Thursday, January 3, 2019

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Friday, 04 January 2019

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Szt9SH

SV: scale said a number i have not seen in years

I looked at it in sheer disbelief. Did it a couple more times to make sure it wasn't busted. 219. I haven't been under 220 in at least a decade. Holy crap.

I have struggled with food addiction for most my life and only recently have i managed to switch to seeing food as fuel rather than something else, and the past two months it's just been coming off. 16lbs since november. It feels absolutely unreal. Breaking the almost romantic connection i had to food feels so freeing. It's now a strictly professional relationship. I didn't binge on the holidays. And I didn't agonize over feeling bad about not letting myself enjoy holiday food, either. I was completely and genuinely okay with not eating the calorie dense food at the parties. I just took my fill, and didn't over-eat. I actually had some form of will power for the first time, it's amazing.

At this rate, maybe I'll be seeing onederland soon. I think digging up my original benchmark photos when i started my weight loss in 2016 and taking new progress pics is in order, i finally feel like i've accomplished something.

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

SV - Finally able to feel comfortable!

tl;dr: 207lb to 177lbs (30+% body fat to 22%) in 6 months, 20lbs lost in the last 3 months as i started regularly going to the gym. 196lb in october to 177lb in january

Hey everyone!

I let myself go. Fresh out of college I looked at myself and realized I was in a spot with my body I didn't want to be. When you look down and can't even see your own junk, you know you've got a problem. In June I decided to change that. In June I weighed 207lbs with a body fat percentage of 30+%.

I was eating fast food every day I could afford it and overeating junk food in between those meals. So the first thing I did was download the app Lose It!. I started tracking my calories. I didn't change my eating habits immediately, though. What really motivated me to change was looking at how much I was eating and seeing my goal date get pushed back further and further in the app. Seeing the quantity of bad food I was eating helped motivate my change.

First thing I did was cut soda and juice and traded it out for water. I would drink a lot of soda pretty regularly. I limited myself to one a day and eventually down even further, later on. Now I have a soda only when I drink which is about once every two weeks, and much lighter than I was drinking before.

Next thing I did was hit up a gym. In June I started doing about an hour cardio 5-6 times a week. I did max slope and between 3-4mph each session. This was great because it boosted my stamina. No longer did I feel winded by going up a flight of stairs or walking for more than 15 minutes with people. By the start of september I weight about 190lbs.

Unfortunately I hit some struggles as I decided to move and the stress of that, as well as my inability to go to the gym made it very difficult for me to maintain my weight loss. By october I weighed 197lbs. This killed my motivation, but I was determined to change my body. I got a membership to the closest gym and started doing cardio again. That's about the time I found this sub as well.

About a week into going back to the guy I started going with someone else. He introduced me to lifting weights. I was incredibly self conscious and felt so weak. I went back to cardio after only spending a small amount of time with the weights. When I got back home I decided to start looking up "how to lose weight", "how to get muscle", "how to blah blah blah", you know the drill. I spent hours and days just reading articles and watching videos. This motivated the hell out of me.

In late october I decided I wanted to start doing weights in order to gain some muscle mass and strength. I wanted to focus on getting lean, losing body fat and gaining muscle. I fixed my nutrition to focus on my protein macro. I went from eating a lot of carbs, some fats, and some protein, to eating a lot of protein, some carbs and some fats. I think this really helped me stay on track.

So now, after what feels like forever, I love going to the gym and I love losing weight. I know I'm not where I want to be with my weight loss goals, but I finally feel confident enough to post my progress. I hope everyone else who set a goal is able to maintain it until they get to it. It's one of the most rewarding things I've ever done.

Here are some things I've done that may help some people... I'm no expert so take it with a grain of salt.

  • Count calories, but don't change immediately. Take it slow and ease into it. You don't want to crash.
  • Set small goals. I don't think I'd still be actively trying to lose weight if I set my short term weight lose goal to 30lbs. Instead I set my goal to lose 5lbs. When I lose more than that I feel so pumped.
  • I never bound my goal to a time limit. I know some people like doing that, but I never wanted to feel forced to go to the gym or eat better.
  • I still eat junk food, just way less of it. I never realized how good some junk food actually is because I was just stuffing it down my face all the time. It's now more of a reward to myself. I love eating junk food, its just how I am, so I'm not going to completely stop.
  • Find something about going to the gym (or doing any physical activity) that you enjoy. I love the challenge of weight lifting and seeing if I can improve each time I get to the gym. I've gamify-ed my weight loss and I think that's the best thing that could have happened to me.

If you do end up doing weights, I suggest looking up the Jefit app. It's wonderful for tracking progress.

Thanks everyone for reading this stupid brain dump post. I'm just stoked that I finally weigh what I did before I started college (which was over 5 years ago) and I finally am starting to see the fruits of my labor. Keep at it and it'll pay off, trust me!

submitted by /u/Metiri
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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2RAwLH6

Secrets to make 2019 your healthiest year yet

Kicking off a new year brings plenty of excitement knowing we get 365 new chances to write 12 more chapters in the story called life. To help make it your healthiest and most fulfilling year yet, we put together 9 key areas to focus on in 2019.



from Life Time Weight Loss Blog http://bit.ly/2BXCmNO

135lbs Lost! Official 1 year weigh-in. Pics Inside.

Hey Everyone, it's been awhile since I have posted, but what better time than my 1 year weight loss journey anniversary? I can't believe it has been an entire year since I started this, but with the help of this community and my VLOG/Website I have been able to create an atmosphere of accountability that has been invaluable to my weight loss. I began this journey at 412lbs and as of this morning I weigh 276.2lbs, for a total loss of 135.8lbs! That is absolutely amazing to me, I never thought I would be able to pull it off, and it certainly hasn't been easy, but with perseverance and accountability I have made it to this point. Below is my side-by-side:

Side-by-Side

I have had a ton of NSVs as well. I started this wearing 60 inch pants and 5XL shirts. I now wear 42 inch pants and 2XL shirts. That's a freakin foot and half (18 inches) lost off my waist and 3 shirt size down. Everything has gotten much easier and I have been back in the gym for the last 10 months.

I have about 64lbs to lose to my first goal of 212lbs and about 86-76 to lose until I hit my final goal. I couldn't be happier with the progress to this point and I am optimistic for year 2. Thanks to you all for checking this out.

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

I don't think I want to talk about my weight loss anymore. Is that okay?

I've been at this for almost a year. I shared a progress photo 6 months in that blew up on my social media, and since then people like talking about it with me. Once in a while I'll post something about being at the gym, or a pic of a really great healthy, low calorie entree at a restaurant (hail CICO) because they're so damn hard to find sometimes. People tell me that the content is inspirational, and I find other peoples' health related content really inspirational since it's become a preoccupation of mine.

Something changed this last month or so. My weight loss has impacted every part of my life, and in fact it's lead me to have to confront things about my life and why I really don't feel happy. I can't talk about my weight without instantly being overcome with emotion, my head filling with my "issues". I just got a position that includes a health program with access to therapy, which I'm going to take advantage of.

I love that people feel inspired to make positive changes when they talk to me or read my several posts about my weight loss. However it brings up deeply personal feelings for me lately. I feel guilty, because I'd love to help people if I can. Especially people who feel like weight loss is hopeless. I feel like I owe that to people, though I also feel like that's a really patronizing perspective.

Is it okay if I don't want to talk about it anymore? I can't stop people from asking about it when they see me slimmer, but I don't think I want to delve into things anymore. I'm also so sick and tired of people from dating apps telling me I look so much better now, when they never even knew me before. I'm still very much a broken person.

submitted by /u/INTJam_on_toast
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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2RbqHVR

2.25 Years Later: From Class 3 Obese to Class 1 Obese // 404.4 lbs to 196.6 lbs

((I apologize in advance - I am not a person who does brevity very well!))

A little over a year ago, I shared my experience of losing 156 lbs in my first year of weight loss - you can find that post here. It goes into my backstory, how I started, what I did to lose weight (/what I’m still doing to lose weight), and my thoughts on the entire process to that point.

I’ve been back and lurking for a little while after a really busy year that didn’t leave much time for perusing Reddit, but I wanted to share an update on the last 15 months.

When I started losing weight, my initial goal was to the lose the 70 lbs I’d gained over two years of my eating getting worse, which caused me to gain weight, which caused my activity and mobility to decrease dramatically, which caused me to gain even more weight. Once I lost 100 lbs and realized that my body didn’t just “want to be 330 lbs” (the weight I had stabilized at for the prior 5 years), I figured: “I lost 100 lbs in six months, I’ll lose 50 in the next six months, and 50 in the next year” – and that’s basically what happened.

I hit 200 lbs lost/half my body weight in June 2018, and was below 200 lbs by July. I’ve been taking a little bit of a mental break from active weight loss for the last few months. I’ve essentially maintained a 200+ lb loss for the last 4-6 months and am currently sitting around 197-200 lbs when not experiencing the bloat that comes from holiday eating after losing a bunch of weight. My next goal is to lose another 20 lbs or so to reach an overweight BMI and pursue skin removal on my abdomen and torso.

My second year of weight loss has been marked by a less dramatic physical transformation (there’s very real truth to the paper towel effect, but the shape of my body hasn’t always allowed me to see the reality of that situation), and a much more dramatic mental transformation, especially in relation to food.

Coming from over 400 lbs, and a lifetime of super morbid obesity prior, I was still able to fudge some numbers in my tracking (I really don’t know if I realized I was doing this), unconsciously snack a little more, and be more lenient in my food choices while still losing weight at a rapid clip. As I’ve gotten smaller, my TDEE has lowered and my weight loss has slowed, so I’ve had to actually confront the habits that I thought I’d already dealt with. Namely, eating when I was bored, upset, or felt out of control in a situation.

For the first year of my weight loss, I relied really heavily on always having snacks at the ready, especially at work where my boredom eating was most prevalent. I’d always have a yogurt or container of veggies ready to go, and would count down the minutes until I could justify eating again. It was a way for me to manage my ever-present hunger and mostly stick to my calorie goals, but I realized last year that it didn’t do anything to actually teach me how to eat like a “normal person” or in a way that I wanted to eat for the rest of my life. I relied on the snacks throughout the day, which meant that the meals I was eating were ultimately less filling and so I continued to rely on the snacks in a self-perpetuating cycle.

The past six months have been a really positive lesson in understanding my hunger, in learning to eat larger/more nutritious/more filling meals, and in reintroducing some of the higher-calorie foods I’d avoided for the first year, and how to portion them appropriately (REAL PEANUT BUTTER, IT IS SO GOOD TO SEE YOU AGAIN).

I have also experienced, for the first time in my life, instances of what I’ve called “out of control” eating – moments of just inhaling everything that I had historically been really good about portion-controlling. All of those instances were during a period this summer where I was working 50+ hours a week at my day job and 12-18 hours a week at a second job, where sleep was in low supply and stress was off the charts. I eventually quit my second job, took time to regroup, and haven’t experienced any out of control eating since.

Other magic I’ve experienced in my second year of weight loss: I ran an entire mile for the first time, and then 2.5 miles without stopping. I ran most of a hilly 5k in 90 degree heat in under 37 minutes, which is just amazing to me because prior to 2017, the last time I “”””jogged”””” a mile was during the Presidential Fitness Test in middle school, and I always had to do it twice because I couldn’t jog/walk a mile in the allotted 18 minute timeframe. I’ve continued to just love being outside, which is a real turn of events for someone who used to make shitty comments about people who hiked because they went outside?? Willingly?????

The other huge mental shift I’ve experienced this year has been in my mentality towards and approach to my life and happiness. The way I approach relationships and tasks and stressful situations is so incredibly different than it was a year ago. I can’t complain about something if I don’t do anything about it – I can’t complain about drowning in debt if I don’t figure out a budget or get a second job to try to offset my bills (I was able to pay down about $7,000 of credit card debt before choosing to quit my second job, and have a plan for continuing). I can’t blame someone else for bringing my favorite cookies into work – the choice to eat one is mine. I can’t complain about having a disorganized house if I never take the time to go through my things or clean. I can’t complain about my lack of flexibility if I never stretch. And I never stretch so. What’re you gonna do?

There have been some “down sides” to extreme weight loss:

  • My body looks super weird, but it looked super weird 2 years ago too, so I can’t be too upset about it.

  • My hair thinned a bit but has filled back out.

  • I started experiencing some back pain and nausea in November, and found out a few days later that I had gallstone the size of a ping pong ball just hanging out in my gallbladder – thought I’d made it through my weight loss without any gallbladder issues, but that lil meatball just stayed silent until she couldn’t anymore. I had my gallbladder removed laparoscopically a few days later, and surgical recovery was actually kind of a breeze (minus the jaundice/elevated liver function from a gallstone blocking my common bile duct after surgery – which worked itself out on its own - and the worst constipation I ever hope to experience – NINE. DAYS.). I do want to note that regardless of the peanut butter comment above, I did not/do not have a super low fat diet that caused my gallstones - it seems to be pretty luck of the draw with rapid/extreme weight loss - I didn’t eat peanut butter for a while because it was a food I ate way too much of as a child and it was difficult for me to portion it appropriately.

  • I sometimes struggle to find clothes that fit my body appropriately because of the way my loosened skin/fat hangs on my upper abdomen that are not also just giant sacks.

  • I’m annoyed that I’ve had to purchase five wedding bands since getting married in April of 2017 (I planned ahead and have gone the $10 sterling silver bands from Amazon route until my weight stabilizes).

  • I still have sleep apnea, but the pressure required to treat it has gone down dramatically and my sleep doctor has recommended doing a second sleep study once I hit my goal weight.

  • I somehow simultaneously have an entirely flat chest and DDs. It's magic!

But honestly, none of that really holds a candle to the joy I experience from the life I’ve built for myself.

Life has changed dramatically – the physical transformation has been mind-blowing, but the mental transformation has really just changed the way I approach almost everything in my life in a more productive, positive way. I call myself on my own bullshit REGULARLY, and force myself to step back and assess my approach to most things before reacting rashly. I know that I am almost single-handedly responsible for my long-term success or failure, and I feel a very real freedom in that.

I am so amazed and inspired by anyone who takes the steps necessary to change their life. There's no right way or path to becoming a better version of yourself, but I hope you find joy in the process and find a way to live a life you love and are proud of <3

Updated progress pictures Crazy cat lady weight loss tips

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2C0R1aP