Sunday, March 31, 2019

Lost. F28 5'2 about 240pounds

Ive always been chunky, preteen is the only time i dont remember being fat. And im scared of being thin cause ive never been it when it mattered.

I have lots of depression and anxiety and gone through therapy (for other things) but weight loss has always come up for helping with both depression anxiety and im all for it when im in the office and days later im telling myself to go outside and exercise (walking/running my dog maninly) i do just one lap around my Apartment complex and call it good. It take 12 -15 minutes to walk the whole complex (she likes to sniff and do her business on every bush/rock)

When my dog was younger i would walk for hours and loved it, just walking around my neighborhood. But life change for the better but my state of mind change too and i was able to go to therapy and was told that im schizoaffective bipolar type and got on meds to help with that. Life was numbed and i lost all joy in my hobbies that was for two years and towards the end of the two years i got a new gp doctor and shes great! And i asked for help with weight loss and she got me on somekind of meds that would help with appetite suppressing and it was great i didnt want to eat and lost 13 pounds in a month from not eating as much. but it was only a short term med as the effect would lessen plus it was like one chemical combination away from meth. So i stopped that apperite suppressant and gained all my weight back.

Im at a point in life that im sad about my weight and i cant get out of my depression enough to go and walk, like its looping and im stuck. Im getting my indoor hobbies back and thats really good but if i get back on psych meds and anti depressants i might lose the hobbies again and just eat more cause its the only thing that i feel like doing.

I dont know what to do. I cant commit to diet and exercise cause of the depression.

Im sorry for rambling. Im sorry if this isnt the place for this post.

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Just a reminder: there will always be an excuse

I mentioned in conversation to someone today that I've lost almost 20 lbs (hit down 18 lbs a couple days ago) and am still losing (I have 130 lbs to go lol). She was impressed and asked if I could share how I'm doing it. I explained CICO, that I was weighing and measuring the majority of my food, and that meal prep was helping me immensely. I explained that I was focusing on reaching my weight goal before I added in exercise so it didn't feel overwhelming. I told her about the app I use to track calories and several subreddits, including this one, that have helped encourage me to stay on track.

She said that all sounded great, but it was harder for her because she didn't have a husband, so she didn't have as much time. And she started talking about how she'll go from one job to the next and have to stop to pick up food in between jobs, or she'll prep food but forget it, etc.

I lost weight while in grad school. I was on campus from the morning until late evening. My then fiancé was hundreds of miles away and I was constantly working, in class, or studying my brains out. I had time for NOTHING. But every day (or night before if I was really on it), I packed enough food for sometimes all three meals and more snacks than I would need. And days that didn't happen (because yeah, it happens, we've all been there), I made choices that fit my goals. It wasn't easy. But I did it. That's essentially what I told her. I've been there. I've been single and crazy busy. But I did it.

Here's what I didn't tell her that I wish I had: being married changes nothing. It often makes staying on track harder. Between my two jobs and volunteer positions, I work more than full time. And many of my hours are worked before the sun comes up. And, my husband and I share a car, so drive him to and from work and often spend over an hour in a Wendy's parking lot waiting for him to tell me he's off work (don't even go here please lol). I'm constantly driving, constantly surrounded by temptation and opportunities to go off track.

I'm constantly exhausted. When your main job starts at 3 am, you're never not tired. But I still make time to prep and freeze enough food to last me for a couple weeks of dinners (and the instant pot makes it super easy). My husband is hardly home and when he is, he just wants snacks. I still make it work. Just because he's eating something or a certain amount of something, doesn't mean I have to match it.

That job, that situation, that relationship status, or whatever that thing is you wish you had doesn't always make things easier or better. Marriage is work. A job is still work, even if it's your dream job. A goal takes work. All of us on this sub could write a post like this, talking about every barrier in their life that makes working towards your goals harder. There will always be an excuse. Weight loss takes effort. It takes discipline. It takes saying no to certain things because they don't fit your calories for the day. It takes turning down a night out or sleeping in so you can hit the gym. It takes making sure you're prepared for a busy day away from home. It. Takes. Work.

You are always going to find an excuse. At some point, all of us have to or have had to realize that we have to be stronger than our excuses. You don't have to eat the elephant all in one day. Take it one bite, one babystep, one day at a time. You'll be glad you did.

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Just wondering if anyone else has had this self esteem issue after a plateau...

Hey there! So I (28F) am someone with a fairly significant amount of weight to lose. About 3 years ago, I lost 50 lbs. Though I still have a long way to go before I achieve what I would consider a goal weight, at the time that I hit the 50 lb mark, I felt absolutely amazing. My self confidence was at an all time high. I just generally felt so much better and I was fitting into clothes I’d never been able to wear before. I really felt fantastic about myself. Since then I’ve maintained that weight with a small amount of fluctuation, but I feel totally different. I’ve realized that I think it’s because I’ve become accustomed to this weight as my new norm, and because it’s still not technically a healthy weight, I now feel terrible about myself. I’m so unhappy with my appearance and the way my clothes fit despite being the exact same weight I was at the tail end of my 50 lb loss several years ago.

I’ve recently gotten back into the weight loss groove but I’m so impatient to see progress and start to feel good again. Has anyone else experienced this? A self esteem dive after a very long plateau? I know as long as I stick with it, I will start to see changes and feel better again. It’s just hard at the moment. Any sort of encouragement would be welcome!

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[Week 2 of 26] Nailing it so far - 50 pound plan

Last post: https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/comments/b52pkg/week_1_of_26_getting_back_on_the_horseerrh_bike/

More or less was fat, got skinny, got injured, got fat, going to get skinny again. Now I'm starting a 26 week plan to lose weight. Will post a weekly update mostly to keep myself accountable.

Week 2: Biked to and from work Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. Wednesday I took the bus so I could donate plasma. I walked home. Friday I slept in, took the bus but eventually walked home after some drinks. Saturday I did a 25 km bike ride and followed it up with an hour round trip walk (to McDonalds...). Sunday I biked 10 km to meet some friends for a 5 km run and then biked back. Exercise I think was about as good as I could have done. Food wise, I believed I ate pretty much my calories burned exercising (again not logging calories yet) however the nutritional value was pretty low. With a (non exercise) TDEE of 2000 I was expecting to lose 4 pounds this week, ended up just over that losing 4.6.

Next week: Work on incorporating more vegetables and fruits into my diet, otherwise I'll be more than happy to have another week like this one. I will also not be getting a bus pass for April so any day missed biking in will end up costing me (although I save significantly on the pass).

Future: No changes to the plan, will start logging food and exercise eventually. With the quicker than expected weight loss, I might have to readjust my target goals in the future.

Week Date Target Actual
1 03/24/2019 180 179.0
2 03/31/2019 178 174.4
3 04/07/2019 176
4 04/14/2019 174
5 04/21/2019 172
6 04/28/2019 170
7 05/05/2019 168
8 05/12/2019 166
9 05/19/2019 164
10 05/26/2019 162
11 06/02/2019 160
12 06/09/2019 158
13 06/16/2019 156
14 06/23/2019 154
15 06/30/2019 152
16 07/07/2019 150
17 07/14/2019 148
18 07/21/2019 146
19 07/28/2019 144
20 08/04/2019 142
21 08/11/2019 140
22 08/18/2019 138
23 08/25/2019 136
24 09/01/2019 134
25 09/08/2019 132
26 09/15/2019 130

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Another Long Ass Lurker Post: Teen Edition

Okay, so I really thought not to post at all because some of the things I did during my weight loss journey I’m starting to recognize as playing with fire. And of course that isn’t something I’d advocate to other teens, strangers, anyone. However I think it’s it’s important that I at least acknowledge my mistakes in a public fashion, point out things I did to make sure I wouldn’t truly screw myself, and hopefully someone will learn from me. frankly I’d be honored if any of you guys read all of this, It’s a lot. I’ll try to separate out this post into subtitles that would help those that just want to see specific sections.

I’ve been a lurker for a while now and I might as well give back to the community I have taken so much from. Also I’m sorry I don’t have actual body progress pics, because I know that’s what people like about these posts. I’m still a minor, and still trying to keep this account kinda private. so with that out of the way, Stats!

F17 5’5’’ (165 cm) SW: 200 lb (90.71 kg) CW: 149 lb (67.58 kg) GW:130 lb (58.96 kg)

From August 2018 to now, I’ve lost around 51 lbs (23.1 kg)

http://imgur.com/a/OVxusfM

Backstory

So I’m part of the faction who, for as long as they could remember, they’ve been overweight. I remember being shamed for it way back in elementary school - but in terms of school, I think elementary school was the only time I was ever really made to feel ashamed for my weight^ ( little shits). The only other times was my dad and his side of the family. type two diabetes runs wild there, so at a young age my dad berated my eating habits.

Yeah, uh, a little side note here: I don’t know how to convince your daughter to lose weight, but here’s how not to do it.

From at least ages 9-15 expressing any type of sustained enthusiasm or preference for a food got me criticized. If not at the table, he would tell me later that “pasta/rice/bread/ketchup/mayo/mashed potatoes/chicken/apple cider vinegar on salads is why you’re fat - stop eating it.” I loathed every second of it, especially when i’d be singled out for eating my favorite foods when my siblings were doing the same. That, combined with the insistence of my relatives that “I’d be prettier/be more desirable If I lost weight” made me feel a bit defiant in a way and -- and a bit helpless. I hated the idea that everyone saw me as something that needed to be fixed.

I did want to be thin then, I wanted to be fixed, I wanted to be just as pretty as my sisters. but I had no idea how to do it, and their ‘encouragements’ weren't exactly convincing me, gluttonous monstrosity that I was, that I could even dream of the ‘discipline’ required. My Dad would also go on fad diets now and then that, of course, would never work, and that also cemented my idea that weight loss was a herculean task that a mere mortal like me couldn’t fathom until I was at least an adult that had more control of the food I was around.

I had gone up to 183 lbs (83 kg) and I basically thought of 183 lbs as my standard weight, but I never weighed myself. In 2017, I was put upon a scale for drivers ed, and I was sickened to find out I had risen to 192 lbs (87 kg) I felt horrible about it, but still felt that I had no control over my weight. In my mind I was eating the same food as my siblings, I didn’t really grasp the idea of calories or portions.

That changed over last summer, when I got invited for a tech internship at the local university for a really cool project on ocean discovery. We weren’t paid, but we got a card to eat around campus for lunch.

I think you know where this is headed.

I abused the hell out of it, got panda express nearly everyday, and still ate dinner with my family afterwards. Frankly I don’t have much regrets, free Chinese food is free Chinese food. But when I got on the scale after the internship was done I had gone up to 200 . 200 seemed to be my mental limit and I just couldn’t let myself be that overweight (at that point, my BMI put me in the obese range), and unlike when I got to 192 lbs, I knew why I had gotten bigger. I also no longer had access to free food, so I felt uniquely prepared for the challenge of fixing my eating habits (lol).

Starting Out

I’m going to tell you right now, what I remember from early August to December, when I started was that it really was hard in the beginning. You see, I wanted to lose weight in secret, I didn’t (and still don’t) trust my dad with my health. I knew that if my dad found out I would be instantly be put on whatever fad diet he was on and everything I would do, my goals, and what I ate would be blasted to literally everyone he knew, which apparently includes the entire East Coast and Northern Africa. Privacy and boundaries aren't words ‘round these parts .

Of course that meant that I couldn’t ask to see a doctor (my dad doesn't trust doctors and think that they are a waste of money too, so there is that as well) or ask for a food scale.

Listen, I really don’t recommend this approach. I should have lied or something to get a food scale (‘its for a project, I swear’) I don’t think there was any I could have seen a doctor, but If you can please do. The most frustrating thing about my entire fiasco was that my dad and aunt (both capable adults) were ignoring my denials of conscious weight loss from December to just about two weeks ago when they were cornering me about it (lies, but so am I at this point) and pointedly ignored my insistence that they see a doctor/ dietitian. I know It’s hypocritical to ask this of y’all, but please, it takes care of a lot of problems when you get advice from someone who actually knows what they are talking about.

I did have some checks on myself and it’s probably the only reason why my relationship with food isn’t as messed up as it should be, what with my medically questionable methods. I had an almost borderline irrational fear of having an eating disorder (I know, I know, the irony is real) but because of it I was dedicated to the 1200 minimum for women (I wasn’t aware of the 1600 minimum for teens, again, another mistake), I felt that no matter what I did I COULD NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES eat below 1200 a day. In fact, the way I used myfitnesspal was that I had an established minimum of about 1230 ish and I would log everything I ate as accurately as I could without a food scale (1230 was what was recommended by myfitnesspal and https://www.sailrabbit.com/bmr/ to lose 1.5 pounds a week). My logic was that since most people overestimate eyeballing food, if I eyeballed 1230 I would hit the 1200 minimum for sure and eat a bit more calories and still be at a deficit. I was aiming for 1 lbs a week, so I was kind of hoping that eyeballing would make me eat around 1400 cals a day.

Again, - I don’t fucking recommend this - if I’d have been a little smarter about it what I probably should have done was eaten at a minimum of 1700 cals for 4 months consistently and see whether or not I lost weight, if not lowering by 100 cals and tracking again for 4 months etc. that would have given me an idea of my true TDEE and would have at least been a bit safer. (If I was actually smart I would be able to convince my dad to let me see a doctor alone for a ‘private -reason-that-needs-to-remain-confidential-but-still-isn’t-a-big-deal,-don’t-ask-me-about-it’ but hey, we can’t all have a silver tongue)

There is another component to this, eating a minimum of 1230 ish a day ment that on most days I was logging about 1250-1350 a day, remember a guesstimate. The way I had structured this was that I’d eat an approximately 6xx cal lunch and 6xx cal dinner (I’ve never eaten breakfast ever, even when I was bigger). If I ate more I’d always console myself with - “well you’re still probably at a deficit, you still made progress - you didn’t even wipe off a day” which was definitely a good mentality to have throughout the process. Likewise the scale our family has is an old ass fossilized goodwill relic from the 90s that isn’t digital and makes your weight vary depending on which leg you lean on (it’s the scale in the pic above). I thought this scale was going to be a chip on my shoulder, but it really helped me not focus too much on the number. I mainly payed attention to 5lb markers so extra water weight, plateaus, food I ate, etc. didn’t stress me out as much as it might have if my scale was fully functioning. Also another unexpected win.

Negatives that I’ve found was a lot to do with still being in school. Since I participate in robotics and I would sometimes be at school from 8 am to 7-8 pm. (robotics build season is also on top of Fencing season. My exercise of choice, that I don’t do as often as I should). That ment from noon till 7 I wouldn’t have food on hand to eat, or money to buy food with. Poor choice, since on those days my TDEE would be a lot higher then on days in the weekend when I’m in bed all day (and -- no shit -- have a much easier time sticking to 1230 -1350. Fucking magic /s)

Likewise, being hungry at around 4-7 is a great way to feel sluggish during homework and after school clubs. Eat enough guys.

Fixing Your own Bad Habits Should be your Goal.

Something that I’ve really noticed, and had found out as I was losing weight is that I had bad eating habits. After all, If I truly ate like my sisters, I would have looked like my sisters. It's something that I feels isn’t represented in so many weight loss advice articles were there first advice is “stop drinking soda, and quit fast food!!!” Your extra pounds might not have been caused by those specific habits, but other ones that you need to target. For an example, I hardly ever drink soda. Even when I was big I avoided it, but I drank an embarrassingly shit ton of milk. It became an inside joke in my family how much I drank milk. As r/gainit has found out , it is an excellent source of extra calories if you are trying to bulk, but I didn’t exercise much so of course it became fat on me. I realized when counting calories that when I craved milk and drank water instead, Instantly the cravings would go away, I just preferred milk because it was always cold and always refrigerated. Once I understood that It was an easy habit to nix.

Another thing that was a problem for me binging when I got home from school/ or at dinner. My lunches were very bare bones as my mom would make them super early in the morning before school. No shade to my mom, she did what she could for me, but when you only eat 400 calories from 6:30 am till 4-5 pm your going to eat anything and everything when you get home. I was in the habit of binging the night before so I wouldn’t be hungry during school the next day. Making my own lunches meant I had more to eat at school and made sure I wasn’t in a constant unintentional deprivation - binging cycle.

Sometimes I would just overeat anyway in the afternoon even when I had a proper lunch and for that what I’ve found useful is tracking why I binged. I needed to keep track of triggers I could avoid to minimize my bad habits. I found out I binged when I was: over stressed with homework I procrastinated on, there was special food in the house (birthday, holiday, etc), and there was a certain type of food (chocolate, chips, etc) that I knew would disappear quickly if I didn’t have some right now. Each of these I had to find a different ways to cope with, because I couldn’t completely get rid of my triggers, or avoid all unhealthy option that appears before me - but just recognizing that the reason I wanted to eat wasn’t hunger based helped me avoid them.

By January I had lost some weight at a rate of about 1.6 lbs a week. It was not above the danger level of 2 lbs a week, but remember, my goal was 1 lb a week. I realized at that point that I was doing something wrong, either my TDEE was higher than I thought, or I was way better at calorie counting than I thought - either way I needed to eat more. I tried to put my minimum at 1500, but I felt physically terrible afterwards. when you are used to packing a certain amount and eating a certain amount at a certain time changing on the fly is hard. so I’m started back again, trying to eat more in that 4-7 pm window but not setting myself a hard limit. That is where I am at the moment. I’m still trying to lose that 19-20 extra lbs but I still noticed some

Unexpected Things

I made the conscious decision not to take any body pictures. Other people in my family sometimes use my phone and a pic of my flabby ass on the camera roll is going to be really hard to explain away. The only picture I have of myself in a higher weight is my senior pictures, where I am, of course, fully clothed in my traditional baggy attire and I’m planning to maybe burn before anyone remembers they exist. As a consequence I still feel fat in a way, even though I am at the lowest weight since - 5th grade? 4th grade? (I remember in middle school being weighed at 164 lbs (74.3 kg) so at least since elementary school). I have finally reached the top end of a healthy BMI, and It nearly feels like I haven’t changed at all. I still got stomach rolls, I still got grandma flaps, I just have to keep in mind that there are not nearly as bad as they used to be. I have to remember that I’ve made progress, that in the midst of an obesity epidemic, in the abyss of cheap fast food and comfort meals, I’ve wrestled back a jawline.

I can cross my legs now, running doesn’t sound as hell now, most of the changes I’ve experienced are small and inconsequential, which leads me to the next topic -

Losing Weight Won’t Fix your Spiraling Sense of Self-Worth. Especially When You’re No Longer Using Food as a Mental Crutch.

Yeah, ya girl got her her admissions letters back (my face when good engineering schools reject my calculus failing ass) so this has definitely been a huge weight on my mind.

So obviously I didn’t think weight loss was going to solve all of my problems, but I was so so relieved when I realized that I could control my weight. Remember that part in that old movie Princess Diaries where Mia looks in the mirror, sighs, and says something along the lines of “well this is as good as it’s going to get”? I felt that way for the longest time. I’d browse this subreddit bitterly because most people here can do whatever they want. It must be nice to just ‘buy’ a food scale, and just ‘go see’ a doctor, and just ‘join’ a gym. It must be nice to buy well fitted bras, or go to a thrift shop to buy dresses and shorts. Walk wherever - present yourself however you like. I’m seventeen, and don’t have the freedom or cash for that. But finding out that I could lose weight with what I had (phone, r/loseit, walking during lunch, etc) felt like one thing in my life that I could fix, something that I didn’t have to wait until I was 25 for. There was finally something I can do to look more like myself.

Of course, CICO works, I physically have less weight on me, but it isn’t Jesus. I just have broader shoulders than my sisters, I just have no hips. Your always going to find something wrong with yourself. -- after all, thin people have body image issues too! I don’t have much advice for you guys with this one, It’s just something that I’ve noted, despairingly, many times.

Communities are Genuinely Important. Don’t be Me

r/loseit has meant a lot to me, as a group that I don’t have my actual day to day life, as a touchstone to things that I was doing that weren’t healthy, for questions that I had. You don’t know how many people you are effecting when you write all your NSV and your onderland posts.

I regret being a lurker for so long -- whether I felt like I had nothing of value to contribute or feeling that a lot of these posts and situations don’t apply to me. There is nothing harder than struggling and fighting your demons alone. I browsed and read a lot of posts on this sub, and after all those weeks and all those months I really wished I had responded to some, ESPECIALLY to all those posts of people with frighteningly similar stats and backgrounds as me. The same height, or age, or SW, or GW, making the same mistakes, in the same situations. So I want to mention the last post of that nature, by u/StarryEyedConfidence. This one. I can’t go back and ping all of the users that I shouldn’t have ignored, but that one was the one I saved before writing this.

Thanks r/loseit.

edit : formatting

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Why I'm neither fat nor skinny [a post about eating habits]

Recently I've been reading about the habits of the naturally skinny. This has caused me to think a lot about my own eating habits and I really felt like writing my thoughts down. So, since I've been enjoying this type of content, I decided to make a post here. I hope someone enjoys it, or finds it informative. BTW sorry about a long post.

So first some background and stats. I'm 20, female, 167 cm and probably around 62 kg right now (that's BMI 22 for any americans). During my teen years my bmi has fluctuated between 20 and 24. Some of this was because of restriction, but a lot of it just happened naturally and I doubt I would ever reach a weight higher than perhaps 70 kg without the addition of serious mental turmoil, or pregnancy. Now in the eyes of a lot of people this would probably classify me as "naturally skinny". But growing up in the 21th century swedish middle class, I was actually on the "chunkier" side for my age. Now I think this is mostly due to some bad eating habits I started in childhood and it's those, as well as the habits that have kept me from really blowing up, that I want to analyse here.

The Good [aka weight loss tips]:

  • Homecooking has always been the norm... I would never dream of eating junk food several times a day, or even most days of the week. In reality I probably eat it twice a month in the form of swedish pizza or a burger with onion rings. And the usual dinner is a boiled carbohydrate, baked/boiled/fried animal protein, a side of plain vegetables and a sauce. Richer meals are eaten during weekends and even then it's nothing extreme.
  • I usually drink water or full-fat milk. Sugary drinks (inc. juice!) are a once in a while thing. I drink them maybe 2-3 a month and even then I struggle to finish a 33cl can of soda.
  • I've never been a picky eater and I truly enjoy what others might consider disgusting diet/health food. For example, I considered cabbage soup one of my favourite meals for years. Not joking.
  • My portion control is somewhat sane. It was far from great (more on that later), but I never even considered demolishing entire sleeves of cookies, several bags of chips, a whole pint of icecream or a family sized meal. In fact
    I didn't even realise that it's something people do. I would be hanging over a chair, never wanting to see food again and low-key wanting to die before I even got close. Because I don't like being stuffed, it's super uncomfortable. I still do it, but I also hate it.

The Bad [aka what I want to change]:

  • The Clean Plate Club. I was a gold-card member for YEARS. I couldn't stand the thought of throwing away even a few morcels of food even if it meant stuffing myself to the point of pain. It's become a lot better now, but I still catch myself finishing things I'm no longer enjoying, or eating past the point of satisfaction and even fullness. My wish to clear a plate is also made worse because..
  • I often pile too much food onto my plate. I want to a have a bit of everything and don't always consider how much food it will be when it's all put together. Buffets are especially hard.
  • I'm obsessed with food. I think about it A LOT. If I don't keep myself occupied it's usually where my mind strays, even if I'm full. And If I think about it, I want to eat it. Most of my snacking comes from this obsession, rather than hunger.
  • I want more, more, more. Instead of savouring every bite I'll hurry to get another one in my mouth, like it's somehow going to taste even better than the one I'm already chewing on [spoiler: it won't]. When I'm eating something good I'll start thinking about getting more, even if I just started and even though I know I'm probably gonna be satisfied by the time I'm done. I rarely have just one piece of something, even if having more is a game of diminishing returns.
  • I often struggle to respect my hunger signals. I eat meals when I'm not hungry so as to not worry friends and family. I often continue eating when I'm full and occasionally to the point of discomfort. And I'll give in to cravings even when I'm far from hungry.

That's all I could think of right now. I think it can be summerised into something like this: I have a bad relationship with food, but I'm saved by some decent food habits I learned in childhood. And to those who recognize themselves in my bad habits, I've been making a lot of progress. For me the key has been to be aware and to communicate with myself. For example, when I notice myself overeating, I'll gently remind myself I don't like feeling stuffed, and that it's okay to stop. I try to avoid anxiety and stress around weight and food, because having a relaxed attitude makes it so much easier for me to let go of bad patterns. Think about it, if you crave something, what would be the most effective method? Taking a deep breath and saying to yourself "I can have some of it later, when I'm hungry", or repeating to yourself "I can't have it. It's a bad food. If I have one bite I won't stop", all the while terrified you might give in? Well in my case the latter would usually lead to a fixation on the food until I finally gave up and ate too much of it...and probably too quickly to enjoy it... And if I do it the first way? I usually forget about it, and if I don't I just make it a reasonably sized part of my next meal.

Thoughts?

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Do you need accountability and want to motivate each other? I lost 22 kg (44 lbs) so far!

Sex/Age: Male, 25 years old

Height: 174 cm (5'9")

Weight loss: From 92 kg to 72 kg (203 lbs to 159 lbs) - On average it has been 1 kg (2.2 lbs) each week.

I still remember the first day I started, what a struggle. But when you are in the middle of it, it is actually so easy! Now I've maintained my weight for 6 months and it's time for me to lose the last 4 kg's. Starting from tomorrow, April 1st :-)

Six pack is my goal. I've never had it, so I'm excited for it!

Accountability and Motivation

If someone out there is starting out or already in the middle of a weight loss, let's keep each other accountable and motivate each other! Either through Reddit, Messenger, daily Snapchats or whatever. Let's keep each other going until the goal has been reached. Send me a message :-)

How did I lose weight?

Eating healthier and doing "Insanity Workout" at home on https://www.beachbodyondemand.com/ . I'm very busy in my daily life with 2 jobs, so I get myself going with home workout instead of Fitness. I don't have an excuse of being lazy, when I can just turn on the TV and workout :-)

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