Friday, December 28, 2018

Having a hard time during the holidays

I am three weeks into my weight loss journey. Before i left to spend timr with my gfs family in another state I had lost 6 pounds. i have been tracking calories, eatching more carefully what i eat and working out 2-3 times a week. then we flew out on christmas eve. since we have been here all we have really had to eat was cheesey potatoes, burgers, sweets, and lots of other cheese products....and beer. i have not had a vegetable in what feels like forever. i am still counting my calories (except christmas day) but i have been eating at maintenence or excess of my maintenence for the past week. i got on the scale here and it says that i am 2 pounds heavier than when i started 3 weeks ago. i am getting really frustrated. i am trying to not havr any guilt when j eat and not beat myself up to much about it because i sort of expected to eat unhealthy stuff here....but u thought i would at least maintain what little I had lost. i dont want to go backwards this early into my journey nor have guilt when i eat what i eat...and i feel like both are happening........heeeeelp!!!!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2TfIaZU

8 Easy Ways to Winter-Proof Your Diet

When the temperatures drop, our eating habits change. The average adult’s produce consumption is lowest in winter, rises in spring and summer, and declines again in autumn, according to the 2015 Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. This may not be too surprising, since fresh produce is abundant and tempting during the warmer months. But no matter what the weather is like outside, vegetables are a critical part of a healthy diet. We all need at least four servings (Two and a half to three cups total) of vegetables each day, every month of the year. The good news: Fall is the harvest season, so lots of fresh produce is available in stores. And frozen vegetables are easy to include in many popular cool-weather meals, too. Try these simple strategies when you’re looking for ways to winter-proof your diet and keep enjoying your four servings (or more!) of vegetables this season:

1. Pancakes Plus
Winter (hardshell) squashes such as butternut have a naturally sweet flavor, lots of fiber, and a load of powerhouse nutrients such as vitamin A. After cutting the squash in half and removing the seeds, bake it until its fork-tender, scoop out the flesh, and puree it thoroughly. Blend it with your pancake mix and you get a serving of veggies with your hearty breakfast.

2. Eggs Extra
Chop sweet peppers, onions, and mushrooms and saute them with a splash of olive oil and ground pepper. Toss in a handful of spinach at the end, when the other vegetables are soft and juicy. Whip two eggs, pour them into the hot pan with the saute, and your ordinary omelet comes with a healthy serving of vegetables.

3. Soup Booster
A bowl of vegetable soup has a half to a full serving of vegetables. Get in more by adding a serving of frozen mixed vegetables when you heat up any packaged soup.

4. Super Sauce
The tomatoes in bottled or homemade spaghetti sauce give you a serving of vegetables. Get in another by stirring grated carrots, zucchini and broccoli into the sauce during cooking.

5. Squash Pasta
Max out the vegetable content of your spaghetti dinner with the well-named spaghetti squash. Bake it in your oven until tender, then fork out the strands in a bowl. Substitute them for half or more of the pasta you’d normally eat.

6. Mash Up
Comfort foods like mashed potatoes help us feel warm and cozy on cool autumn days. Replace half of the starchy white potatoes in your recipe with baked and mashed turnips. If turnips are a little too zesty for your taste, use steamed and mashed cauliflower instead.

7. Pizza Topping
When your busy schedule calls for pizza night, skip the pepperoni and order your pie with broccoli, mushrooms, or roasted red peppers–or all three. Better yet, add them yourself to the Nutrisystem Italian herb flatbread pizza.

8. Smart Snacks
Whether you are watching your favorite team play on TV or taking a break at your desk, reach for a bag of baby carrots, cucumber slices, or celery sticks and a single-serving size of hummus. Dip and crunch and enjoy a serving or more of the vegetables your

The post 8 Easy Ways to Winter-Proof Your Diet appeared first on The Leaf.



from The Leaf http://bit.ly/2rY3EPd

NSV: I am bounce house sized!

I take my kids to this indoor playground that has a bounce house. One of the posted rules is "Weight limit 180 lb per rider." I always read that rule as "Not for grown ups." Um, no me, lots of grown ups are under 180 lbs. Well today my preschooler asked if I would bounce with her and as I was about to say I wasn't allowed I looked at the sign again and realized: I am 170 lbs. I may bounce. We bounced together. I may have cried a little.

One of my weight loss goals was to do more things with my kids and I am doing it!

Also in case it helps anyone else: I just got no where counting calories. What helped me was a general diet shift to less calorie dense foods, no longer drinking calories except for special treats, and, I know how stupid this sounds, smaller plates. Seriously, I started eating off of little saucer sized plates exclusively, and it made a huge difference for me. It's just the psychological effect of the smaller plate that helps me control my portion size and realize how much I'm eating, even if I do go for seconds. I also got a fitbit to track my activity and I've been walking every day. 40ish lbs down so far! That's over the course of two years, slow and steady :).

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2SruUBq

For anyone out there struggling right now: you deserve to take care of yourself!

Hey guys! I started my weight loss journey in July of this year at 240lbs, 5’10” and 23 years old. Currently weighing in at 198lbs which is 42lbs down. Goal weight 150-60lbs. Over the past month, I ended up taking three weeks off of the gym and ate poorly. Just got back yesterday and had a great workout.

Tonight, I was attempting to do a 20 hour fast (normally do IF 16:8) and about 6 hours in I started craving McDonald’s. Ended up going and eating 10 nuggets, fries and a cheeseburger. Felt like ass after mentally and physically. One hour later, I convinced myself there was some energy in me and went to the gym anyway. Burned 687 calories with some cardio and weights. Definitely could’ve had a better workout and had more stamina, but this just reminded me that it’s not about the bad choice you make, it’s about how you react to it and come back from it. We’re all so much stronger than we think we are and deserve to take care of ourselves.

For anyone just starting, those in the position I’m in or those maintaining, you’re all amazing and we can do this! Even if there’s some stalls in between. :)

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2LCkQD0

Not sure if I can do it on my own.

Hey r/loseit ! I am an 18 year old female, around 160cm tall and weigh around 82kg. I have been, for the last year or so, ashamed of my belly, thighs and calves. The worst moment came a few days ago when I realised I couldn't fit into the size 32" jeans, which is the biggest size of Levi's I could find, and I really needed a new pair. I have started to get serious about loosing this weight but I'm so scared of not being able to do it myself. I'm considering a gym and classes such as Zumba to help me. Today I went on a 30 minute walk, and did 20 minutes of trampoline workout yesterday. Do you guys on this subreddit have any tips on how I can achieve my goal, and/or how I can feel more positive and in control of my weight loss journey. Thank you.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Q5gNjm

Thursday, December 27, 2018

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Friday, 28 December 2018

Welcome adventurer! Whether you're new on this quest or are towards the end of your journey there should be something below for you.

Daily journal.

Interested in some side quests?

Community bulletin board!

If you are new to the sub, click here for our posting guidelines


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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2BJ2WtH

How I broke my soda addiction

Hi folks! I posted this as a thread on my twitter then I thought it might be helpful to someone here. I credit the loss of my first 15 pounds to cutting out soda, along with lowering my portions. I was never raised to drink water, always juice, then soda. I hated (and still do) the lack of taste of water, especially when I’m eating something. All I can think about are those hotdog eating compétions where they dunk the bun and all in a glass of water. Soggy hotdogs. That’s what I think about when I drink plain water while eating.

I have to put flavoring packets in my water, so maybe I still have a way to go. But I’m sure you all know breaking the soda habit is an extremely difficult process, and while I may not be drinking as much water as I should yet and I have to flavor it, I’m still very proud of the fact that I haven’t bought soda over six months. I went from buying a twelve pack of Sprite every week to nothing at all.

So! Here’s how I did it:

Buy your soda at the store like normal on grocery day, but then also buy a few water flavoring packet choices that sound nice to you (I recommend the True Lemon brand), a good water bottle, and a water filter pitcher if you’re worried about water quality from the tap. Or, if you don’t want to invest right now, just the water flavoring and any size pack of plastic water bottles.

Drink your soda like normal, but mix some flavor into a bottle of water and keep it with you all day. Get used to the taste and feel of it in your mouth. Try drinking it after you do any kind of physical activity. If you can go for a walk one day, bring it with you.

Keep buying that flavoring and those water bottles (if you opted for those instead of a reusable one—but I recommend a reusable one if you stick with it). Then, when you’re feeling adventurous, when you go grocery shopping one day, “forget” to buy soda. Making choices is hard, but when the choice is between spending money and not spending money, it softens the blow. That’s why you want to do the buying of the water bottles and flavoring and stuff at a different time from when you choose not to buy soda.

It’s ok if it doesn’t stick this time. You might drive by the store later that week and turn into the parking lot and buy that soda. You might do that later the same day. But keep doing it. Keep not buying it during your main grocery trip. It then starts to become more convenient to just drink the water for a while, until you can make it back to the store. Then, until your next grocery trip... where you may buy more soda, but also more water flavoring. Then you don’t buy the soda next grocery trip. Or ever.

It took me roughly two years of this, with lots of starts and stops, to get to the point where I am now. That said, I only really got serious about my health and weight loss this past year, so this process could very well be quicker for you if you’re more committed to the change.

I hope this helps someone!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2CBhLAi