Monday, December 3, 2018

Getting back up again

I’m not super open with my SO and my family about my weight loss. My SO is very supportive, but as someone who has never had a weight issue doesn’t really get it, my family are all very overweight and think I am being vain and selfish by working out or outright ‘shaming’ them when we go out to eat and I order a salad.

It’s been a really rough couple of weeks, an old knee injury flair up had meant my weights at the gym haven’t been the same and my family over the holidays were really getting to me.

I’ve had four days of avoiding the gym and eating more than I should be and having deserts and things like that. Blowing the calories I usually have. I still logged everything and I still ate under what I used to in a day.. but man.. just felt so defeated.

It started up like that again today. Had sweet coffees, had a big breakfast, avoided the gym.

After lunch I was feeling so down and meh I decided to leave work early. On the way home I ended up crying in the car at the lights very close to my gym. When the lights went green I just turned down the street, parked and went to the gym.

I’ve just finished an amazing work out and I feel absolutely amazing. I’m going home to make myself brilliant healthy dinners and lunches for the rest of the week.

Apologies for the rant/vent.. r/loseit is such a motivation for me.

Might have wobbled... but managed to get back on the horse again.

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First post

Hi everyone! I'm 28 year old mom to a beautiful 1.5 year old boy. I started my weight loss journey when I was pregnant in 2016 - I was 217 when I got pregnant and was terrified that I would develop high blood pressure or gestational diabetes. Add that fear to my morning sickness and I was able to keep my weight gain to less than 8 pounds. If you do the math, that made me 225 and only standing at a whopping 5ft 1in. I let myself slowly lose some weight from breastfeeding, once that stopped I gave up soda. That contributed to another 10 pounds down but I got another plateau, so I started Weight Watchers and running. I'm pleased to say that I am currently hovering at 156-159 currently, which is almost a 70 pound loss! I went from wearing size 18-20 and XXL to 12 and M. I have some work left still but it seems so much more attainable!

I've hit a motivational plateau in that I've stopped doing anything to lose but am maintaining, so I thought I'd come here and hopefully get the nudge I need to hit my goal!

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Workout App

So last week I posted that I was starting my weight loss journey and had decided to eat at a 500 calorie deficit. So far I’m 3 pounds down from my original and want to really get things going by working out. Although I have experience in the weight room I have trouble creating workouts and picking weights. That leads me to my question, does anyone know of a workout app that makes workouts for you? I previously used the Volt Athletics app for workouts but realized the workouts weren’t specifically designed for weight loss and I am in search of a new app. The Volt app was great for taking your PR’s for bench, back squat, and hang clean and creating workouts for specific sports with custom weight recommendations. I know enough about lifting to know what I’m doing for each workout but I struggle at picking weights and what exercises to group together. If anyone knows of any apps that can take maxes and create workouts with weight recommendations for a weight loss/fat loss goal please share! Thank you!

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Did your memory improve after losing weight and eating healthier?

I am (M 26 Height 6’6 Weight 425lbs) currently in the process of making healthier choices which includes exercise and eating healthier. I started losing weight last year and was 67lbs down. However that was with only intense exercise. I still ate fast food and sweets all the time.

I got comfortable, stopped working out and gained all my weight back plus more. Lately I’ve been eating less carbs and less processed sugar along with basketball and weight lifting.

Now for my questions,

Has anyone here gained better memory and better focus over time during their weight loss journey? If so how did you notice?

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My progress so far

Since July 16th I have lost 55 lbs. Since December 15th 2016 I have lost 122 lbs. I have had ups and downs, massive weight loss and massive weight gains in between. I can proudly say that I am almost to my goal. This has been an incredibly life altering couple years and I want to thank everyone on this Sub. I'm not very active with commenting or posting, but I check this subreddit multiple times a week for motivation, tips and inspiration. For anyone out there still going or just starting, you got this! I know where you are at and I would love to help in anyway I can and will respond to any DM's I get.

At the end of all of this I can say that consistency and making individual healthy choices is the biggest thing you can do to reach your goal. Remember this is a marathon not a sprint and nothing will happen overnight.

Here are some progress pics below. I am training for a marathon in January and ran 16 miles last weekend. 5 months ago I could not even run a mile without stopping. Again thank you all for being a supportive community I am truly grateful!

Oldest picture I have being big (roughly 340 lbs) I started at 352 lbs for reference.

https://i.imgur.com/uxxEzGA.png

Working a jobsite in 2016

https://i.imgur.com/fAd4vdO.png

After a half marathon two weeks ago

https://i.imgur.com/pqs5ZHU.png

Size 44 shorts that used to fit snug (You can see the biggest difference here)

https://i.imgur.com/fSseo5n.jpg

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Losing Weight with C25K - Anyone else had to repeat weeks and backtrack?

Hi r/loseit! I'm currently at week 7 of C25K which is HUGE for me- as someone who is still categorically obese and has feared running her entire life- but I'm going to have to voluntarily backtrack and repeat weeks 5 and 6 due to missing some time at the gym. I consider this extra training, not steps backwards: a NSV! I've also found that the scale is not showing a weight loss nearly as much as I'd hope, but due to the way my clothes feel and I feel overall, I know that I've most likely built muscle from the running. It is definitely NOT easy running for 20+ minutes straight as an obese person with heavy thighs, regardless of weeks of training.

Have you had similar experiences with C25K?

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One-Minute Ways to Beat Cravings—All Day Long

Temptation is everywhere—and always there. Fight it—and win—at some of the toughest times of day with these one-minute ways to beat cravings that can derail your progress.

7 a.m.: CHUG A BIG GLASS OF COLD WATER Start your day with a big, cold glass of water and you’ll burn more calories all day. In a German study, researchers found that downing 6 cups (48 ounces) of cold water increased resting calorie burn by up to 50 calories per day. And that’s not all—researchers at the University of Utah found that dehydrated adults burned up to 2 percent fewer calories. And if that’s not enough, in a study at Virginia Tech, subjects who drank two 8-ounce glasses of water before meals lost 36 percent more weight over 12 weeks than non-drinkers. So chug a big one before breakfast and start the day burning.

10 a.m.: FILL UP ON PROTEIN A morning dose of protein—like from peanut butter, eggs or Greek yogurt—can help prevent sugar cravings later in the day. In a study from the University of Missouri, MRI scans showed significantly reduced activity in the parts of the brain associated with cravings among those participants who ate protein in the morning. And dieters who eat these foods produce less of a hormone called ghrelin, which stimulates hunger.

Noon: DON’T EAT AT YOUR DESK Or at least don’t work while you’re having lunch. In multiple studies, “mindful eating,” in which dieters focus on being aware of the food they’re eating and the act of eating it, has helped people lose weight without focusing on calories. To try this, eliminate distractions while you have lunch—things like reading, e-mail, or television—and focus instead on the colors, flavors, and textures of your midday meal. In a three-month study from Ohio State, patients with type 2 diabetes significantly lowered their blood sugar through this technique.

2 p.m.: STEP AWAY FROM THE CANDY DISH When your body gets a sudden craving for chocolate during your mid-afternoon slump at the office, it’s not chocolate your body wants—it’s stuff like dopamine, a biochemical that your body associates with pleasure that’s released when you eat chocolate. But you can get dopamine releases in other ways—like through exercise. So instead of grabbing a tempting foil-wrapped bite from the reception area, take a quick walk instead. You’ll clear your head and get the biochemicals your body’s actually craving. And when you get back, move the dish farther from you. In a study involving a candy dish, scientists found that people ate 1.8 more pieces of candy per day when the bowl was placed on their desk as opposed to two meters away. So move it farther from you and stop mindless munching.

5 p.m.: WARM UP WITH A CUP OF TEA An hour before dinner, set the kettle. By drinking hot liquids—like tea—an hour before eating, you can eat less and feel fuller, faster. In a 2008 study at Penn State, people who had hot drinks before eating consumed 134 fewer calories during their meal. And you can add benefits if it’s a cinnamon flavor: In a study in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, the spicy stick was shown to increase sugar metabolism by a factor of 20.

9 p.m.: USE YOUR NOSE TO SATE YOUR SWEET TOOTH As your eyelids start to droop, your body may look for a boost—of energy and pleasure hormones. For many people, this means a before-bed snack, and it’s usually something sweet. But a pleasant scent—like from a scented candle—can spark your senses and deliver the dopamine your body’s craving. And if you choose mint, it can help calm your craving: In a study from Wheeling Jesuit University in West Virginia, subjects who sniffed peppermint every 2 hours consumed 1,800 fewer calories during a 5-day period than when they didn’t smell the herb.

10:45 p.m.: GO TO SLEEP! Being asleep doesn’t just mean you won’t have time to eat—it also balances the hormones that makes you feel hungry and full. When you don’t get a full night, your appetite hormones get messy. The amount of ghrelin, which gives you an appetite, increases, while the amount of a feeling-full hormone called leptin goes down. And science backs up the ties between shut-eye and thin thighs: In a 16-year study of 68,000 middle-age women from Case Western Reserve University, subjects who slept fewer than 5 hours per night were 32 percent more likely to gain 33 pounds or more over the course of the study, compared with those who got 7 to 8 hours of rest. So get to bed! You’ll have more energy all day tomorrow.

 

 

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