Monday, December 31, 2018

Finally broke 20lbs of weight loss!

F/21/ SW:195/ CW:170/ GW: 130

As the title stated, I've finally passed the 20lb mark! I know it's not a lot compared to what a lot of people on here have lost, but I'm still really excited about it! My work out buddy isn't around at the moment to celebrate with me, but I had to share it with someone!

I've always done the half-hearted, "oh I'll watch what I eat and cut back on my portion size" but it never really stuck. So I'm really really proud of losing just this much! I feel great! I'm down a size for my shirt, two for my pants, and I experience nowhere near as much knee pain as I used to! I do still have more to lose before I'll be in the healthy weight range, but I'm proud of what I have done so far!

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Day 1 Wednesday

43 M 5-8 CW:303 GW:199

A few years ago I got serious about weight loss and dropped over 70 pounds. I was so proud of myself and felt so much better. I have since put all the weight back on and have started and stopped trying to get healthy numerous times. Well now I have eaten myself into diabetes as well as other health problems and I truly believe this time it's a matter of life and death. I have two children and I don't want them to have to bury their father while they're still kids.

I have been inspired by so many stories on here and am ready to not only try again, but to succeed. I'm trying to post a picture of myself but am having trouble doing so, so I am not sure if it will show up. I chose not to hide my face because I feel like I need to own up to who I am and acknowledge where I am starting from. Of course, if the pic doesn't show up, that plan backfired.

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2019 is THE YEAR for me

M24/268.5 lbs

So this isn’t just a weight loss thread per se.

I just initiated a CICO diet on Sunday (Australia time) with a limit of 2400 calories a day. 2 days later I’ve already lost 2.5 pounds. For a good few years I’ve been eating crap and been worried about my health for a few weeks because i refused to brush my teeth, ate approximately 2000 calories each meal and been a hermit on my ass playing video games for a good 6 months. Safe to say, things will have to change.

I have continued brushing my teeth twice a day starting the week before Christmas and as of the second last day of 2018, I’ve been calorie counting. For the first time ever last night I only had 1 steak and a teeny bit of salad for dinner, nothing else. If this were old me I would’ve had 2 steaks and 5 sausages for dinner alone.

One more thing to address is to make more connections, go outside every couple days and enjoy the town I live in. I previously went all over the closest city to go to places but stopped for 6-8 months after a bad experience. I’m just gonna focus on my town for now.

It’s funny how this all came about, I brought some friends over for a get-together and as they were binging MTV, I noticed the life I’m missing out on. The lack of social and romantic connection, the non-hermit life. I ran back to Instagram and was immediately reminded by the models I follow that my life was headed downhill. Boyfriends, actual great lives, great looks etc. were abundant and I felt in order to get it all back together I need to respect myself.

I tried Tinder again but with my neckbeardy looks, it didn’t get me anywhere as expected.

The motto I made up (I think) is “to love myself before others”. Apparently I’ll be at 198 lbs by 2020 according to Lifesum if I keep up my diet. As I’m 268 it’s a massive improvement itself.

Happy new year! I’m hoping to keep this up and my end goal is to become a brilliant-looking guy with a good lifestyle which I’m aiming for 2020.

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[Major SV] Two Years Almost to the Date, and I Am Giving Myself the Best Birthday Gift "-210lbs"

Well, here we are... on the cusp of 2019, having survived one of the longest years ever ~.~ 2018 was truly trying at times for everyone, and this made losing weight kind of hard, but through it all We have kept on the path... I generally did :/

 

I started my journey on May 14th 2017, at a whopping 405lbs. I was just fed up with being excluded from some of life's best moments because of my weight, so on that date I made a deal with my mom. If she cooked healthy food I would eat it, and that is exactly what happened. I started out watching carbohydrates, and that soon developed into watching calories. Now my daily routine includes entering every bite of food that I eat, good or bad. This has become as regular to me as taking a shower, and that was what I needed. Being able to do the math and figure out how much weight I should be losing based on how many calories I was eating is honestly what really powered me on and kept me going, and is keeping me going through this bout of maintenance I am in(I have maintained my weight for three months now).

 

Not all of this journey has been about weight loss, a lot of it has been about changing my mindset on many things in my life. I keep saying that I am broken now, but I am not actually broken, I have just been reshaped in to a different person... Weight loss alone did not change me, but weight loss coupled with a series of serious events in my life has completely changed my demeanor, and what is important to me. I have now applied for a second job, something I would not have been able to handle at 400+lbs. I am hoping to get an additional 30 hours of work weekly. I will be finally getting out on my own in my own place because of this extra money I will be earning. I know I know, congrats to me on becoming less of a loser right :/ but it really means a lot to me, and I am actually really glad on the way things turned out. What has happened in my recent past has truly made me into a much better version of myself, and that is what is keeping me going now.

 

Now, here we are, 2019... and my birthday is only two days away(January second). I will have lived a quarter of a century, I have not been this relatively thin since I was five years old, and I truly have given myself the best personal birthday gift of my life; independence, confidence, boldness, tenacity, and 210 less pounds to deal with daily... all of that in less than two years... not to bad.

 

P.S. - I am still about 10-20lbs off of my goal of 185-175, but my New Years resolution should take care of that. I plan on only eating around 1300 until I get to my goal weight, and then I will maintain my goal weight within 10lbs as my resolution, and this is one I will easily keep :)

 

P.P.S. - Thanks for all of the long term support r/loseit ... I would not have been able to do it without this support, literally. I was about to give up around 390lbs when I hit my first plateau, but I was talked down by r/loseit, and for that, I thank you :)

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Year in Review: 30 pounds lost, 6 months maintenance

Hi friends, new and old!

I lost 30ish pounds during 2018, on top of the 15 that fell off during 2017 when I finished grad school and started drinking less. I also maintained for the second half of this year-- at first accidentally, and then as a conscious choice. I'm ready to lose the last 15-20 pounds, but thought I'd pull together some thoughts for all of the new loseiteers! Welcome! We have open, increasingly skinny arms!!

Here's what I know you're all here for: progress pics!

Here's what I learned:

Know your TDEE: in January 2018, I started hanging out on r/loseit. I saw a lot of people talking about 1200 being plenty and, never having tried CICO before, thought that was what you had to do in order to succeed. I'm 5'11" and fairly active. This was a terrible idea. I was cranky and lightheaded, and was stomach-grumblingly hungry all the time. As we all know, we make poor decisions when hungry, so I soon found myself going over my 1200 calories/day by a lot. Then I'd feel disappointed, then I'd try to be even more strict the next day. That way eating disorders lie, and I was lucky to have a good support network that suggested eating more, but not too much more. It took a few weeks of experimenting to realize that 1800 is the sweet spot for me-- low enough to still lose, but not so low that I'm starving all the time. Your TDEE is going to be different depending on your starting weight and activity levels-- take time to figure out what works for you, and adapt if your rule is actually hurting you!

Use the tools that work for you: On that note, just because someone swears by one weight loss app doesn't mean it'll be the right fit for your brain/emotional state/needs. For example: I started with just My Fitness Pal, then I added in Libra (Happy Scale for you apple folks) to get more of a sense of trends. Then I wanted more accurate TDEE info, so I threw in the 3Suns adaptive TDEE spreadsheet. Then I was getting impatient and wanted to know when I'd reach my goal, so I started using the losertown predictor. I was soon entering my weight in three or more different apps every day. That was fine when the scale was trending down, but when I wasn't happy with the number on the scale, every extra app was just a reminder of my feelings of failure and impatience. My system wasn't healthy for me, so I cut back to just Libra, and enter my weight in MFP whenever I remember.

Know your eating habits: With time, you'll figure out where you need to put your calories to get the most bang for your caloric buck. For me, that's less than 300 calories for breakfast, being at around 1000 calories consumed by midafternoon, and having 800 calories to play with for dinner/dessert/an evening tipple. I've learned overtime that I just feel lightheaded and woozy if I don't eat breakfast and that I need to save up a ton of calories for the end of the day so that I can enjoy being spontaneous with my bf, rather than worrying about finding a 200 calorie dinner when he wants to go out to eat. Find the caloric breakdown that works for you, your exercise habits, and your lifestyle.

It's ok to maintain, even if you're not yet at your ultimate goal, even if maintenance is an accidental decision: By about mid-May, I was consistently in the 180s. Then I was in the low 180s throughout June. Then I moved to a new city in July, and was living at other people's houses while we looked for our own place. Then we found an apartment, but settling in after a big move is no joke. Soon it was September and I was starting a new job, and I was still in the low 180s. Because of all the eating out that happened in June and July, I'd stopped entering my food in MFP. I was also straight up tired of thinking about losing weight every day. So, I decided to consciously commit to maintenance, even though I'd already been maintaining for a several months. I kept the rules simple: weigh in once a day. I've since maintained for another three months, and have rediscovered my discipline and enthusiasm for weight loss. Sure, it'll take me longer to get to my target weight, but I'm pretty sure I'll be happier for it and more likely to stay at that goal weight. This is all to say that your eating habits should fit with the bigger picture of your life, maintenance breaks can be great, and finding ways to keep yourself trending in your desired direction is more important than "perfect" weight loss.

Keep tracking weight, if nothing else: research shows that people who lose significant weight and maintain that loss have several things in common, one of which is regular weigh-ins. So, hop on that scale! Yes, even on mornings when you had multiple beers, fries, and pizza the night before, even when you just got back from a trip to the land of no fiber and all the sugar, even when you know your weight is going to be up. Remind yourself that the number is just a signifier of your gravitational relationship to the earth, step on the scale, and record your data.

That's it for me! I'd love to hear your thoughts!

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Podcast about losing weight w/o counting calories and working on the emotional/mental side of losing weight

Hey everyone so I have been listening to a podcast called Losing 100lbs with Phit N Phat and the podcasters, who have each lost their own weight without counting calories, talk about the mental and emotional aspects that get in the way of weight loss

Here’s some things that I think are practical:

  1. Meet yourself where you are at: don’t go try to cut out all junk food in one swoop, ease into it; I have tried to just go cold turkey on things but planning to have certain foods helps

  2. Plan your meals ahead of time so you can stay committed: if you already eat pizza every night, you should plan it and write it down the night before or day of so it is intentional rather than random eating

Just thought to share because sometimes those mental and emotional aspects are what trigger me personally to overeat

If you have any questions let me know!

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Thoughts from 2018--a Maintainer's Year in Review

Felt compelled to share this latter half of my journey. Hopefully someone can take something helpful away from it ♥️

I started this year at 136 lbs. I'd been maintaining it for a few months at that point, having lost a total of ~75 lbs since I had my third baby in fall 2016. 136 was what I weighed at my high school graduation so for those who say your hs weight is impossible....lies!!

I thought I would be happy with that weight, but then I hit it and I still hated what I saw in the mirror. My body fat % was high, and even though my BMI was perfect, I felt I looked...clumpy. gross. still fat. I thought I could solve it by getting into running and eating even less. So I started pushing myself to run 10k distances (without properly preparing my body for it) and I started eating even less. I was exercising like crazy, chasing after three small kids, still breastfeeding the third, and I was miserable. But I refused to give it up, convinced I just needed more discipline.

By the time summer came, I was waist deep in eating disorder land (not for the first time in my life) and so depressed. To make matters worse, my body had barely budged. I'd lost FOUR pounds and screwed up my knee and my bf % was 27%. Lower than it was in January but still higher than the ideal for my age/gender/etc. Seeing that almost pushed me deeper down but thankfully I'd been having some spiritual awakenings about my disordered eating by then so I was open to what the personal trainer at my gym (an acquaintance...Ive never done personal training) had to say that day.

She convinced me to lay off the cardio (I was fond of hour long super sessions where I'd try to break my personal records of calories burned per hour), to amp up the strength training, and to eat enough. It was scary. I was terrified I'd get fat again if I stopped running, if I dared to eat an afternoon snack sometimes, etc. But I couldn't keep on how I was living and I have three daughters and I was more terrified of passing my crazy on to them. So I changed. I do one cardio session a week now. And I don't berate myself if it's just 40 minutes. I started lifting and taking strength training classes. I started eating more. Still clean and healthy, still no fast food, but enough.

And y'all. I am in such a better place now. I've lost two inches in my waist since July. I'm happier. I'm not plagued with constant low blood sugar. I have energy with my kids again. I look fitter and tighter in the mirror. My husband loves it but he also loved it when I was 9 months pregnant and 210 lbs so his opinion might not count haha!

So today at the gym I stepped on the scale again, just curious. My weight? 139 lbs. I have gained seven pounds since July. A year ago, that would've sent me into a tail spin. Now though? All I can think about is how good I look in my size 6 jeans, how excited my family is for the fried fish I'm cooking tonight (sometimes I do that now....the horror ;)), how I can chase after my four year old now without having to stop because I'm so lightheaded. This is healthy. This is happy. This is what my body needs to weigh and it is good and I am not fat because my BMI is closer to 25 than it was when I weighed 132. (I'm 5'5" for reference.)

Just wanted to share this because I think it's important that we realize our weight loss goal/ideal might not be what we think it should be. You might still have to fight for contentment when you reach it. Be flexible and open. Be kind to yourself. Don't lose the weight because you hate yourself. Lose it because you love yourself. And make sure you nourish yourself every step of the way.

Much ♥️ and Happy New Year!

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