Monday, March 25, 2019

I went shopping

This past weekend, I decided I was finally okay with starting to replace items in my wardrobe since I am close to my goal weight. It was something I had been planning for several weeks and also dreading for many reasons, money, potential fitting room meltdowns, general laziness etc.

I started with my workout leggings. They are the one piece of my wardrobe that are way too big for me now, extremely worn, and just not comfortable to wear. They were purchased on a whim about 3 years ago at the very beginning of my journey. Like most people, I thought the key to weight loss was exercise. So not only was I trying to replace them but I was also trying to buy something of quality. I did a lot of research and watched tons of reviews on different brands until I had a list of places I wanted to go try some on at. To be honest, I took so much time doing research to put off going to the store and having to try stuff on. I like most of us here, am still not mentally adjusted to my new dimensions so things like trying on clothes, is still a challenge for me.

Friday came around and I found myself at the mall with my mental list of places to check out. That familiar panic started to set in as I thumbed through the racks of leggings that I was interested in. My kneejerk reaction was to grab an Extra Large in each one that I was interested in, so that's what I did, mentally preparing myself that they wouldn't fit or just wouldn't look good. I lined up for a fitting room and tried on the first pair, they didn't fit, but not for the reason that I had thought. They were too big. It had to be a mistake, a fluke, vanity sizing, but there was no way it wasn't my size. I tried the next and the one after that until I got the end. All too big. I peeked out of the fitting room and asked the attendant for a smaller size. It was the first time that had ever happened to me, and let me tell you, it felt damn good. All of hard work, all of the moments where I felt I couldn't do it, all of the moments where I cried because I wished I was "naturally skinny", all of the moments I spent hating that I had to try hard to lose weight, just melted away. My journey was looking me right in the face as I slipped on that size Medium and it was a perfect fit.

I was ready to be disappointed this weekend, but now I'm more motivated than ever to pull myself to the finish line. It's true when they say that nothing tastes as good as fit feels. I ended up with 3 pairs and I can't wait to break them in!

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[Q&A] Running with a backpack?

Basically, I have learned about myself that if exercise doesn't fit seamlessly into my regular routine, I just won't do it. Thankfully my weight loss has been going fine without it, but I'm interested in experimenting with it just as a mood booster. I currently take a bus from my office to the train, then take the train home, but I'm looking to start running from my office to the train a few times a week as the weather improves. This means that, at minimum, I will have to carry my work clothes and shoes along with my makeup on my run. I hate running with a backpack. Any runners out there who have tips for a situation like this or specific backpack recommendations? I've been needing a new one anyway!

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I don't handle setbacks well

Weight loss is easy if you have a nearby gym, endless supply of healthy food, and unlimited time. But life does not work that way. Things get in the way. Sad things like a recent fall out, stress, or a family passing, and happy things like a birthday, wedding, or just random celebration.

I have been doing well up until now. A month ago I had a major inconvinence that set me back a week. A month later, and I am still struggling to get back into the groove. So far I have been relapsing badly by poorly eating and missing my exercises. Today, I did exercised but overate. Yesterday, I ate within my caloric limit but did not exercise. For every bad day there is a good day and vice versa and I feel like I am no longer going anywhere. Actually, probably backwards. I am struggling to go back to my normal pace and it freaks me out that only one week of nearly 2 years can throw me off. It makes me wonder if I will EVER be able to reach my goal weight, let alone sustain it. What if I encounter life changing things like marriage? A lawsuit? Pregnancy? Will I really be able to handle it and keep my weight in check?

I hate how out of control I am. I keep trying to jump back into it but now it seems like for every one step forward, I am going 2 steps back. How do you all get back on the horse after falling off? Anyone can relate? I appreciate any help.

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Gastritis

So over the last 12months I've lost 110lbs. Never felt better and generally everything has gone well, CICO all the way of course.

The last 3 weeks I've had terrible stomach pains, nausea, and general fatigue and unwell feelings. This may have nothing to do with my weight loss but I wondered if anyone else has had this experience? Went to the docs today and was given Omeprazole to treat gastritis, basically stomach acid is irritating my stomach/duodenum. I just don't know why this has happened and someone suggested that leaving my stomach basically empty for the last 12 months might have let the acid sit too long?

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Buy bigger clothes!

I know it sounds counterintuitive but if you've gained some weight try buying bigger clothes. I gained about 20 lbs but could still squeeze into my old wardrobe. I refused to buy bigger clothes in the beginning because I was determined to lose the weight. Why buy bigger clothes when I would soon be able to properly fit into my smaller clothes again?

Squeezing into clothes that were too small for me was really demoralizing though. Everything was squished, spilling out, and just really uncomfortable. It just made me feel huge and frumpy. These negative feelings really hindered my weight loss and I would have mini pity parties for myself everytime I got dressed.

I finally bought a few key items that really fit me and it changed my mindset! I feel great when I get dressed now! I no longer feel frumpy and that has motivated me to take care of my body even more. I realized its about loving the body I'm currently in, even if it's still a work in progress. Pity parties are terrible for your mindset! Attack weight loss with acceptance and patience for yourself. In the meantime, theres nothing wrong with feeling fabulous while carrying some extra chub. Feel good about yourself and it will motivate you to continue caring for yourself. That's what is working for me right now anyways :)

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SV: 50 Pounds down in a year! Slow and steady helped me win my race.

Hi all!

First of all, you're all wonderful. No matter where you are in your journey, you're on it, and that's all that matters! This morning I woke up, and saw that mythical number on the scale that I've been chasing for a year now. My university weight. I'm down 50 pounds, and it's taken me about a year. I wasn't elated or celebrating, it just felt like another morning. The changes I've made in my life have been so small, and simple that I've been living my goal weight happiness for the past few months even though the scale wasn't quite there yet! I've been extremely energetic, so much more confident, feeling really GREAT! The number on the scale now seems a bit moot, and I wanted to share.

Last March I decided to start by making some small changes, I started bringing my own lunch to work and not indulging in fast food. I lost 10 pounds immediately and realized how badly I had been eating. I started to count calories, and found it increasingly difficult to stay to 1500 cals a day, so I decided to take the summer off and maintain my then 15 pound weight loss. I focused on making better decisions, salad instead of fries, walk more places when I can, say YES! to physical and fun things, and in September when I picked back up where I had left off I had lost ~5 more pounds. That blew my mind since it has felt natural, easy, didn't disrupt my life, and I threw myself back into it. I've lost the last 30 from September to now, with lazy CICO about ~1250 cals a day, and a maintenance day every week to "indulge" without the guilt. I started playing hockey, and recently started gym work outs, and work physical fun things into my week, so most days I'm active - even if it's just at home yoga.

I've made so many small changes over the past year that have added up so quickly that I barely noticed. I can't believe I actually did it this time! My life is completely different.

If you have 10-100 pounds to lose, just know that there is no one way to do things. Slow, fast, work outs, no work outs, 1200 cals a day or just a small deficit, find what works for you and your life. The key for me has been sustainability. A diet doesn't have to be oppressive and restrictive.

I'm adjusting my goals now, and want to lose 10 more pounds before I started on my fitness goals, and I'll go slow and steady there too. Can't wait to see where I am in 6 more months.

You won't change things over night, but know that one day you'll wake up, your goal weight will be on the scale, but you'll realize you already accomplished what you set out to do!

YOU CAN DO IT!!!!

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Running with LoseIt - 3/25/2019 - Running Myths

This is a weekly post for the runners and future runners of LoseIt. All levels of runners are welcome -- from someone who just ran their first mile/km, to someone who has been running for years. Just started C25K? Preparing for a half-marathon? Running for health/exercise only? Come on in and share!

This post is largely for checking in on your progress, posting a race report, asking questions, complaints about running/not running, and weight loss while running.

In addition, each week I ramble on about some topic to get through the automod filter. This week...

Running Myths/Misinformation

There's a lot of common runlogic that is just wrong out there. We see this with weight loss, there's a lot of bad advice, misinformation, ego/elitism and just outright lies out there.

Same goes for running.

Running is fast, jogging and possibly walking is slow

A lot of folks think there is some speed at which you are running vs. jogging. Heck, some people think below a certain speed, say 12 min/mile, 7 min/km you are just walking fast. Or anything slower than 10 min/km is jogging, not running.

All bullshit.

There is no speed at which you go from walking to running, or jogging ends and running begins. Running is a type of human motion. Like walking, skipping, etc. You are running when you are in a running gait/form.

Jogging is not running

Jogging is easy running, presumably one that isn't taxing cardio-wise. There's lots of misinformed scales of speed out there that put this speed as running and that speed as jogging. Like they are different and like jogging is easy.

But it is all, every step, every minute, running. And, it isn't fucking easy.

Easier, sure. Easy -- no way.

Personally I call jogging my easiest possible pace in a running gait/form. But given my average workout is 60 minutes, this isn't a walk in the park. A 60 minute slow and easy run 2+ times a week keeps my cardio up for a 10K.

There is no reason to run if you aren't fast/competitive

This was certainly a rationalization I used to never run for the first 47 years of my life. But it's BS. It's like saying you shouldn't do any other athletic pursuit unless you are capable getting to a podium spot somewhere.

There's benefits to running that have nothing to do with being fast/ competitive. Running at any speed, for any distance is rewarding on many levels. Most people don't run ever after leaving school. This is crabs in a bucket thinking.

Running requires expensive gear

Running is best in comfortable shoes and clothes. But I started running in my regular sneakers/trainers, sweats, and a t-shirt.

I still dress very cheaply for running. I own zero shirts over US$20, vast majority are $8-10. Shorts are mostly cheap, too - also $8-10 average. I own one expensive pair of Nike running shorts -$45. They are very are great, but very unnecessary.

You need expensive sneakers/trainers to start running

Good running shoes are a nice to have for the beginning runner -- not a must. But most folks can start running in any comfortable sneakers/trainers.

Once you get a regular running habit going, then absolutely good running shoes are necessary. I pay on average US$100 for mine. Some are bought in a real running store, and I pay $120-150. But usually that model drops out of stores and gets replaced. But I stick with it as long as I can. The same shoe in 6-12 months is often only available online, and is cheaper, $70-80.

You should run with a 180 step per minute or higher cadence

This is very common advice. Step faster because it is better for your form and makes you faster.

Not necessary. It's a nice to have, not a must have. If you can run without discomfort at 150-170 spm -- you are fine.

Personally my cadence is around 160 spm naturally. A very common cadence. Should I step faster? I do actually. When I run faster, my cadence works up to 170+ spm. But I just don't go that fast. I am slow AF.

Your form needs to be forefoot striking

There lots of form advice you can get and possibly act upon. Likely you can improve your form. You can change your foot strike position. You could do a lot of things.

But you can happily run the rest of your life without any conscious form changes. If your foot hits the ground directly beneath you, if you have no discomfort running 30 minutes with your current form, you are fine. You will actually develop better form and more fluid motion with more running.

Your expensive thick cushioned shoes are the cause of all your pain, run minimal or barefoot

This is one of those half-good types of advice. The problem is, it's full of caveats and half-bad stuff.

If you are an experienced runner, and you find you just keep getting pain/injuries... then go for it. Try a transition to minimal shoes or running barefoot. I've run a 10K besides a barefoot runner. People do it. Not many, but some do.

Here's the likely truth -- most of your injuries and pain are not caused by your shoes but are the result of three things -- training too fast/too much, muscle imbalances/weakness, and being too sedentary when not running.

Weekly check-in

How did you week go? Finish a week of C25K? Training for a race? Hit a new distance PR? Run for the first time? Share with us!

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