Thursday, April 4, 2019

Adding exercise has stopped my weight loss.

So I started off at 280 lbs back in December doing mostly keto and extreme calorie reduction (1200-1500 per day) combined with intermittent fasting. It worked super well for me. I shot down 40 lbs to where I am now at ~240 lbs doing basically zero exercise working a sedentary job.

However I've hit a plateau as I've changed a few things up, and I'm looking for advice for what to do to continue this awesome journey.

So here's the issue, I've started doing crossfit workouts 4 to 5 times a week after work, and I really enjoy them, but I'm not loosing any weight. Since I've started I've fluctuated around the 240 mark for about a week now, whereas before the weight would come off at about 3 lbs per week fairly steadily.

I suspect I haven't been eating enough food, as I commonly get numbness in my hands and feet, as well as some dizziness while working out. However I'm terrified to increase my intake as I'm afraid to put the weight back on again. I've had issues with drinking enough water, because I don't want to see the numbers on the scale increase at all.

Has anyone else experienced this? How do you break past this to get back to dropping more weight while working out?

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One change, leads to two changes, leads to three changes....leads to a new me?

LONG:

[Proof!]

Ya'll have been the most inspiring people for me. I read every day, I've posted one other time...but man.

I was always the fat girl. I did sports, still the fat girl. I was just slightly less fat at different points in my life. I've never been the skinny girl. I met my husband, who had a really difficult childhood (no guarantees on food, where the food would come from, etc) so I've always tried to make sure that we had as much food as we'd ever want....because that's how I grew up (and why I was so fat) and I wanted him to feel 'safe' that way too.

What that lead to is my skin and bones husband [18/5'9/124] doubling in size over 9 years. I'd put on about 70 pounds in the same amount of time. I was always fat, but I had a lot of complications from surgeries (gall bladder, tonsils) about a year before I met him - so I met him at my lowest weight (since I was probably in 7th grade). It's been a rollercoaster.I'm finally here, we did keto at the end of 2017 for a few months - lost 20 pounds each, couldn't sustain keto and gained it back.

January 5th, something clicked. My best friend had visited us from FL in December, at Christmas, and she has lost about 80 pounds...It sounds weird but I've had huge, massive, life achievements every year for the past few years....with nothing planned (wedding, major job change, graduating college w/ master's, buying a house) - I thought maybe weight loss would be 2019. I got a Fitbit charge 3, that spurred on the change...along with a 67 year old friend who lapped my on the Fitbit achievements weekly. I decided that was it. I was done. I was going to change for real this time.

I've gotten off my ass, I do my share of chores (which I never, really have, I got winded and tired and didn't want to), I've started taking care of my skin (trying, it's way more of a PITA than I was skinnier with flawless skin back in the day!), started making changes to things outside of weight loss.

It's lead me here, 90 days, almost 30 pounds....and I'm proud. My husband who started pulling my old clothes out of donation bags (that had just, not made it when we moved) and put them off to the side since it looks like I'll start seeing them soon!

Thanks for reading, thanks for the Inspo...and thanks for being an amazing group. Here's to the other 45+ I aim to lose! Here's a picture, I'll post some more after I go to Disney World at the event of the month and come back with a slew of comparison pictures ;) Stick with it, I promise, it's worth it. CICO works if you work it. I did, it's changing me than just my weight...it's changing ME.

TL:DR: Lost weight, stopping being lazy, started taking better care of my skin/life, happier.

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I'm not ashamed to say that WW works for me!

I always thought Weight Watchers was something my aunt and mom did back in the early 2000s. I didnt think it was acceptable for a guy to do WW, something immasculating about it for some reason. However, on my secod week, it's going really well and I've seen weight loss already! WW is about slow and regimented change, something I think is good and definitely better for the long term but I've never been able to do personally. The points system makes it really easy to track and it helps put all my food in perspective. How in the world could I just eat 10 Krispy Kreme doughnuts without regard before WW?!

I recommend it to you all!

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Breaking a Plateau?!?!

Hello loseit friends!

I have lost almost 30 pounds since the beginning of Jan 2018 by simply watching what I ate. I have not begun to exercise yet.

Recently, over the past 3 weeks, I have been completely stuck at 241.9 pounds--every time I weigh has been 241.9. Yesterday morning I woke up and weighed myself at 238.9. I was ecstatic--my plateau finally broken! I ate totally sensibly the entire day yesterday, stayed at my calorie goal, and went to bed. When I weighed this morning I was back up to 241.4!!!!!

I AM SO FRUSTRATED AND UPSET!! I really try not to weigh myself daily but when I was losing weight at a steady clip I was able to stay motivated. Now that I'm doing everything right and I am not losing I am wanting to binge eat greasy food every day. My clothes are definitely not feeling smaller, my engagement ring is not any looser, I am not losing inches. I truly am just maintaining.

About me: F27, 5'7", SW 268 CW 241.4 GW 165. I work an office job where I am on my butt for 8 hours a day but I walk on my hour lunch. I also have a FitDesk under my desk and I use it for about 40 mins daily as long as it doesn't bother my office mate (which sometimes it does, and I don't use it on those days). My TDEE is about 2100-2200 calories (estimate) and I eat between 1500-1600 calories a day. This should be AT LEAST 1 pound a week, roughly, but is not. I try and watch my sodium intake, I don't usually eat heavy meals before bed, and I take a spoonful of Metamucil every morning in my water to stay regular.

Someone please tell me what I am doing wrong, or other things I need to watch for to break this plateau! I am a bigger girl, there is no reason that I can think of for my weight loss to stall this much--its not like I am at 18% bodyfat and close to my goal weight.

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Thoughts on the “never be hungry” approach?

My story: I’m still near the start of my weight loss journey and trying to figure this stuff out. Generally speaking I have cleaned up my diet over the past couple of months but still eating three-ish meals a day plus the odd snack (~500cal deficit). However I occasionally end up slipping back to unhealthy eating/bingeing like I used to (usually it’s if I don’t have a meal prepped in advance and just want something “easy” but mostly it seems to be hunger that I’m misidentifying at the time as a craving for pizza/chocolate/whatever).

I’m definitely getting better at resisting these urges, but yesterday I read that some people choose to basically graze on healthy food all day so that they never actually feel hungry.

My question: Is this a quick fix that will actually help me stop bingeing on food OR does it actually take the focus away from self control/eating mindfully and potentially cause more issues down the line?

Grateful to hear anyone’s thoughts and/or experiences! Thanks

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Can’t lose weight on deficit

I’m 6’6, 20 years old and have weighed around 220 the past couple months. I lost over a hundred pounds over a year ago, and use to be overweight and lazy my whole life. Now I go to college and lift heavy weights intensity 3 times a week, and 3-4 times a week I also play basketball for an hour or two (shooting around/drills). I am also active outside my workouts walking all over campus, and getting about 8-10k steps on weekdays.

I was consistently losing weight at the start of this semester with a scale I was using, but it eventually broke and I got a new one. On this scale however, I have not been able to consistently lose weight, and have stayed around the 220 pound area for a while even though I am in a deficit.

I have measured my TDEE on multiple websites and use the low end I have found which is about 3,050. Currently I eat about 2,400 calories (600 cal def) and measure almost everything accurately (my college provides nutritional info on everything as well).

The only thing I could think of that is masking my weight loss is how much sodium is really in my food, or just water fluctuations. I drink a lot of water every day (probably too much lol), but I’m not sure if that would really stop me that long. I know about the “woosh” thing but I have never really experienced it myself. I’m just sick of the way I look and want to drop down another 20-30 pounds.

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9 Warm Weather Activities that Torch Calories

Summer has to be the most active time of the year, with so many chores to be done and opportunities to get outside and enjoy the warm weather. While you’re busy taking advantage of the season, you can also burn off excess calories, helping to speed up your progress toward your weight loss goal. Here are nine popular warm weather activities that kick up your metabolism while you go about your days—no visit to the gym required.

1. Mopping the Floor
The minute the weather turns warm, cleaning tops the “to-do” list in many homes. When you get out the bucket and mop, and move at a steady pace back and forth across the floor, you’ll torch calories plus tone your arms and strengthen your core muscles as your metabolism heats up.
Calories burned: 330 per hour

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2. Dusting and Vacuuming
Wiping down your furniture, shelves and decorations gets rid of dust and potential allergens. It also keeps you moving around, bending and stretching as you go. Pushing the vacuum not only removes dirt and other debris from your carpets and floors, it activates your back and leg muscles and cranks up your internal calorie-burning engines.
Calories burned: 160 per hour

3. Ironing
Smoothing wrinkles and pressing creases into your clothes and linens is steady, methodical work you do while on your feet. That effort leads not only to a pile of well-maintained laundry… it can lead to a pile of sweat as well! Try ironing a week’s worth of clothes all at once, then hanging them where they can’t be wrinkled again. You’ll be be thanking yourself on those busy weekday mornings, and your waist line will thank you, too!
Calories burned: 150 per hour

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4. Painting Walls
When a room in your home needs a fresh coat of paint, there are many tools to work with and tasks to do, from moving furniture to reaching with the roller brush. All of those add up to significant calorie-burning that helps you end up with a fresh look, too.
Calories burned: 350 per hour

5. Mowing the Lawn
Walking back and forth as your power mower cuts the grass keeps your yard looking neat and your body, trim. You don’t get the same benefit from a riding mower, but you can really amp up your calorie burning by using a mower powered only by your legs.
Calories burned: 330 per hour

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6. Gardening
Digging, raking, pulling weeds and other gardening tasks get you outside in the fresh air and sunshine and fire up your metabolism as you beautify your yard.
Calories burned: 340 per hour

7. Washing the Car
Sure, you can go to the drive-through car wash, but rinsing, scrubbing and drying your own vehicle is pleasant on a warm day and it burns calories while you’re at it. Vacuum and polish the interior to get the maximum benefit.
Calories burned: 330 per hour

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8. Visiting the Playground
Taking the kids to play on the swings, sliding board and jungle gym helps them burn off energy and stay active. The little ones will love for you to join in and you’ll remember what fun it is to play as you turn up your metabolism.
Calories burned: 300 per hour

9. Riding a Bicycle
Pedaling around on two wheels with the warm breeze in your face is a simple joy that can bring you back to carefree childhood days. Skip the skintight clothes and hunched over posture and just ride for fun (with or without kids). While you pedal and smile, your body torches a whole lot of calories.
Calories burned: 400 per hour

*Calories burned are the average for a 155-pound person, based on a report from the Harvard University School of Public Health.

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