Wednesday, February 13, 2019

My 2018 to now journey! (I weigh less than I have since 2016!)

I was 230lbs, 5'7" January 2018. I was in a bad relationship with a baker, and ate my feelings (and his sugary goods).

I was unhappy with myself, and had previously done short stints of dieting, but didn't feel in control of myself. I'd drop up to 20 pounds, but always creep back to 230.

Between the cheating (January), breakup (February), and eventual move out of my ex (May) the pounds were just shedding off. Instead of eating my feelings, I associated eating good food with my shitty ex so I had less of an attachment. I threw myself into work, and a new, healthier relationship. I started OMAD, having large lunches at work. I dropped from wearing large scrubs, to mediums.

In July, I had surgery. I had dropped to 180lb! I was grateful, while still overweight I was at a safer weight to go on the table. By the way, fastest weight loss ever! Just get parts of your body loped off. I also fit in the small scrub tops.

After surgery I relaxed my diet during recovery, since I wanted to let my body heal. Recovery turned into maintenance for the holidays, but I'm proud to say that I stayed hovered in the 175-180 range.

I started college this January. OMAD worked when I was working 12 hour shifts but now I need to eat before class to focus.

Instead, I am starting to cut down on meat and be vegetarian. It keeps me from eating the same burger every day.

I have a routine of oatmeal with a ridiculous amount of blueberries before class, soup of the day for lunch, and for dinner I try to use the salad bar in the evening before I go for the pasta/veggie burger options. I don't go for the pastries much anymore, eating them all the time reminds me of my ex.

I haven't been tracking for the past month, weight or food intake. For shits and giggles I pulled out my scale, and I'm 173.1lb! It's my lowest measured weight since 2015, I'm very proud.

I'm mostly happy with my weight now. I'm tired of buying new clothes. My next goal is to get fit. See y'all in bodyweight fitness subs next!

Thanks for reading, it makes me proud to see how far I've come. From a controlling relationship, a job that worked me too hard for minimum wage, and eating my feelings, to feeling attractive, higher education, and food discipline. I lost 50lb in 8 months, and have maintained for almost half a year.

Only problem: I don't know how to treat myself if not sugar foods! Non food reward recommendations please!

Tldr: I'm happier and healthier, dropped 280lbs of an ex and 50lbs of myself. OMAD and routines have been my saving graces.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2E8B8S4

Sobriety for weight loss, but seeing social effects too

Hi all!! New to the sub and loving it. This week I decided I’m going to do one month sober to see how I feel (I’m predicting I’ll feel great, health-wise) and if it helps end my weight loss plateau.

I’ve wondered in the past if my alcohol consumption has been problematic but in the sense of “huh, that wasn’t a great choice I made while drinking and should probably evaluate this.” So I think it’s a good idea to give my liver a break, enjoy sober fun, and hopefully lose a few pounds this month.

I’m now noticing how incredibly uncomfortable this is to explain to people. I’m 24 and friends with a lot of young people who center social activities around happy hours, birthdays at bars, pregames, tailgates.... etc. So as I’m making plans for the weekend, I’m creating contingency plans for explaining (or almost lying ???) to people why I’m not drinking. My close friends support me unconditionally in my weight loss and sobriety, but acquaintances get uncomfortable and think that I’m judging their drinking (I’m not - live ur life).

Any other people having difficulty with this? Tips for ways to defer awkwardness? I’m planning on taking a pack of seltzer (la croix obv) and drinking that so I have something in my hand and hope that works?!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2N217NV

BMI debunked?

Hi all, so I've approached weight loss in part by monitoring my BMI. Recently however, a friend of mine told me that it has been "debunked." When searching about that on Google I found this link from NPR: Top 10 Reasons Why The BMI Is Bogus. In particular, one thing it said that piqued my interest was this:

There is no physiological reason to square a person's height (Quetelet had to square the height to get a formula that matched the overall data. If you can't fix the data, rig the formula!). Moreover, it ignores waist size, which is a clear indicator of obesity level.

Now, I'd hope that most, if not all, of us are aware that the BMI is not the end-all authority on fitness or overall body health (points the article makes as well). But about a year ago I was at a healthy BMI. Since then I gained 30 pounds and have lost 10 of that on my journey back.

My waist size at a healthy BMI was obviously much smaller than my current weight at 20 pounds heavier. I can't fit into the clothes I wore a year ago in a comfortable manner. I've personally found the BMI to be a pretty good guideline to what is a healthy weight at a certain height.

And on that note... height clearly has an impact on what your healthy BMI is likely to be. I know that at my current weight that someone much taller than me is likely not as fat and closer to a healthy weight. How does that not make sense? Unless I'm misunderstanding something.

I don't know, maybe I'm biased, but I've never felt like the BMI was ridiculous and always approached it with the mindset that it was a simple guideline and not an authority on overall health.

What do you guys think? Has it been debunked?

Edit: While I appreciate the instant downvote, that doesn't really tell me anything...

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2N38QuY

I want you to ask yourself if it’s worth it.

Now that we’re in February a lot of people that had New Years resolutions are quitting and I’m going to try and give a little push here to stop and make you question if that food is worth it.

I am 20 years old, I’m 5’4” and at my highest weight I was 188 pounds. Today I stepped on the scale and weighed 164 lbs. I’ve lost 24 pounds since June and while that weight loss was and is slow because I fell off the wagon many, many times I’m still proud of it and I am trying so much harder than I ever have. I don’t see much of a difference but I feel it and it feels great.

The point of this post is to motivate me and you to keep pushing forward so that we can both live the life we deserve.

Saying no to food is hard.

Exercising is hard.

Counting calories is hard.

Saying no to temptations is hard.

Changing your life is hard.

All these things and many more that come with dieting and saying no and eating healthy are hard, very hard.

But you know what’s harder? Dreading and avoiding going to the beach in the summer with my friends because of my body is harder.

Walking to class painfully aware of how each fat roll is rubbing and sweating and feeling gross from a ten minute walk is harder.

Squeezing into my medium sized shirts that fit all throughout high school and realizing these shirts are getting tight and no matter how hard I suck in my stomach still sticks out is harder.

Not being able to wear cute summer shorts because my thighs rub together so much that my skin blisters and burns is harder.

Avoiding intimacy with my boyfriend who has loved me unconditionally for over 2 years because I hate my body is harder.

Watching the seams on the inside of my cute new leggings break and tear after a couple months of wearing them is harder. I know that some women and men just have bigger thighs and this happens at any weight, but for me it is preventable.

Not having a nice pair of jeans because they all look spray painted on and give me a giant muffin top is harder.

Crying in the fitting room because everything I try on looks awful is harder.

Next time you feel like giving up I want you to think about how hard dieting is but how much harder it is to hate your body and dread things because of your weight. Is that food really worth so much self hate and sadness? I’m finally starting to realize that it’s not.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2GD3g1k

I let life knock me down but i'm ready to stand back up.

On March 2017 I began my weight loss journey, the following 2 years I ended up losing 150 pounds (I Started at 350 and got down to 186) I made many posts on r/loseit asking for advice and even posting about my victories and how close I was to my goal weight. Then in August 2018 my now ex husband came out as gay...my emotions ran wild I became depressed and suicidal and even attempted to take my own life. I got help and am controlling my depression even though I am not 100 percent I feel alot better. Unfortunately for the past 6 months I have binged almost every day eating above 6k calories and I have gained 80 pounds back. I felt terrible about myself and I couldn't even look at myself in the mirror. I have noticed my breathing is more labored I can't walk without getting winded and everyday normal things are harder to do again, I currently dont fit in any of my clothes and had to buy some bigger clothing items. Im happy to say that Monday I started back again, albeit I am struggling but I haven't messed up yet and im proud of that. I have tried to "start again" for the past few months and always failed but this time I won't fail. I want to be 150 pounds and feel good about myself again. I am eating 1200 calories and following CICO and sticking to healthier options with lots of protein to stop my hunger from getting out of control. Thank you R/loseit for always being a wonderful place of encouragement :)

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2SNghM7

Just about 10 lbs down(CICO) since the New Year, but I have some questions.

I’m 26F, 5’3” currently 143 lbs

I’ve done CICO in the past, to lose weight when I wasn’t working out consistently and did great at 1200 calories a day. I got down to my goal weight of 120 lbs.

Then I had some medical issues that lead to steroids and weight gain pushing me back up to 150-160 lbs. I’m healthy again and motivated to lose the weight.

Now I’m doing CICO again but I also exercise regularly(1 hr-1.5 hrs, half of which is strength training the other half is variable between total body, cardio and Pilates).

Also being a full time student, I’m slightly more sedentary, at my computer than I was when I wasn’t exercising and doing CICO before. I’m basing this on my average step counts collected by Fitbit, last time around they were 8k average now it’s about 6k.

When I entered in my stats I got a budget of 1237 for my goals and I’m feeling great but with my daily net calories being below 1000 on a regular basis I’m wondering if this is actually an okay long term method.

I’m losing between a pound and a pound and a half per week. Which seems to be in the “safe” weight loss zone so I’m not sure if I should be eating more or not.

Thoughts?

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

IS it true you lose weight quicker at the beginning?

I'm about to start my proper weight loss attempt, to trim down from 202lb to about 175 as a first goal. I know when my mother did this, she initially was losing about 5-6lb a week, not by doing anything drastic, but continuing on a normal calorie deficit. Just want to be sure so I can be more prepared whenever of If I ever see quick drops that then slow down, so I don't panic! I'm currently eating less than 1,300 calories and doing regular exercise, that includes 10,000 steps a day and a weight training routine. I'm ideally looking to lose about 2-3lb per week. I just want to know what toe expect at the beginning of this journey, how to keep patience, motivation etc. and just how quickly/slowly I am going to see begin to fall off of me.

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