Monday, December 17, 2018

Type 1 Diabetes is the ultimate saboteur

Hello all. A bit of a lurker here.

I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes as an adult 2.5 years ago. About a year ago I managed to lose 25 lbs over many months due to running 3-4 times a week. When I went back to univeristy I stopped running mostly due to hating winter running. The weight slowly crept back up. But the real nail in the coffin was this summer. I was vegan for a year and decided it wasn't for me so when I came off I super binged on everything I restricted myself from eating before. So I gained a lot of weight naturally. I weighed in at my heaviest at 192lbs which is the fattest I've ever been. Getting close to 200lbs scared me so about 9 weeks ago I started going to the gym 5 days a week. Then 39 days ago I started tracking my calories in and out.

I also can't really run right now thanks to a super annoying calve injury that I am working to fix with my physiotherapist. My gym routine is 3 days of weight lifting with 2 days of cardio.

I have been at 1700 calories a day minus one reward day a week where I have a meal that I've been craving. This is mostly for my mental health as I don't think I could cut everything from my life without crashing and falling off the diet plan. (I'm a 5'10" female if that helps understand my calorie plan).

But diabetes is hard. I left whats called the "honeymoon phase" in diabetes this past July. The honeymoon phase is where your pancreas is still sort of working and pumping out insulin so you need to inject less. But my pancreas offically died and now I'm all on my own. My sugars have been less than ideal and I work with my diabetic nurse frequently to try and get me in control but so far nothing is working.

My biggest issue is that my sugars like to go low from exercise so I am forced to eat glucose tabs before and during exercise to essentially stop myself from dying. This means extra calories that anyone without diabetes wouldn't have to take. And that's fucking frustrating.

I also have to eat a bed time snack due to my bipolar meds being tough on the tummy. So again even more calories that a "normal" person wouldn't have to take. But I account for these calories anyways in my daily total.

And to top it all off my weight loss has been slow as hell. I've been tracking all my calories but I've still barely moved. And now for some reason in a matter of days I gained back 4 lbs. I get this is likely water weight from the holiday season. But what if it isn't? What if I'm doing something wrong?

I just need help guys. And motivation. Losing weight this time is so much harder thanks to my diabetes being more of a bitch. The irony being I'm trying to lose this weight FOR my diabetes and my health.

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After three days under 200 I'm officially Walking in a Winter Onederland!

OMG /loseit! Thank you for your stories of success and challenges. Of your ups and downs. Of your Ah-Ha's and Oh-No's! They've all been helpful in my own progress. Keep posting!

I am 2/3rds of the way to my GW, at which point I'll make a new choice to be maintaining and to be working on strength. For now it's plenty just to work on losing.

My 12 Steps to Losing Weight: I wrote this up for me and my journey. I reread it weekly, and add to it or change it as I learn more about myself and losing weight. I know everyone is different and has their own journey. I’m putting it out here to keep me accountable on my own journey, and also in the case that some portion of this helps someone else. (Portion, yes that was a food joke.)

  • Losing weight is actually hard work! (Sounds dumb, but when it's easy I think it'll always be easy, when it's hard I think it'll always be too hard. There are a hundred points in the day where I am asking myself to be on top of my shit and make a positive choice. I won’t always make a positive choice.)
  • Eat less than the number of kcals I’m burning and track that shit (smart phones, smart watches, apps, and websites all help to determine what I am burning just to live, plus kcals burned walking and exercising, etc. and a good app lets me set a kcal limit for the day and more easily log everything I eat at every meal, even though I hate to be so anal.)
  • Log everything I eat BEFORE I PUT IT IN MY MOUTH (otherwise I’ll put it off, won’t remember what I ate, and I’ll overspend my kcal account—DONE THAT too many times)
  • Total commitment to my calorie limit, but… (If I have a cheat day, it’s disastrous for me as I’ll get used to eating too much, so I don’t ever do it. I tend to be polar that way, it’s either 100% or nothing. If I feel I’m too weak or light-headed, I’ll first make sure I’m drinking enough water during the day, at least 3L. If I have been drinking enough and still weak, then I’m prepared to move my kcal target higher. If I go over my limit because I wasn’t able to track my kcals closely enough or forgot to add a food, I disregard any harsh thoughts I’m having toward myself. I just focus on more awareness of logging my food and look forward to the next day where I can do it well. PS on my 99th day of my active focus on weight loss...I ate far too many kcals for dinner, blowing out my kcal bank account by 581, and then I ate a piece of apple pie my wife made...and oh my god was I stuffed, too stuffed, and loving the flavors! I make mistakes and have poor judgement, and then the next meal I get back to my commitment.)
  • Experience my food as I eat it (when I eat while distracted it feels like I didn’t even eat, and I immediately want more—I can really tell the difference when I do and don’t pay attention to my food as I eat it)
  • Be willing to be hungry sometimes, and not eat every time I want to (hunger isn’t necessarily a bad thing to feel, and self restraint is me gaining power over a part of myself and a part of my life…this is good, makes me feel like a badass!)
  • Choose a mix of slower-burning and faster burning foods with enough nutrients (simple carbs in large amounts will not give me sustained energy and will quickly burn through my day’s kcal bank account...goodbye donuts, I’ll miss you but we have an unhealthy relationship and you’re not worth it...okay okay, let’s meet again once I’ve reached my goal weight and have a talk)
  • Weigh every morning and track it in Happy Scale (it does an amazing job of helping me to not freak out over the large variation of weigh-in amounts every day by smoothing it all out, plus it creates lots of milestones and allows me to forecast when I’ll hit them. When I’m hungry but out of kcals in my account I can look at those progress charts and forecasts and dream of a thinner day!)
  • Recognize the more I lose the harder it’ll be to continue to lose relying solely on eating less (aka At some point I’ll have to get off my lazy ass and expend more energy to create more of a calorie deficit…I’m still unwilling to do so, but I’m putting it out there to future-self that I will need him to get off his ass and do this)
  • Find people to share my ups and downs with (people that can celebrate when I’m losing and support my feelings when I’m not, like r/loseit…a life partner can not always support me when they are struggling with their own weight challenges)
  • Walk tall and move feeling what it would be like to be at my goal weight (which also helps me to feel the difference I currently have from where I used to be)
  • Recognize the weight loss I’ve already accomplished (that’s the “walk tall” part—no matter how long it’s taken, no matter how far I am from my goal weight, no matter the ‘back slides’ etc., put some love into what I’ve already accomplished)
  • Plan a maintenance routine for when my goal weight has been achieved (I’ve had the experience of regaining 55 pounds due to not having a plan and not realizing my growing weight reality...not doing that again)
  • Realize I may have to always track what I eat, and suck it up like an adult and be okay with that (I don’t know this will always be true, but I need to be okay if it is, or be okay with having far too much weight on my body and deal with all of the shit that goes along with that…if it came down to one or the other, I’ll take the former! I already tried not tracking once I’d lost 40 pounds…that didn’t work.)

That was 14 steps. “Tough cookies” as my mother would say.

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NSV: everyone and their mother has noticed (and new bathing suits!)

Including people I haven't seen in ages, such as my aunt who lives on a different continent, and my former pediatrician (who I saw for the first time in 6 years, a couple of weeks ago).

I started my weight loss journey in August 2017, after having my gallbladder removed at the tender age of 24 (but my SW is from about a month and a half earlier). I've lost about 50 pounds since then, the first 30 or so mostly through CICO, and have been in quasi-maintenance for about 2 months now (I'm not done though; I still want to lose between 13-16 pounds, depending on which fluctuating number I see on any given day). But, it seems like my body composition is still changing, because suddenly, everyone in my life has started to notice and comment on my weight loss.

A few weeks ago, I had to take my niece to the pediatrician (the same one I used to see), and literally the first thing she said to me was "oh wow, you lost weight!" I had no idea it was that apparent, especially since the last time I saw her was before I put on all that weight... the last time I saw her, I was maybe ten pounds heavier than I am now.

My neighbor, who I've seen most days, all of a sudden said "you've lost a ton of weight, haven't you?" the other week, when we made small talk as I was leaving the house. I've been living at home this year, and this is a neighbor I've known my whole life, and again... had no clue it was so obvious. Rinse and repeat with my sister who is away for college (hugs me, and says "your waist is way thinner!", the last two times we've seen each other), and my aunt who's visiting from another country, and haven't seen in 4 years (literally the first thing she commented on, and I wasn't even close to my largest the last time I saw her).

Just... I don't know, it's weird that I'm suddenly getting all this attention for it, but it feels good at the same time? I've always been really bad at being able to tell when people have lost weight, including myself, and I sometimes feel like I'm still at my largest - even though, logically, I know that's impossible. I guess it's the paper towel effect coming into play, but I never thought I'd experience it this much, and when I'm still relatively far from my goal weight.

I'm also going on vacation for Christmas, and will be wearing a bikini for the first time in my life, which is both exciting and terrifying. Hopefully my stomach isn't really as big as I sometimes feel like it is haha (because phantom fat and me sucking at seeing weight loss), but after resigning myself to one pieces my whole life, I wanted to challenge myself to reach a place where I could pull off a bikini. Here's hoping I don't see those vacation pictures and cringe!

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Day 1... Again

Well, like the title says, it's Day 1 for me... again. I feel like I have been trying to lose weight my whole life, but have never really been successful. While I occasionally lose 5 pounds here and there, the scale has slowly creeped its way up to around 195. I've been hovering between the area of 190-195 for the past year now. I've probably had about 50 other Day 1s, and I'm only 24 years old. But this time - and I really mean it - this time, I feel like its going to be different.

I'm going in to this weight loss with a different mindset this time. In the past, I've wanted to lose weight to be smaller, to look cuter (in my mind), and to be healthier, and I've set myself really strict gym schedules and CICO goals that I just couldn't stick to. But this time I'm going to try something different. Not that I think that me previous reasons for losing weight were bad, I just think I have some better ones now. I want to lose weight to be healthier - that one hasn't changed. I wouldn't necessarily say that I am particularly unhealthy, but I would like to lower my blood pressure a bit as it can sometimes read a little high when I test it in pharmacies, WalMart, etc. I want to lose weight to be fitter. I want to be able to move my body more easily, lift heavy weights, and do outdoorsy things with my boyfriend who loves to do things like hiking and camping. I want to be able to go up a few flights of stairs and not be winded at the top. I want to lose weight for myself. I want to be able to set a goal and succeed, and be proud of myself!

So, this time I'm going to do things differently. I'm going to set an attainable CICO goal - one that does not include calories from working out - and try to hit it 5-6 days a week (because sometimes things go south on the weekends, ya know?). I don't want to include something like "I will go to the gym 3-5 days a week" in my calculations because sometimes life happens, and you don't get to the gym like you planned. So, on the days I know I will get to the gym, I'll have a little extra (maybe 150-200 calories) if I feel like I need it. Finally, I won't be so hard on myself. I know in my mind that weight loss is a process, and that it takes time, but I always get discouraged when I don't see immediate progress. This time, I'm going to really remember my reasons, and that I'm in this for the long haul. I want to lose this weight and create a healthy lifestyle for myself along the way.

Here's to my last Day 1!

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Plateau for 4 months - TDEE to blame?

Hi everyone,

I’m a 30 year old female. I have dropped weight from 210 to 179 over the past 18 months. I’ve hit a plateau and have been around 178-181 for the past ~5 months or so. I’m curious if there are any tips to break through this struggle.

I am a teacher so I’m moderately active during the day but usually end up under 10,000 steps by bedtime.

Calories: 1,450 I track with MFP. I weigh everything with a scale unless it’s packaged as a serving size. I tried condiments, little snacks, etc.

Workout: I began Beachbody LIIFT4 workout program 6 weeks ago. I’ve been very consistent and have not missed a single day. Prior to this, I wasn’t really working out and just focusing on diet.

I’ve had two pregnancies. My second (and final) child was delivered in May 2017. My 210 weight was a week after delivery.

My biggest complaint is that even after eating healthy and never going over calories for a solid week (or even 2 weeks), I step on the scale and see the same weight, or even a weight that is 0.4 or 0.6 pounds heavier. It’s so frustrating to put in consistent work and not be rewarded.

So here I am asking the community for tips on how to switch up my weight loss program to get better results.

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Early Announcement, Next r/loseit weight loss challenge! New Year POKEMON Theme!

Hey everyone! As many of you will know we just ended our Autumn Mario theme weight loss challenge! Often the question comes up when the next one begins and so this time we wanted to announce a little bit earlier than we usually would. So our next challenge theme will beeeeeeeeeeee..... POKEMON! Yes thats right we are doing a Pokemon theme! The team names have been selected but I will keep those a secret for right now ;). Sign ups will open January 4th! We are working on changing a few things and maybe refreshing the way the process works so lets just leave it at this for now. There will be 8 teams this go around! Look for more information on the first official post on January 4th!

If you wish to put a reminder on this post please follow this link to set up. Or look for similar reminder comments below.

Start the new year off right with the first 2019 r/loseit weight loss challenge!

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7 Winter Weight Loss Mistakes to Avoid

Weight loss experts used to warn us that on average, Americans gain seven pounds over the holiday season from Thanksgiving to New Year. Fortunately, more recent studies have dialed that number back to what looks like a more manageable pound or so.

For example, one 2016 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that in the U.S., we put on an average of 1.3 pounds after the Christmas holidays. (For those who are already overweight, other studies have found it can be as much as five pounds or more.

We are not alone. The researchers, from Tampere University of Technology in Finland, found that packing on pounds over the holidays isn’t a uniquely American problem. Germans gained 1.8 pounds and the Japanese put on an extra 1.1 pounds over Christmas. Everyone also overdid it on national holidays, such as Thanksgiving, Easter and Golden Week, a Japanese holiday that occurs in May.

But it’s actually worse than it sounds. A full half of the pounds that Americans and their friends put on over the holidays, the study found, stick to them like super glue. After dropping half their holiday weight gain, they stopped losing, so they still weighed more than they had before the holiday festivities began.

Now, multiply that by years. That’s one answer to the age-old question, “How did I gain so much weight?” We make all kinds of mistakes in the winter months that sabotage our diet goals, and not just over the holidays.

25 Weight Loss Wins That Have Nothing To Do With The Scale

Read More

Here are seven winter weight loss mistakes you might be making and how to avoid them:

1. You stick to traditions.

holiday meal

You always have turkey with all the trimmings, sometimes twice during the holiday season (an average of 4,500 calories, according to research from the Calorie Control Council. You always bake gingerbread men with the kids or grandkids (at 158 per man, according to one homemade recipe from mccormick.com for this holiday treat). And it wouldn’t be the holidays if you didn’t make your famous Buche de Noel, a delectable concoction of sponge cake, chocolate and heavy cream (484 calories—most from fat—according to Bon Appetit magazine’s recipe). You warm up cold winter nights with comfort foods such as mac and cheese (one cup made from a mix is 405 calories a cup, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)) , and thick, beefy stews (at least 210 calories a cup, depending how you make it according to USDA).

Solution: To lose weight in winter you’ll need to change up your traditions. Choose your favorite foods from your holiday meal and take one serving of each. Focus less on food and more on experiences. Trade the annual cookie bake-off for a day of crafting or ice skating. Skip your fancy calorie-laden dessert and become the life of the party by bringing board games to play after dinner. Feed your cravings for comfort food by indulging in Nutrisystem’s creamy mac and cheese, Chicken Pot Pie and Hearty Beef Stew—tons of comfort, fewer calories.

Get perfectly-portioned Nutrisystem meals to ensure you stay on track. >

2. You use busyness as an excuse for unhealthy choices.

holiday busyness

One Cornell University study, published in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, found that having a busy schedule was the number one reason families made unhealthy food choices. In winter, to your already busy days, you add holiday shopping, decorating and delays caused by bad weather—so of course grabbing a bucket of chicken or ordering a pizza seems like a good solution…until you step on a scale.

Solution: Even if you can’t slow down your life or offload any of your daily tasks, you can be prepared for those times when you used to turn to the drive-thru. Make sure you have your Nutrisystem snacks with you so when you hit a snag finishing up your shopping at the mall you won’t be so hungry that the temptation to binge out is too great to resist. Keep your kitchen stocked with the fixings of healthy Flex Meals—veggies all cut, simple recipes at hand—or do some binge-cooking on the weekend so you have microwave meals in the freezer.

Get your Nutrisystem snacks right here. >

3. You drink too many calories.

holiday drinks

Alcohol at parties, hot chocolate drinks after a day of skiing, sledding or even shopping–those liquid calories add up. Alcohol has almost the same amount of calories per gram as fat (seven vs. nine according to a study conducted by Middle Tennessee State University), and a typical hot chocolate with whipped cream from a major national chain is 400 calories (before you start adding the syrups according to starbucks.com). Worse,  liquid calories may not be filling, so you could put away 400 calories at a sitting and still want more. Not only that, alcohol can chip away at your willpower so you’re likely to have more.

Solution: Wise advice any time: Drink in moderation. According to Berkeley Wellness, A five-ounce glass of wine is only about 100 to 190 calories; a 12-ounce bottle of beer is as little as 55 calories and up to 200 calories or more; and a 1.5 ounce drink of liquor 90-165 calories or so. Stick with one, and make sure it’s not “supersized.” Many bars serve six to eight ounces of wine, and your cocktail might contain two or three times the amount of alcohol recommended for one serving. Your bartender can tell you.

You don’t have to give up those delicious hot chocolates and creamy lattes either. Just be smart when you order. Ask for skim milk and turn down the whipped cream. Love those seasonally spiced lattes? Order a small with nonfat milk and without that swirl of whipped cream on the top!

Grab a few protein-packed Nutrisystem shakes to curb the liquid craving. >

How to Bounce Back After Overeating

Read More

4. You don’t eat as many vegetables and fruit as you do in summer.

Fresh fruits and vegetables

Yes, the farmer’s markets have largely closed down. No more fresh lettuces, juicy tomatoes and fresh-off-the-tree peaches. You miss those fresh salads the abundance of berries and fruits so your intake slacks off.

Solution: Expand your produce repertoire. There’s still plenty of cold weather produce to choose from, like Brussels sprouts, cabbage, kale, turnips and carrots, that can be shredded into salads or roasted to sweetness. Some fruits, like clementines, apples, and pears, are most abundant when the weather turns cold. Don’t turn down frozen and canned versions either. You’re not losing any of the health benefits. Studies have found that nutrient content of frozen and canned veggies doesn’t vary greatly from fresh.

 5. You’re too “nice” to regift Christmas cookies and turn down party treats.

Christmas cookies

It’s hard to say no to the party-giver who spent days preparing a ton of food and keeps running plate after plate of delectable goodies under your nose urging you to “just take one,” or assuring you that “it’s just once a year.” It’s even harder—no, impossible—to give back your sister-in-law’s chocolate chip banana bread or your neighbor’s cookie tray.

Solution:  At parties, you can avoid temptation—and insulting a solicitous host—by bringing your own healthy appetizers or desserts and always keeping something you know you can eat on your plate. Then it’s easy to say, “Oh, I’d love to, but I don’t have room.” Or you can come clean: “It looks amazing, but I’m committed to sticking to my diet, even at parties.” The food gifts you receive are a blessing in disguise. They’ll save you some time and money: One less gift to buy or make!

Grab your favorite Nutrisystem desserts to satisfy your sweet tooth while remaining on track. >

6. You hide under layers.

sweater

Sweaters, layers and coats are a place to hide from a body that makes you unhappy, but you’re dieting. You’re working on a body you can be happy with and that you don’t want to hide.

Solution: You may be able to hide from others, but there isn’t enough outer wear in the world that can hide your weight from yourself. And you don’t want to. Let it be your motivation, and certainly don’t be afraid to to show off your hard work in a shirt or dress you’ve been eyeing up at your favorite store.

 7. You don’t exercise because it’s cold, rainy, snowy, windy, dark. . .winter.

lack of exercise

According to a Gallup poll, exercise frequency drops off precipitously the minute the weather gets little cold and messy. This can cause problems when you are trying to maintain a healthy and active lifestyle throughout the holidays.

Solution: This is the time to pay for a gym membership or a few pieces of exercise equipment—like bands, kettle bells or a step that will let you exercise indoors during inclement weather. But winter offers you a unparalleled opportunity to burn more calories in less time. By being a bit cold—enough to start shivering—you can burn 300 more calories a day, according to George King, MD, of the Joslin Diabetes Center. Cold burns more calories by activating brown fat, a special kind of fat that acts more like muscle to torch calories.

Need a little help to get on the healthy track this winter? Get started with your Nutrisystem meal plan today to avoid the winter weight gain! >

The post 7 Winter Weight Loss Mistakes to Avoid appeared first on The Leaf.



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