Sunday, January 6, 2019

(Vent) My mother discussing my weight with her friends in support is making me even more insecure

I have lost almost 20kg / 44lbs since May (yay!), starting at 66kg/145lbs and I’m currently 47kg/103lbs

Anyway, for the past couple of months, I have for once in my life felt somewhat happy with my body!! My clavicle is to die for if I do say so myself, my tummy is quite squishy but not too bad. Once I drop the last 10lbs I’ll start trying to gain muscle if income allows it, replacing my walking with training.

My legs have always been my biggest insecurity. Its currently summer here in Australia, aka shorts and skirts. For the first time I felt comfortable wearing shorts outdoors. Yeah, I have cellulite, yeah my knees and inner thighs are a bit loose, but theyre not too bad!!! I figured its the last of the subcutaneous fat to go anyway since I thought loose skin is supposed to be paper thin? And I’m 19, I moisturise, loose skin shouldn’t be something to worry about.

My mum has been very proud of me and supportive during this whole journey. She has struggled with her weight her whole life. She will talk to her friends or anyone who will listen for hours about me. She goes into extreme detail about all my routines, though I think she does tend to over exaggerate tbh...

It honestly does bother me, but a part of me is thinking “wow finally I did something to be proud of”. She never talks about things she wouldnt want me to overhear, so she knows I know shes talking about these things. I don’t try to stop her. Maybe I should though...

While I was washing up in the bathroom, she was on the phone to her best friend aka someone who knows more about my weight loss journey than I do. Based on what I overheard, they’ve been discussing loose skin. My loose skin. Specifically on my legs. About how much I needed wanted to start toning.

I started sobbing immediately, all my insecurities suddenly being confirmed and once I was fit to leave the bathroom I ran to my bedroom to change into my winter pj’s to cover my shameful legs. Now all I see are gross old lady knees and wrinkly legs and cottage cheese skin. Everything else grosses me out, my stomach is all lumpy, my arms are baggy, my boobs have deflated, my cheeks are chubby. I dont look like how women under 50kg are supposed to look.

I don’t know what to do now. I already do as much bodyweight exercise as I can without burning myself out to the point I can’t function in other areas of my life. I feel so uncomfortable and insecure about having my body being discussed in so much detail, even when they’re being positive and complimenting me its still making me feel awful. am I overreacting? Shouldn’t I be happy about having supportive family, even if they’re talking about my body in such depth?

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2GYI5Zd

Confession:. I am scared of maintenance

Hi everyone,

I have been doing CICO since May and am currently down 65 lbs, with about 25 lbs to go until I hit my current goal weight of 140.

My starting goal weight was 160, so as I get to that benchmark, I am starting to imagine what life is like at maintenance, and to be honest, it scares the shit out of me.

I have been eating in the 1200-1400 calorie range since August (1500 before that), and I am so comfortable with it. Meals are predictable and my weight loss of 1-2 lbs a week is predictable, even when my activity might be less so. I want that same predictability at maintenance - that my weight won't go up, that I know what to eat, and that things balance out even if I slack on exercise for a few days. I am just so terrified of gaining again, or getting comfortable eating at too high of a calorie count. When I punch in my new goal weight of 140, my maintenance calories are about 1575, which is basically a whole other meal. If I punch in the fact that I exercise 3-5 days a week, that number jumps to over 2000! I can't imagine being at 2000 calories a day!

So for those of you who have made the jump from eating at a deficit to maintenance, what was it like for you? How did you find your number/range?

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'Losers' of r/loseit, what are some of the more embarrassing/unusual/humorous side effects to losing weight that you've experienced during your weight loss journey?

I really hope this post is allowed, I am going to add some personal anecdotes to try to meet required posting rules.

I am six days back into my weight loss journey for the new year. I made a few changes to my diet, most importantly that I decided to go vegetarian and it seems to be going pretty well, I'm eating less crap, fewer calories, lost about 3 lbs already, and I'm eating lots more veg, fruit and pulses. It seems to be helping my IBS too, with the exception of one thing...

I got enough gas to power Britain! I think the increase in fibre has... spiced things up in my digestive tract. My SO told me the other day that my farts smell like dog food. Definitely not been eating dog food. I've tried peppermint tablets, yoga stretches (to get it all out lol), sitting on the loo for ages tooting away, avoiding beans for a few days, cutting down my diet fizzy drinks, avoiding booze, but nothing is stopping them! I'm hoping once I adjust to the increased fibre intake things will settle down, mostly for my partner's sake. It smells like the inside of a packet of dry roasted peanuts in here (I hope someone gets this reference!)

I just wondered if anyone else was having some embarrassing/funny/odd side effects that we could all have a giggle at or help each other out with some advice on how to ease it, I know a week into resolutions/weight loss plans can mean some people feel a bit low or like they want to give up.

I hope this makes someone other than myself giggle, the SO definitely doesn't find it funny...

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

I want to talk about my experience of weight loss with an eating disorder history!

TW: numbers, small descriptions of ED thoughts. I will try not to be triggering, but if you are in an active eating disorder or early recovery, it's way not the time to be thinking of weight loss!

Hi /r/loseit. I want to talk about my recent experience with losing weight as someone with a history of a restrictive eating disorder. Sorry, this is probably going to be a very long post! My very first post on this subreddit (and on Reddit!) was concerning my challenges and worries regarding losing weight considering my history. Before I posted, I searched for something similar over and over- and I didn't find much information similar to what I was looking for. The advice I did get was, basically, "don't lose weight." Which is well meaning, and I would have given the same advice to someone online I don't know, but I was also in a place where not losing weight had the potential of being just as dangerous as losing weight, or more so- I was BMI 37, had high cholesterol and blood pressure, and was struggling to walk up a flight of stairs. I did end up embarking on weight loss, and I want to share what I've learned in case someone else, like me, needs to lose weight but has a history of a restrictive ED. I am not a mental health professional, I am just a person trying to get through this weird life thing, and I can only speak for my own experience, but I hope some of this is helpful to someone somewhere down the line.

I am a long way from my most recent relapse, and truly felt it was possible to take on weight loss in a healthy way. By a long way out, I mean years- almost a decade. I am not fresh into recovery. Weight loss is not something that anyone fresh into recovery should be thinking about! If you are just starting to recover and hoping to lose the "extra" weight you gained in a "healthy" way, please speak to someone in your recovery circle about those thoughts, it's not the time to take on something as triggering as trying to lose weight. With this post, I am addressing people like me- the eating disorder is there, in the past, and you know it's a possibility that it could pop up again, but it's not something you ever wanna go back to, it's not something that's fresh, and you're mentally prepared, through a strong foundation of long term recovery, to do the hard work to keep it there in the past.

I'm mostly not going to talk about what worked for me in terms of weight loss, because there are plentiful resources on this sub and others about that topic, and I don't really have anything new to add. Anyway, most people with restrictive EDs are pros at weight loss already. I'm going to talk about how I've managed to not lose my mind while losing weight. So that being said, here are some things that made it possible for me to lose 70 lbs without relapsing into my eating disorder-

  1. Support network is crucial. People I can be honest with, including a therapist, were appraised of my plans and updated regularly. Having a good therapist and a support network outside of therapy has helped me to keep myself honest and on track, regardless of what thoughts have popped up. I am very fortunate to also have a husband that knows of my eating disorder history and who is someone I can share everything with at all hours of the day or night. Sharing my negative thoughts took away their power before they turned into negative behaviors. As soon as I want to hide something, I talk about it, and that keeps me accountable. It's tricky, and if you're not able to do this 100% of the time, I can't see how it would be possible to lose weight in a healthy way. Eating disorders thrive in the darkness. Shining light on all the dark nooks of my brain kept the eating disorder from taking power over me.

2) I needed to be able to know and challenge myself. I'm a big proponent of people knowing themselves best, but an ED takes away your ability to be honest about your own thoughts and behaviors. It's not the fault of the person with the ED, it's a terrible mental illness, but it's hard to acknowledge that your own brain has been hijacked, and all those things your inner voice are saying are not true. I needed to know when my inner voice was "me-" that is, the me that was looking out for my health and well being- and when it was influenced by my eating disorder. That's super hard sometimes! Point 1 helps with this, because people outside of me are really good at identifying when I am being influenced by my ED.

3) I needed to do a lot of soul searching about my motivations. Early on in my recovery, I tried to lose weight "healthy" (I didn't really need to lose weight at all, I was a perfectly healthy weight), because I thought if I could just eat "healthy" and be "naturally thin" all my issues would go away, and I could have the body my eating disorder wanted without actually having to deal with an eating disorder. Man, I was super wrong. Losing weight healthy is a totally different process than losing weight with an ED. I am never going to get the body my eating disorder wanted me to have if I am truly taking care of myself and approaching this from a place of health and wellness. I am good with that thought now (and I love my body!) but it took a long time to get there. My goal in losing weight is not to be "skinny," but to feel strong and capable, to have a healthy body, and to enable myself to do the physical things I want to do without any restrictions. Keeping those goals in mind has kept things in perspective.

4) I still have work to do in recovery. This whole journey has shown me more than anything the places where I am weak in my recovery. It's shown me that the behaviors that got me to my high weight were still eating disorder behaviors! That was a wild experience. All these years, I feel like I have avoided true recovery- namely, connecting with my body, understanding and accepting its urges and weird bits and needs, and taking good care of my physical and mental health. A therapist has been crucial. I never truly, 100% addressed some aspects of my disorder, and I am still very much "in recovery" as opposed to recovered. This experience could have gone a totally different way without points 1-3; that's why I put those points first. Because a good support network, and a lot of internal work and soul searching were the difference between enabling more complete recovery and relapsing into my eating disorder.

5) I deal with eating disorder thoughts sometimes. I have to have an action plan for the thoughts. I use a structured method of challenging these thoughts, which has worked well for me. I am not a bad or broken person for continuing to deal with these thoughts- I just have a mental illness that isn't completely healed. The difference between now and active ED is that I am capable of seeing these thoughts for what they are, that they are ugly little remnants of a disease that has taken away too much of my life. Understanding that it's ok for these thoughts to pop up as long as I deal with them in a healthy manner has been crucial to my success. In the past, I've been very all or nothing with ED thoughts- if my ED voice was there at all, I had to act on it or I had to stuff it down with food. Now I challenge it, or just observe it and let it flow away, and it doesn't influence my actions at all. Good therapy has been a godsend for this approach.

6) Having an action plan for "bad days." Every dieter has "bad days-" days where they eat more than they planned or are just struggling for whatever reason. For some people, bad days lead to "falling off the wagon." For me, they can lead to self-hate and further restriction, which can lead to binge-restrict cycles. These cycles are freaking horrible. I've needed to put a good plan in action for extra self love and focus on "bad days." I am learning to accept that I am human, and I sometimes eat more food than I do on other days, and this does not make me unworthy. When I have a bad day, I forgive myself, and move forward. That's harder than it sounds. I have learned to recognize when I am obsessing about a past event, like eating too much, and to break the cycle of obsession through meditation or cognitive behavioral techniques. Are you seeing a trend? LOL. Therapy is good.

7) Learning to accept that my life is not my body, and my body is ok. For a long time, most of my self worth hinged on how I looked. That's something I think a lot of people can relate to, and it really sucks. I am not how I look. Getting to my goal weight will not magically change my life. I have had to spend a lot of time coming to peace with my body, and with how I look at the present. I will never look 100% the way that my ED brain wants me to look. I am still me with 20 less lbs, or 100 more lbs. I cannot put my life on hold until I hit my goal, nor will my life be significantly different or better at my goal weight. This is why it's been really helpful to have goals that are not appearance related- I am reaching my goals of strength, of being capable, and of being healthy, and regardless of how my body looks, it is a good body that has taken me through an amazing life so far, and will take me through many years to come if I treat it with love and kindness and compassion.

8) Evaluating the techniques I am using to lose weight. Look, we all know CICO is king, especially people with EDs. Calories were king in my life for a long time; there is also absolutely nothing more triggering to me than strictly counting calories. I've lost weight using IF, and didn't count jack for most of my weight loss, and that was a way healthier approach for me than downloading MFP. Yes, IF works because it reduces your calories in. Not focusing on the calories aspect still made it a way better approach for me. Now I've done more recovery work, I have been able to work in more calorie tracking without losing my mind, but at first it sure was amazing to lose weight without constantly drowning in numbers. I think that any alternative way of eating that allows changes to calorie intake without strict counting could be helpful- I probably could have done keto, or paleo, or whatever. The important part was I found a way to lose weight and avoid my primary trigger mechanism until I was in a good spot.

There you have it, there is the heart of my experience. I am constantly learning and growing and working on myself, so this is by no means an exhaustive list, but it's the biggest points of what I've experienced for the last 8 months of weight loss. I hope this is helpful for someone out there at some point. If you are someone who is in the same spot, and needs someone to talk to, please feel free to get in touch. I would love to talk to you about your experience and help in any way I can.

I hope everyone has a healthy, happy, beautiful 2019!

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

Challenges with starting a weight loss journey

Hi! Idk if this belongs here but I could use some advice.

In high school I was a bit overweight, about 20 pounds. I lived a sedentary life and my family eats pretty unhealthy. So when I went to college, all the walking (5 miles a day) and choosing healthier options on my own got me to lose the weight unintentionally. I kept it off for a bit, but have gained even more now from a medication I need to take. I really feel uncomfortable with how I look, and would like to loose weight.

My issue is I was so uncomfortable with the attention losing weight brought. I feel like everyone I saw made a comment and it made me feel insecure. I was wondering if anyone else felt this way and had any tips. I would like to feel proud, but I’m just not that type of person and I get so uncomfortable when people take notice to me about sensitive things such as weight loss.

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

Dance Dance Revolution and my weight loss: A match made in full combo heaven

Preface:

I've been swinging up and down massively (in Kg, just in case): q06 then 102, 114, 108, 102, 108, 105, 110, and now pushing down to 106 again.

I'm a massive music games fan. I've been playing beatmania (dj like game with raining notes), drummania (drumming game), etc. I've played some sort of music game since preschool. Now I'm 21 and still hitting the arcades religiously.

English is my second language, apologies for weird grammar.


One day I was playing Drummania, trying to unlock some new songs. I looked left slightly, past the cabinet I'm playing on, and there it is, a DDR A cabinet (the latest, online version). Something clicked in my mind. My weight. Weight loss. DDR. That's it, I'll have DDR as my main game now.

Initially, I struggled physically. My eyes can read the arrows, but my legs can't follow. I don't have the stamina. I don't have the leg speed. I can't do anything more than level 9-10 songs.

I decided to give it a go, I decided to dedicate myself to it. I need to do this.

DDR really fit me. Really helped me to get fit. Every time I try jogging/running, my mind is bored. "How far till I reach my goal? Should I just walk?" I go to a few weeks of C25K and give up. But with DDR, boy, oh boy. I have to stop myself so I can get home before 11pm. (the arcade is close to my internship place (5-10 mins), but it's approx 1-1.5h of commute for me to go home.)

Few months later, here I am. Lv. 13 AAAs, Lv. 14 clears, my weight loss journey couldn't be better. Doing what I loved (playing music games) and losing weight? Sign me up.

If you're interested, look for arcades in your area!

PS for US redditors: Round1 (bowling/arcade place) should have a DDR cabinet! Try to find a Round1 near you.

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

2019 week 1. 2 mini targets hit this week.

I just read 107.5kg on the scale. That's under 17 stone for the British amongst us. 2 nice targets for me (every 2.5kg and every half stone are mini targets along with BMI points)

Just another 1.4 kg (3.1lbs) until I get back to an overweight BMI and am not technically obese.

I did weigh 126.7kg 2 years ago, but it was probably higher as the scales I used were reading low (the new ones are quite accurate). Weight loss was due to cutting down on junk and snacks and alcohol and also due to walking my dog who we got 2 years ago.

I tried keto for several weeks in Summer last year and the main benefit is that it seriously reduced my sweet tooth.

My 2019 goal is 95kg.

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