Thus Far: 365 Days of Tracking Calories

Greetings, fellow losers! It's been a year of tracking for me, and I'd like to share my insights. As I stated in my introductory post, I was never taught proper nutrition growing up, and have learned so much in the last year.

When I finally decided I had to do something about my weight, I weighed myself in at 201.3 pounds while wearing light clothes, so I call it 200 even. On my 5'8" frame as a then-29 year-old male, I looked fairly large, especially around my stomach. I usually didn't eat high volume foods, but I ate lots of bread, pasta, and tortilla chips, all of which are pretty high calorie. Hunger wasn't normally a problem for me, I just made poor choices. While losing weight, I rarely felt hunger, for which I'm grateful.

Since educating myself on the topics of weight loss via this subreddit's very useful Quick Start Guide and other research I've done since learning of CICO, I've come to adjust my eating habits. I set a goal for myself of 160 pounds, which would put me just inside a normal BMI. While losing weight, I tracked all my food intake via MyFitnessPal, and started weighing myself daily a few weeks into my journey.

At first, I was using measuring cups to measure my food, but it seemed inconsistent. About a month in, I bought a food scale to weigh my food, and discovered that measuring cups are wildly inaccurate because of settling and overflow. Unless it's a powder, and you pack it and level it off with a knife, it's never going to be accurate. A serving size of 1 cup that's supposed to be 40 grams might actually be 33 grams or even 50 grams, there's no way to tell without the scale. Once I got the scale and started weighing everything, it felt like I was eating so much more food. A lot of the things I was eating regularly erred more on the low side when measured in cups.

Around one month in, I bought a Fitbit Charge 2 to help track my calories out. Since I was monitoring my calories in, knowing how many I was burning should definitely help, right? Well, it turns out that all fitness trackers intentionally over-inflate calories burned because people like to see bigger numbers. My Fitbit tracks my sleep and steps walked, which I've found to be much more accurate and meaningful than the calories it tracks. I highly recommend getting one for these reasons, rather than monitoring calories out. If you do get one, cut its listed burned calories by 20-25% when tracking for yourself.

I started incorporating foods I didn't eat regularly into my diet, such as fruits and vegetables, because most of them are lower calorie, and you can eat much more to fill full. I significantly increased my protein intake with more chicken breast, lean beef, and started eating flavored Greek yogurt, which is surprisingly tasty.

I started out eating about 1,700 calories a day, and gradually dropped to 1,500, the lower limit for men. For the first couple months, I ate a bowl of cereal for breakfast, lean meat like chicken breast for lunch, and had whatever I wanted in moderation for dinner, and had a Greek yogurt for dessert. About 2 months in, I learned about intermittent fasting, and stopped eating breakfast, and started having slightly larger lunches. It was immensely helpful in helping control the small amount of hunger hunger I had when I was losing weight, and helped burn a bit of fat along the way by making my body use some of its stored fat to get me around while I didn't eat for 16-18 hours at a time.

In about 150 days, I reached my first goal of 160 pounds, and switched to maintenance. I had been monitoring my TDEE with the adaptive TDEE tracking spreadsheet, and my TDEE over those 150 days was around 2,200 calories. Moving from 1,500 calories to 2,200 was a noticeable change, and I was able to reincorporate many foods I had limited for myself, to once a week or less, much more often.

I still had noticeable stomach fat, but my face looked much leaner. I started looking into getting fit, and started thinking about bulking. I hadn't been doing any lifting or exercise other than walking more and the occasional short bike ride since I started losing weight. After about a month of educating myself while maintaining 160, I decided I still had too much body fat to consider it, and needed to drop to 153 and decide from there.

It took me 212 days from starting to reach my second goal of 153 pounds, or about 32 days to drop 7 pounds from my decision to drop to 153. I've maintained this for the last 5 months, staying between 151 and 155.

On my way to 153, I started running at the track nearby. I bought some resistance bands and I started lifting weights. Since starting exercising, I feel I have way more hunger than ever before in my life. When I got to 153 and spent a few weeks there, I found that my TDEE had gone up to 2,400 because of my increased exercise. I've been eating everything in sight, and maintained that weight for 5 months, which surprised the hell out of me. I've started what people call a "body recomposition" by maintaining that weight and putting on muscle. It's been slow, but I've noticed an increase in muscle and a small decrease in fat.

A couple weeks ago, I decided it was time to cut down to 140 and remove all doubt that my body fat percentage would be low enough for a proper bulk, so I'm back to 1,500 calories. Let me tell you, I'm hungry! I've gone back to intermittent fasting to control that hunger, and it's working for me, and my hunger is almost as low as when I started losing weight.

I've learned a few things from this experience:

  • Calories are the only thing that matter in losing weight. Controlling your calories in is a whole lot easier than controlling your calories out. Exercise burns much fewer calories than most people think. High intensity exercise for an hour a day likely only burns 200 calories for most people.
  • Logging my food has been the single most useful thing on my journey. A food scale is the single most important piece of equipment to accurately log food.
  • There will be days where you go far over your goal, or go out to eat and can't weigh your food, and that's okay. You are building good habits, even if you stumble along the journey. Try to log as accurately as possible, and you'll do amazingly. Most restaurants have similar foods, so if you can't find a nutrition chart for that restaurant, find a similar one from another restaurant and log that. Close is so much better than nothing at all.
  • Your log is not your judge. Don't lie to it.
  • Hunger is not an emergency.
  • The difference between being heavily overweight and normal weight at the same activity level is only a couple hundred calories per day.
  • Nutrition is so very important. Getting the right amount of vitamins and minerals is vital to physical and mental well-being. Potassium is so low in most people's diets, yet it's so important. Eat more potatoes and bananas, or buy NoSalt to add to your food. It tastes just like regular sodium chloride, table salt.
  • Fruits and vegetables should be eaten every day, even if you're not a fan of most of them. Get a few you like, and alternate through them.
  • Don't worry about the scale number. My Fitbit and Libra weight logs show that the numbers change daily, mostly based on water weight, not fat. If you're at a deficit, there's no need to worry. The number will go up and down, but the fat will come off.
  • When you reach a goal, you should go a couple pounds beneath that goal, because when you start maintenance, you will almost immediately jump a couple pounds due to more gut water and food in your stomach.
  • Just because one method, like intermittent fasting, works for one person, don't mean it will work for everyone. Track your calories, and figure out a plan that works best for you.
  • Never give up. This is your life, and you can take control of it and achieve your goals. Be persistent. Build discipline. Motivation is fleeting, but discipline will keep you on the path. Make a couple goals each day and try to reach them. Don't let any day be a zero day.

Good luck to all of my fellow losers, and thank you for everything, /r/loseit! Here's to another 365 days of counting calories.

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22/F Starting my journey, looking for tips !

Hi guys, long term lurker first time poster. I'm a 22 year old female college student and I'm ready to make a great change in my life. In terms of stats I'm 5"8 and I weigh about 185 pounds which rounds me out at a BMI of about 26.8. According to the TDEE Calculator I found on this subreddit that means I need to lose around 30 pounds to get to my ideal weight of 154 pounds which is about what I weighed before going off to college and getting into a lot of bad eating and sedentary habits.

I decided at first to start this journey to get healthier and not to lose weight but now that i'm in the swing of things I thought might as well fix a goal right ? I started couch to 5k last week which gets me running three times a week and my scoliosis doctor told me that I should go swimming twice a week so I do that for around 30 to 45 minutes every wednesday and friday. I'm a vegetarian and tend to eat a lot of cheese and crap so I've decided to start logging my meals on the Samsung Health app I have on my phone because last time I did that I realised that I started eating healthier and cheated less in terms of takeaways and junk food.

The main reason for this post is to keep me accountable for my actions and to keep at it but it's also to get tips from other people ! How do I stay motivated ? What are good meals for vegetarians on a weight loss journey ? How do you fight the urge to order delivery food ? I'm accepting all and any advice anyone has, especially if you've been in a similar spot to me ! Also, if I keep up my exercise how long do you think it'll take me to lose the weight and am I doing too much ? I'm pretty scared I might be over doing it.

Thank you for reading !

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