Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Some gentle encouragement for my wonderful losers.

This morning I was late to work because I couldn’t put together a shirt/pants combination that fit. I’m approaching laundry day so my favorite sweaters weren’t an option. I threw on a couple shirts that I haven’t worn in a while only for them to be too snug in the arms/chest. I tossed them in a discard pile and settled on an old sweater. Totally defeated.

A little context - August of 2016 I made a decision that changed my life. I started seeing a nutritionist, bariatric physician, and therapist to get my weight under control. I dropped from 286 to 190, and I replaced my wardrobe with clothes that actually fit. Last fall I started grad school, stopped seeing practitioners (because my health insurance/schedule no longer allows it), and shot back up to 214.

Anyway, I shouldn’t have felt defeated because I’ve lost 8 pounds since the start of the new year. Those are the fun pounds too because they come off quickly as your body adjusts to the new way of eating. But my mental stability was no match for a swift kick in the ass from Life.

This is where the encouragement comes in. At times, losing weight seems so simple - eat less calories than you exert, make sure they are nutrient dense if you want to feel full, and exercise if you want to boost your energy or improve cardiovascular health. But we all know it’s not simple. What we are doing is actually really fucking hard. Sometimes you do everything right and you don’t lose weight, and sometimes you do everything wrong and you still lose weight. It’s Life’s tricky little difficulty level - hard setting. If it were easy everyone would do it.

And yet, many of you do. Hell, I have. And that’s straight up extraordinary. You persevere despite the shirt not fitting, or your coworker pressuring you to eat a donut, or every fast food restaurant you pass on the way home from work that’s seductively whispering come hither. It’s a gluttonous siren song. Because the truth is we live in a world that wants to capitalize on our fatness. We are surrounded by messages begging us to buy shitty food so that gyms and weight loss drug companies can beg us to buy memberships and prescriptions. Actually losing weight is swimming upstream, and y’all are the superheroes (with or without capes) that manage to do it.

For most people, the journey doesn’t have a true stopping point. But the hardest part (for me) is always the beginning. So congratulations on your accomplishments and know how fucking awesome you are.

So long, losers ❤️💪🏼

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Ddl010

Advice for breaking a 3-4 month-long plateau??

Quick backstory - I am turning 30 in April, and decided last year that it was time to get serious once again about my health. Having done this several times with moderate success, I am not oblivious to the things needed for weight loss. I changed my diet, stuck to a strict eating window and decided to try my hand at Brazilian Jiu Jitsu with some Muay Tai sprinkled in. From last April until mid October, I was able to lose 60 pounds bringing me down to 305ish area. It was around that time that my body stopped cooperating. From then on, I have been stuck on a plateau of 298-305.

Here is my main issue, so on some level I am probably answering my own question. During the work week, I have no issue sticking to my eating window and making good food choices. I get plenty of sleep and drink almost a gallon of water every day. The weekend however, is a free-for-all. Sometimes I eat everything that crosses my path, and sometimes I am pretty responsible. Regardless, this respite from work and training always seems to result in anywhere from 8-14 lbs when I hit the scale on Monday. This would discourage most people, but I know my body and all it takes is one striking and one BJJ class and I am usually back to whatever I was on Friday. I will then train at least one more time before the end of the week and sometimes manage to move the scale a little.

I was hoping to get some advice from other big guys about breaking through your weight loss plateaus. I have gotten a lot of good information from people I know (these people are generally in shape already) or people online (these people I do not have direct access to). Is this issue only because of my weekend habits, or is there more I should be doing as far as my diet and activity choices overall? Perhaps this is mental? Getting under 300lbs was my initial goal and once I achieved it, my progress has slowed a lot.

I hope this wasn't too long, I can expand on any details if needed.

Thank you!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Fz0BpE

Weight Loss & Your Wardrobe - What to do about clothes?

Hi all,

I'm at a point in my weight loss journey where none of my clothes fit me!

Exciting but also extremely frustrating. I feel dowdy and awful since my clothes are too big and hanging off me, and it's adding to my inability to see my progress. I recently too, washed a chap stick and it RUINED the clothes that were still kind of fitting me! AH!

I still have about 25 pounds or so to go until my GW and don't want to invest in a whole new wardrobe until I'm comfortable with where I'm at.

How do/did you guys deal with clothes?

Did you buy only a few new things?

Did you donate all of your old clothes? Did you hang onto a few things?

I'm not sure where to go from here, but it's getting harder and harder every day to look professional, feel good in my clothes, or be comfortable!

Thank you!

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

Step out of your comfort zone!

I think weight loss is like a lot of things in life, you never really get anywhere until you try something different.

Us as humans have come to expect a certain comfort level in life. We take hot showers, we adjust the indoor temperature of our buildings so it's comfortable, we eat whenever we get the slightest bit hungry, every advancement we've made has been to make life easier and more comfortable for us. So when it comes to making changes to our daily routine we resist because it makes us uncomfortable, a feeling that we are not used to.

This generally leads to making up a lot of excuses. I don't want to exercise because I don't know what to do, people might judge me, it's hard work and I'm used to being comfortable and lazy. I had never tried keto before because I told myself I like bread too much and could never do it. I told myself CICO was too much work to track everything I eat and most things would be too hard to figure out. In my mind I wanted to make changes, but the other part of my mind was sabotaging it before I could even start. I was so used to eating good food I forgot how to just eat food as fuel, it doesn't always need to taste amazing. Or is can taste amazing and be healthy, even better.

We do this with all aspects of our life, we are creatures of habit because the things we do as a habit feel comfortable.

Then I started to try to put things in a different perspective. There are a lot of people in this world who are hungry and can only eat what's available to them. I didn't think I could give up bread, but what if something happened where it wasn't available to me? Like the zombie apocalypse, I became allergic, my wife and I lost our jobs and bread was an extravagance we couldn't afford, etc. Then could I survive without bread? You're damn right I could! If my survival depended on it I'm pretty sure I could adapt. And then I realized that I was going down a long road of poor health and my survival did depend on it. Not necessarily giving up bread, but giving up some of the things that I thought were comforting and it was time to try something different.

So lately I've been making it a goal of mine to try new things and step out of my comfort zone at least once a week. I've actually started keto, tried cooking some new foods, tried yoga, taken a cold shower (okay, maybe luke warm), I try a different exercise at the gym every day, woken up early to exercise, etc. Basically I'm just trying to challenge myself and come out of my comfort zone more so making changes will not be as difficult. Most of the time it's not even that uncomfortable at all, it's actually exhilarating and it makes me feel more alive! I've even learned a few things.

So, people of loseit, I challenge you to step out of your comfort zone and try something different today. It could be something very small, or try to recognize something you might want to do that you've been making excuses for. What will you do?

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Day 1: Enough is enough!

Time to take responsibility for this.

So, a bit about me: I am a 27 year old woman. For most of my life I was very skinny, to the point where I didn’t grow boobs until I was past 20, and got my period very late and never had a consistent cycle. Still, I didn’t have an unhealthy lifestyle or an unhealthy relationship with my body, I ate what I wanted and took the weight for granted. I had a very active lifestyle.

When I turned 19 I moved out and entered the adult life, got in my first relationship, started cooking for myself and buying whatever I wanted when I wanted it. I stopped my healthy lifestyle because I no longer needed to do it (I used to bike 15-20km (9-12miles) km almost every day, but it was because my bike was my means of transportation, and I was always late so I had to bike really fast).

I started gaining weight. In the beginning I didn’t mind, it meant boobs and hips – which I appreciated. Then things got out of hand. Over the course of maybe 3-4 years I went from 58 kg (127 lbs) to 75 kg (165 lbs). Then I was stable for a while, but over the last two years I went from that to 88 kg (194 lbs). That was my all-time heaviest. During the summer I was ashamed when I went to pick out bathing suits and bikinis, I didn’t feel good in any of them. I had tried to count calories, to exercise, but nothing helped (of course, in retrospect I know I was cheating and in denial about how ‘healthy’ I actually was). I realized that a big part of my personality growing up, was that I was a skinny girl. Suddenly that was no longer true, and I struggled immensely with my self-image.

Fast forward to this fall, where I realized I’d had enough. I became stricter with my food consumption, and over the course of two months I lost 8 kg (17 lbs). I’ve kept them off, but I’ve been feeling so good about my weight loss that I stopped making an effort. Now I’m back to start again, and get my body to where I want it to be – a middle ground between my skinny ass teen-self, and my fat 2018-self. This time I want to keep myself accountable by joining a network of some kind, so I figured r/loseit could be a good place to start.

Edit: To add lbs/miles

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

A pound means nothing to me

I hope someone can help me shake this awful perspective I seem to have.

I understand that logically and scientifically it is healthy to lose 1-2 pounds a week. I accept this, and yet, I also know water weight can account for a lot of weight too. Therefore, I find myself in this terrible spiral that one pound means nothing to me. I always think it could be water weight, therefore, the process of weight loss seems to be taking so much longer because when the scale goes down, I always think there's a high probability its just water weight. I never truly count a loss unless I've gone down 5 pounds, and that takes quite a long time that I'm discouraged by then.

Does anyone else struggle like this? Or is willing to provide perspective?

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Ryjb7O

Ready, Set, Sniff! 7 Scents That Could Help with Weight Loss

You don’t have to live next door to a bakery to know that your sense of smell has a powerful influence on your appetite. Even when you’re not hungry, just a whiff of good food cooking can stimulate cravings and entice you to eat.

You might not know, however, that certain pleasant scents can have the opposite effect on your appetite. Recent research indicates that aromas such as peppermint, citrus and vanilla may help control your appetite and alleviate cravings, making them good scents for weight loss. And although further research is certainly warranted in this area, there’s certainly no harm in adding these scents to your life. What’s the worst thing that could happen? You have awesome scents wafting through your home?

Here are our seven favorite scents for weight loss:

1. PEPPERMINT

The science: Study participants were asked to sniff peppermint oil every two hours for five days, according to a report published in the medical journal Appetite. For the next five days, they sniffed a placebo. The subjects consumed 1,800 fewer calories during the time when they were exposed to the scent of peppermint than when they were exposed to the placebo.

How to use it: You can put peppermint oil—available in many grocery and drug stores—in an aromatherapy diffuser or burn a candle made with real essential oils. Even easier, brew yourself a cup of mint tea when you feel hungry between meals. You can just hold it in your hands and inhale, but don’t hesitate to sip it—the tea has zero calories and it even helps soothe your digestive system.

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2. OLIVE OIL

The science: At the German Research Center for Food Chemistry, study participants ate yogurt that had added olive oil, butter, lard or canola oil as a supplement to their normal diet. The subjects who had the olive oil-infused yogurt reported the strongest feelings of fullness. Although scientists weren’t surprised, considering that olive oil has fatty acids that create the sense of satisfied appetite, they were surprised that those eating the canola oil (which has the same fatty acids) reported feeling less full. Even more shocking, though? In a follow-up study, the scientists compared the appetites of subjects eating yogurt enhanced with just the smell of olive oil to those eating plain yogurt. Even without the oil’s fats, those eating the aroma-enhanced yogurt consumed fewer calories throughout the day than the control group, and had more serotonin—a chemical associated with satiety—in their blood.

How to use it: Olive oil (actually, all cooking oils) is categorized as an Extra on the Nutrisystem program, because while oils are full of healthy fats, they are also high in calories, so you should be careful to have no more than the recommended serving of one to three teaspoons in your daily diet. Give your salad a spritz or two of olive oil from a spray bottle—that’s enough to give you a healthy whiff and bring out the flavor in the vegetables.

5 Zero-Calorie Ways to Add Flavor to Your Food

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3. STRAWBERRY

The science: When 27 subjects were exposed to the scent of strawberries before drinking sweetened milk, they reported feeling more satisfied after the drink than when they weren’t presented with the fruit’s aroma, according to a study published in the Journal of Nutrition. The strawberry scent also diminished the study participants desire for sweets.

How to use it: When you feel a strong craving for sweets, slice up a few strawberries and eat them. If the fruit isn’t in season, add thawed frozen berries to a smoothie or hot cereal. Strawberry isn’t just one of the great scents for weight loss, it’s also one of our favorite fruit options!

How to Get the Most Out of Your Nutrisystem Weight Loss Program

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4. GRAPEFRUIT

The science: The scent of limonene, a component of grapefruit oil, activated fat-burning in laboratory animals, says a study published in the journal Neuroscience Letters. The aroma works, the researchers theorize, by stimulating the sympathetic nerve system, which tells your body to burn fat. They determined that 15 minutes of exposure to the oil three times a week reduced the subjects’ food intake and body weight.

How to use it: You can eat whole grapefruit, a SmartCarb that is high in fiber and other nutrients. Most of the limonene, however, is in the rind. Squeeze a piece of skin gently to infuse the air or a glass of water with the colorless oil. You can also buy limonene or simple citrus oil to use in an aromatherapy diffuser.

5 Signs You’re Prone to Emotional Eating

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5. VANILLA

The science: In a study at St. George’s Hospital in London, England, 200 overweight people wore skin patches with one of a few different aromas on the back of their hands for two weeks. Those wearing patches with vanilla consumed fewer sugary foods and beverages than the people with patches containing other scents. The subjects in the vanilla-patch group also lost an average of 4.5 pounds during the study period.

How to use it: Many perfumes and other fragrance products contain vanilla, so you can dab a bit on and sniff it throughout the day. Vanilla extract is a low-calorie, fat-free flavoring that you can add to hot cereal, smoothies and other foods. It’s versatility makes vanilla one of our absolute favorite scents for weight loss.

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6. JASMINE

The science: A group of 67 women in a study reported in the journal Appetite were shown colorful photographs of chocolate desserts. They were then asked to breathe in one of three odors—green apple, jasmine or water. The group sniffing jasmine reported significantly lower chocolate cravings than the people in the other two groups.

How to use it: Jasmine is a beautiful plant with fragrant white flowers. You can grow it inside your home or workplace and take a whiff whenever you’re craving chocolate. Or, buy a jasmine soap or candle. You can also buy jasmine essential oil at drugstores or health food shops and use it in an aromatherapy diffuser. There are also countless jasmine tea varieties out there. Brew a bit pot and you won’t just enjoy your whole home becoming filled with one our favorite scents for weight loss… you’ll get a tasty zero-calorie drink out of it, too!

7 Habits That Are Messing with Your Hunger Hormones

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7. LAVENDER

The science: Lavender has long been used as a natural remedy for stress, which is a common cause of eating when you’re not hungry. In a study published in the journal Archives of Oral Biology, researchers documented that the scent of the herb reduced stress among students solving complex arithmetic problems. Those that were exposed to airborne organic essential oil of lavender had lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol in their saliva than the control group.

How to use it: Add a few drops of lavender oil to your bath to soothe your nerves and ward off cravings. You can also find lavender-scented soaps and skin creams that envelop you in its lightly floral fragrance all day. This is one of our favorite scents for weight loss since it’s versatile and comes in many forms!

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