Wednesday, January 2, 2019

For those now hopping on the diet train, it’s not that you’re starving - your stomach is just throwing a temper tantrum.

If you’re getting back on the diet following the holiday season - or just getting started (welcome!) - then right now, you’re probably feeling the pain. Man oh man, how is it 10:30am and your body is already crying out for lunch? Eat lunch at 11 and by 3pm you’re begging for dinner. Those previously on a diet are thinking, “I used to keep these reduced eating habits and never hear a word of complaint from my now-growling greedy tummy! What gives??”

I’ve been there. I’m here now. This is that brutal first week (or two) where your body is still getting accustomed to the new way of things. And it’s not happy about it. Your stomach was living in the lap of luxury at High Cal Manor, but now it’s been kicked out of the house and thrust into a minimum calorie job at the Kale Hut.

Just like a toddler who had the cookie jar taken away, your stomach is being told it doesn’t get to have all of those cookies and roasts and slices of pie, and it’s pitching a fit. Now it’s up to you to not give in.

Yes, it’s hard. Yes, you may buckle and snack just a little bit in order to get it to shut up for awhile. But don’t let it break you! The diet train starts by diving into a tunnel, but I promise you it pops out on the other side. If you can stick to this for a week, just a lil’ ol’ week, your stomach will see that this is the new status quo and learn how to deal with it.

I’ve stuck it out through this terrible week at 240lbs and I’ve done it at 190, 180, and 170 (I take a lot of breaks... it’s kinda my thing). I can almost guarantee I’ll do it again in the future. But I succeed in my weight loss because I trust and know that I will get results, and I’m not about to let one lousy week stop me.

So stick with it! I believe in you! We got this! If you can beat this week, the weight only goes down from here.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Sz0AVA

Any tips on how to get my wife (26F) to commit to losing weight?

I'm a 26M, by the way.Any tips on how to get my wife to commit to losing weight?

She's 280 Lbs now, she was well under 200 when we started dating. She's 5'8"She infamous for "I'll get serious about it tomorrow" over and over again until, well, the first "tomorrow" was in August of 2015, and she's put on 40 additional pounds since then.

I'm still attracted to her, and I still enjoy making love to her. I try to make that obvious as much as possible. However, I'd be lying if I said I wasn't more physically attracted to her slimmer self. The difference isn't big, though. Chubby is one of the body types I happen to be attracted to.

That being said: as it currently stands, my attraction to her isn't a problem.

There are a few problems:

  1. Her confidence in herself is currently below sea-level, as such, our sex life is practically non-existent some months. At best, we'll have sex 3 times a month, quite the departure from multiple times a week (as it was before weight gain).

I've read that being overweight can have an impact on your sex drive as well, so I don't think it's simply a matter of making her feel sexier. I compliment her every day, so I think pushing that envelope harder would become even more of an annoyance to her than it probably already is.

2) We're seriously planning on trying for a baby, we'd like to do this as soon as we can.However, being obese will pose some serious risks to pregnancy and childbirth .We've agreed that we're not going to try until she's less than 210 lbs. Putting her body through that much stress when it's not ready isn't worth the risk.

3) Her father recently passed away from a heart attack. He was a great man in many senses, however, to be blunt, his diet and lifestyle choices were less than great:Pack a day smoker, obese, didn't eat too many veggies etc.He's not a special case for this family, they have a history of diabetes and heart disease.

For me, this raises some serious concerns for what the future holds if she doesn't do something about her situation now. Her father waited far too long to make a change, it took his first heart attack to get him to start turning the ship around, but there wasn't much that could be done at that point.He wasn't too different than most people in the sense that most people don't bother to make positive changes in their life until they face a dire consequence.I don't mean to sound so cold, I knew the man for 10 years, and I loved him as I love anyone else in my family. It's just hard to effectively communicate that through text.

4) She's noticeably less active. I don't want to use the word "lazy", as getting up to walk downstairs to run a load of laundry is much more work or her than it is me.She asks me to do a lot more simple things for her that I feel she could do herself if her body was lighter.Examples: walking from the bedroom, all the way to the living room to grab the remote.Or walking the dog because she's not wearing pants or doesn't feel like getting up. If I try these excuses she gets upset with me.

Yes, some of this is to be expected in any relationship, but there's been a definite increase. It doesn't go both ways, the only time I ask her to do those kinds of things for me is if I physically can't, because it's just faster to do it myself (like by the time I'm done calling her name to get her attention, I could have just gotten up, grabbed the remote and changed the channel myself).

Things I/We have tried:

  1. Leading by example:
    It was the summer of 2015 (mentioned earlier), and I was the fattest I've ever been, clocking in at 251lbs at the heaviest A few of my friends (and my family) had pointed out that I looked bigger. Huh, I guess that's why my knees hurt so damn much. I hadn't bothered to weigh myself in a few years, it hadn't been a problem. I won medals in high school from Cross country and Track, being overweight wasn't something I had considered.

This was completely unacceptable to me. After weighing myself and seeing how much I had let things slide, I tried a bunch of things to lose weight. I tried keto, paleo, Intermittent fasting (24 hour, and then 16 hour), calorie counting, fasted cardio every morning, and atkins for a bit.

The sliver bullet was calories in/calories out + fasted cardio several times a week. In 1.5 years I lost 65 lbs.

Here's the thing, nobody had to push me or nag me about the food I was eating. I dealt with all the annoyances that friends and family cause when you're trying to pursue weight loss ("Oh, just one chocolate sundae won't hurt!!" type shit, anyone that has ever tried to lose weight knows exactly what I'm talking about), I tried new things, I was completely self driven. I made a lot of mistakes, and I can offer advice on what to avoid if she ever chooses to start.

My wife? Well at the time she was 220, she said at least once a week that she's going to join me. She never did, and actually those weekly "I'm going to start next week" talks have been happening ever since.

She wasn't much help by the way. She wanted to eat out every day and brought the most delicious smelling food around. I told her how inconsiderate this was, she'd improve for a week or two, but then would be right back to bringing the good stuff around this fat boy that dreamed of eating a never-ending tray of brownies one time during one of my fasts.

Leading by example would be a bit of a problem now: I've been weightlifting to gain some muscle mass, so I need to eat a slight surplus of calories if I'm hoping to get anywhere. I don't dirty bulk, but I still need to eat larger quantities of food.

If she would have hopped on the weight loss at any point during the time I was losing weight, she'd be below 200, easy.

2) Getting advice from an actual doctor.

Way smarter than what I did.She went to a doctor in the hopes of getting pointed in the right direction. He told her to count her calories, drink water, eat raw veggies, and walk at least 10,000 steps a day.

Okay cool, she doesn't have to listen to any of my advice, an actual professional told her exactly what to do.

No dice. She has a follow on checkup in a few weeks and hasn't lost a pound.It's cold outside, so I brought out the elliptical we own and set it up in the living room ( we don't have much space), she used it once.

3) Being a nag

I can't lie to myself. I get frustrated when she tells me she ate at burger king for lunch (not salads) and doesn't know how many calories she's eaten. So I nag her about it and tell her that it's bad for her and that I'm frustrated she just won't stick to losing weight... blah. To be honest I've lost patience with it all, I never insult her personally, but I do ask when she's planning on getting serious about her health.I feel physically ill when I have to remind her that she needs to count calories, and ordering ice cream from post-mates is bad, it's been years at this point having the same conversations. She listens about half the time so I'll keep doing it. I'd love for this to not be a nearly daily occurrence. Hell, if I could never say the word "calories" again, I would probably have a longer life span.

That's not to say we haven't had healthy conversations about this. Those happen once a month.

4) Going to a therapist

Fixing obesity isn't simply a matter of slapping someone's hand away from a box of Oreos. There's a psychological element to it, obese people treat their body the way they do because there is likely some toxicity going on in their life. Eating is a great escape from stress, but too much reliance on it causes dangerous amounts of fat.She's under a lot of stress right now, her father passed away recently. So she's been having weekly therapy sessions for about 2 months now. I wish I could point to this event and say that's where the trouble began, but to be honest, most of the weight gain happened well before he passed.

I fully expected things to get worse from this point (understandably so), but surprisingly, her weight gain has stagnated. All things considered, she's been unbelievably strong about this news. Life after her father passing could be a post all on its own, so I wont dive too deep into that. The short version is that we do a lot of things to honor her late father, and still include him in holidays.

Bottom line: I know she can do it. She doesn't have to resort to anything crazy or rash. She sometimes shows signs of improvement, but it's very short term (2 weeks at best). She just won't commit to the long game. I'm there to help her, but that's just it, help. I can't force someone to lose weight or find it in themselves to be motivated to do so.

I mentioned earlier that her weight gain has stagnated, so it gives me hope, but how in the world do I get her to commit to weight loss?

She needs time to grieve, of course, but she's in the red-zone for her health at this point. If things get any worse, I'm worried she'll suffer some dire consequences. I want us to have a long happy life together, sure an accident might happen to shorten that, but I can guarantee it'll be short if she stays obese.

I love her, and want to have a family with her. However, I'm just about out of ideas at this point. I feel like all I can really do is wait and hope for the best.

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

My new year's resolution isn't to lose weight.

I want to lose 20-30 pounds and get back into a normal BMI range, but losing that weight isn't specifically one of my new year's resolutions for 2019. Instead, my list of new year's resolutions looks like this:

  • log my food every day, even if it's just my best estimate
  • get my 10,000 steps every day
  • hula hoop for at least 10 minutes every day
  • do 16:8 IF
  • weigh every morning
  • forgive myself for any missed days and get back on track ASAP

These are mostly things that I do already - except the last one. My biggest problem is consistency and giving up after a few bad days. So, I'm going to do my absolute best to stick to these resolutions this year and see where it gets me. I want to focus on the tasks that I can manage on a daily basis rather than a big goal that seems so far out of reach. I know that when I stick to these things, it works - I've lost 15 pounds or so already, and there's no reason I can't keep going with that loss.

Here's to a great 2019, and may you all achieve your fitness/weight loss goals this year!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2s2mtks

M/46/181cm/83kg. I am so bloody proud of what I have achieved. 54kg down and fitter than I have been since I was a teenager!

Hello and Happy New Year to all you lovely losers!

I don't post here very often, but have been so inspired by everyone on this sub that I wanted to share my weight loss journey with you all. I know you want the before and after pics so here they are (apologies for the quality!)

For background, I am 46 years old, 181cm and currently 83kg. I don't live a "regular" life. I run a bar in a holiday resort, and as a result I work ridiculous hours every day for 7 months, and then take 5 months completely off.

I´ve always struggled with my weight and self image, but over the last few years I really piled it on. I was drinking way too much, my diet was terrible and exercise was non existant. I was spiralling into a depression and got to a point where I couldn´t see how I could ever change. I was struggling with my workload, was miserable all the time, and I was basically waiting to die (melodramatic I know but its how I felt).

Then last March, I was walking home after a day in the pub and I was gasping for breath walking up a small hill. Something clicked in my brain and I decided that it was time to sort myself out. I got home, talked with my SO and asked for her support, downloaded MFP and started tracking calories. I went all in and set myself a 1000 calorie per day deficit, bought myself a Fitbit and committed to 10k steps per day, and most importantly swapped beer for diet coke.

Something amazing happened. The numbers on the scale started to drop. I was 137kg at my heaviest but eating at a deficit and walking daily soon saw that number get smaller and smaller.

My clothes started to hang off me, I was feeling better, looking better, my snoring reduced drastically to the delight of my partner, and I felt like a dark cloud had been lifted off me.

As the summer came around my workload increased massively and my daily steps increased to an average of 25000 per day (14-17 hour shifts will do that!) and I had to increase the calories I was allowing myself just to get through the day, but the weight kept melting off.

By October I had hit my goal weight of 80kg and felt amazing. As work was starting to wind down I decided it was time to up my game and join a gym.

Walking into the gym for the first time was scary as hell. It had been at least 20 years since I had lifted weights, but with the help of /r/Fitness and YouTube I soon got into the swing of it and I only wish I had started sooner. Feeling my body get stronger, and more flexible is addictive and although I´m new to it, I have already made some noticeable gains.

I continue to track my calories, but think nothing of having a pizza/kebab/beer if I want one. If I over indulge I just make up for it over the next couple of days. I have gained 3kg since October, but that is down to increased muscle mass and I´m happy at the weight I´m at.

I never thought I would be writing a post like this yet here I am. I´m fitter and happier than I have been for a very long time, and I have no intention of ever gaining that much weight again.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2F4R21w

Holding Myself Accountable for My Choices, Letting Pass the Things I Don't Control

The chief task in life is simply this: to identify and separate matters so that I can say clearly to myself which are externals not under my control, and which have to do with the choices I actually control. Where then do I look for good and evil? Not to uncontrollable externals, but within myself to the choices that are my own. - Epictetus

That suggests a chart like this...

Things I Control, Choices Things I Don't Control (fortunes and misfortunes)
 _________________________________   _________________________________ 
 _________________________________   _________________________________ 
 _________________________________   _________________________________ 
 _________________________________   _________________________________ 
 _________________________________   _________________________________ 

Before reading on, maybe consider your plan right now. How much of it is in your control? How much of it depends on factors out of your control? Take a few minutes and jot down your own chart. Then read on...

Life is not Perfect

Perfect is not required. It just has to be good enough for weight loss.

You win some and you lose some. Nobody goes to Las Vegas expecting to win every roll of the dice, pull of the lever, or deal of the cards. The winners in Las Vegas are the ones who win more often than they lose. They take home the money. The rest of us losers pay for the bright lights, their comped rooms and their free drinks.

We're going to lose some of these battles with our established habits, with our unfriendly environments, or with the daily circumstances. It sucks to lose a battle. It's demotivating, momentum breaking, and irritation-making!

The purpose of this exercise is to be forewarned and prepared. We should start knowing that we WILL fall off the wagon (as it were). We WILL derail the train. But maybe it's more useful not to think of it as a wagon or a train in the first place, where falling or crashing would be a disaster. We're more comparable to being on a roadtrip, where a wrong turn is just a wrong turn. We don't crash the car and light it afire and live there. We just make some corrective turns and keep going. As long as we make more correct turns than incorrect turns, we'll make progress toward our intended destination.

Things I Control, Choices Things I Don't Control (fortunes and misfortunes)
How many calories I reasonably plan to eat The difference on the scale today (up, down, or the same)
Whether I pre-plan my food day Unexpected social events and irresistible temptations, not being hungry, being hungry earlier than expected
Setting aside time, preparing for exercise Snow, rain, or schedule interruptions; feeling good enough that I do extra exercise
Logging my food as best as I can I cannot be 100% precise in estimating someone else's prepared food, it might be higher or lower

Focusing on the things we can control, we can bend the odds into our favor. With the odds in our favor, fortune and misfortune will still happen but we will win more often than we will lose.

So consider your own plan to lose weight and get fitter and healthier. What are the choices that you control? What are the factors and outside of your control?

Not getting emotionally upset (or gleeful) by the things we don't control, and understanding that they're just the way that fortune works, makes this experience more enjoyable and endurable.

♂55 5'11/179㎝ SW:298℔/135㎏ CW:183℔/83㎏ [3Y AMA], [1Y recap] MyFitnessPal+Walks🚶Hikes+TOPS

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2s6RZxU

New Year Reflection and Refocusing *Progress Pic*

Wow what a year last year was. I made some huge progress, down 27 pounds since August.

Progress Pic

I'm at my lowest weight since 2013. I also hit a huge Plateau and managed to not lose any weight since the end of October. Thankfully I didn't gain any weight either, but I am ready to review last year and get my goals in order for this year. Looking back on my posts I made some lofty goals after my initial quick start to my weight loss. Now with 2018 in the review mirror I wanted to make some new goals and get back to the habits that made me successful in losing 27 pounds this year. I started this journey because I wanted to be healthy and a good example for my daughter. I also was identified as having Prediabetes and as corny as it sounds the new year provides us a great opportunity to look back at the previous year and look forward to new goals.

  • I am going to track my calories everyday in MFP (Current Goal: 1,750 calories)

  • I am going to hit 10,000 steps on my Fitbit everyday.

  • I am going to go to the gym 2 times a week to run

  • I am going to run my first 5k.

  • I am not going to let one bad day or binge derail my progress or weaken my resolve.

  • I am attempting a 2 lbs/week goal with my refocused efforts.

This would give me the following mini-goals

230 lbs by January 30th

220 lbs by March 6th

210 by April 10th

200 by May 15th

I can't wait to get to my goal this year. I will not only be out of the Obese BMI, but also out of the overweight BMI. I can't wait to take a new r/progresspics photo and post about my successes later this year.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2s69AG8

I’m so tired of family/friends/people giving me their opinions about how I’m losing weight.

So this is going to be a giant fucking rant, and new account for obvious reasons and will be posting here more often. Also on mobile so please forgive formatting!

The story of my weight loss, and the struggles I’ve had to deal with over the course of my life. I’m 6’2, so I’m pretty lucky but my weight has always been a constant battle for me. Growing up I was always a bigger kid (the terms were husky, big boned, or a thick boy), but I always played ball (baseball pitcher) and was on club teams/school. Playing ball kept me in okay shape, but I injured my shoulder and had to quit playing this was in high school.

Now the reason I was overweight is because my mother is an amazing cook, and I would always be guilted into eating more because of the whole “there are starving kids in Africa” blanket statement after I said I was full. I had to realize that I was over eating. So to give you an idea on my weight at 16 I was ~210 and then in college I gained the freshmen “15” and with other weight gained between my quitting of baseball to college I ended up at ~240 at the age 19. After my freshman year I was tired of being fat and made that mental switch of you have to fucking do it.

At the age of 19 I was diagnosed was ADD/ADHD (Now I recently got an official OCD diagnosis so yeah me 😂) and I got my first prescription to Adderal. It was life changing for me because not only did it help by suppressing my appetite, give me energy, but mentally as well. If anyone’s interested in that side of the story, let me know because I feel like I might have some insights that others might need to hear because my mind runs a million miles per hour and can’t stand still half the time.

Alright back to weight loss story, so at 19 and 240 I went on “extreme dieting” often doing a mix of calorie counting and intermittent fasting. I was eating ~1200 calories a day, and if I worked out I ate more accordingly. I picked up tons of healthy hobbies, but running was my biggest outlet. In the course of ~8 months I was able to get down to 165 pounds. Since I was skinny and fit I was picking up and doing all these new hobbies like MMA, soccer, and ballet (still needed my fine arts credits at university).

I will admit 165 was too tiny for me I was at a 30-32 waist and medium shirts I also got a gf and got lazy and went up to ~180. I maintained the 180-190 for ~4-5, but when I turned 25 my father became sick. I quit my life, moved back in with my parents to take care of my father before he died. During that time I was a caregiver 24/7 split shifting taking care of my father at night while she did the day. All I did was care for my father and drink beer.

I was not being healthy at all, and it sickens me looking back but i was drinking 3-4 30 racks of coors a week and really not doing anything active. Over the course of ~3 years I slowly gained wait until I was 275 pounds. Then in July/AugusT 2018 after my father passed I wanted to get back tO my old weight. I am now at 220 lbs now and lost about 10 lbs a month by mainly not drinking And mY IF/calorie counting Methods.

Well of course my family wants me to eat more or change my eatiNg habits because its “not healthy” I just want to tell them to STFU, I have done so much research and have found this works best for me. People lose weight differently and this is my method that works for me and many others.

/end rant

ThanK Y’all for letting me vent

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