Monday, April 8, 2019

Starting my journey here!!

Hi fellow losers!!! I've been a longtime lurker of this subreddit, and I'm finally posting!

I'm 25F, and started my weight loss journey 6 weeks ago. So far I've lost 10 lbs, then gained 6 back. I have an extremely hard time dieting on the weekend, and I HATE exercise. However, I've found that I do enjoy my time outside jogging, just not the actual *jogging* aspect. Lol. The only thing different about this time dieting compared to the millions of times I've started diets before, is I've actually logged all my food in MFP for 6 weeks thanks to you guys!! I'm pretty sure I've only come under my 1400 calorie goal like three times though...

Anyhow, I'm posting here because it's the last thing I haven't tried. I've noticed that when I tell my friends and coworkers I'm trying to lose weight it definitely doesn't help me- it almost hinders me in a way, because I feel like I'm sort of giving them some of the control, and some of the power. My coworkers frequently tell me I look like I've lost lbs (when I know I haven't) and try to convince me I should eat shitty food with them. I work in a fine dining restaurant and it is SO HARD to avoid the delicious food there. My best girlfriend has a really really unhealthy relationship with food and is much thinner than me, so talking about weight loss with her definitely feels like it does more harm to me than good, bless her heart.

So here we are today, a Monday, and of course I binge ate Hawaiian food and cake last night, telling myself THIS Monday is THEEEE Monday to start over. I weighed in at 156 this morning (I'm 5'8"). I decided to post here on one of my fav subreddits for the first time so I have someone to go on this journey with other than those in my life.

I have 5 weeks to fit into this gorgeous size 12 dress for a friend's wedding. Think I can do it, losers????? Hope your Monday is KICKASS

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2I4oB5a

cellulite first to go?

i’ve been a part of this community for a few months now, but i have recently been getting active. for the last three or so weeks i’ve been hitting the gym 4-5 nights a week for about an hour. my work outs include cardio and different weight workouts.

i’ve never really noticed a change in my past diet plans but this time i have! it’s not weight loss though, it’s reduction in cellulite!! i’ve noticed that the skin on my butt is gone from dimpled to fairly smooth and lifted!!

this a small change but i’m honestly so excited about it. i’ve had this mindset that my body is going to stay the way it is and that’s just life. but this small difference has been a wake up call. i’m excited to keep going and see more changes 🤩

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

My experience cruising after losing 52 pounds.

I just got back home a few days ago from a week long Caribbean cruise and thought my observations might be helpful for those of you on a weight loss journey with upcoming travel. I decided to go for the “it’s one week, just enjoy your damn trip” approach after much apprehension about losing hard earned weight loss progress. I am half way to my goal weight and was worried about getting derailed. The first day of the cruise my husband watched appalled as I made a bee line for the desserts buffet full of cakes with beautifully piped icing and layers of butter creams, coconut, jams, ganache, etc. I’m a reformed sugar addict and it was like diving into a swimming pool full of cocaine. I came back to our little booth overlooking the pier where we were sitting awaiting access to our room and for the ship to take off. I had a small slice of funfetti cheesecake and a small slice of peanut butter s’mores cake in front of me. I closed my eyes, took a deep breath, and lifted my fork to my mouth—annnnd wow. Not good wow. All I could taste was sweet blandness. Zero flavor. Not worth the calories. My mother in law polished off the rest while I grabbed some broiled fish tacos covered in salsa and a black coffee to wake me up from the long drive from Dallas. Did I indulge in anything? You bet your little buttcheeks I did! Creamy gruyere chicken soup, lobster roll, a greasy poolside burger after swimming all day in the ocean, a few beach margaritas and tequila shots at the all inclusive beach in Yucatán. It’s vacation! Live a little. I was relaxed and fun with my kids and am coming back with loads of photos and memories. Being slimmer meant being comfortable in my skin to be in a bathing suit and swim with my kids instead of sitting on the sidelines. I had the energy to keep my kids safe, to lift my baby on one hip while holding my 3 year olds hand and having a heavy backpack on as I navigated the busy ports. This would not have been possible 52 pounds ago. I came back 2 pounds heavier. But today I’m working out, I’m eating lean chicken and fresh veggies, and a watermelon kombucha as a treat. I’m back on track and it was totally worth it.

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VIDEO: Why exercise won't make you lose weight

This is a concept I don't think many people understand. While exercise is important to overall good health, it's not really necessary to lose weight.

In this video CNN's Dr. Snajay Gupta explains that very little weight is lost due exercise, and we can completely undo the calories we burn in 30 minutes of exercise in a few minutes by eating a few cookies.

70-90% of the calories you burn each day, in fact, are just from the body doing what it does (organ function, creating new cells, creating heat, etc.). This is the basal metabolic rate (BMR).

To lose weight and keep it off, it's the number of calories you take in that really matters, not how hard you hit the gym. This is a good thing to keep in mind if you are struggling with weight loss because it is just too hard to exercise regularly.

I've been drinking a couple of Slim Fast shakes each day, eating a few apples/oranges/bananas as snacks, cutting out the alcohol and having a normal dinner and losing weight even by exercising very little.

Most importantly, if you do exercise, don't reward yourself with an ice cream or slice of cake afterward. That's the exact wrong way to do it, and it's the reason many people fail when dieting.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Ijo3aZ

F/22/5'6'' [82lbs lost) Struggled with a plateau, and then maintenance, and am now finally active and at my goal range!

Pictures here!

Hey all, I recently arranged some pictures that show my health journey so far and figured I'd share. I love to encourage and support others that are trying to make progress on their own health, and would be more than happy to provide recommendations, encouragement, advice, and so on to anyone that needs it!

I don't truly know my highest weight, but the highest I ever saw on the scale was about 210lbs. It was at this point that I knew I needed to make a change, and I decided to be more mindful of what I was eating and try to ride my bike more often. This lead to a loss of about 35lbs over the course of a year or so. I still wasn't counting calories or anything like that at this point, but it was a start.

I hit a plateau for a couple years, and began to gain a few pounds after a while, as I began to fall back into bad habits. I kept thinking, "Oh, I'll get the rest of the weight off eventually! One day..." but would never make a change or follow through. Then, one day in June 2017, I found /r/loseit. I started to count my calories, and went all in. I ate at 1,200 a day, and NEVER had a cheat day (I have no idea how I fostered such iron willpower so early on). I lost another 40lbs this way in the span of 6 months!

I hit 135lbs and began to finally process that I had done something worth being proud of. I began to focus on slower weight loss and maintenance, and continued to count. Over the next 6 months, I slowly got down to around 131-132lbs through slight calorie restriction. Then, vacation happened.

My boyfriend and I went to Disney World and the Bahamas, and it was my first major vacation since losing the weight. I went crazy on the food, and ended up gaining around 8 pounds over the course of a month. Thankfully, I went right back into my dieting lifestyle once we got back home, and lost the weight I had gained.

About 5 months ago, I made the decision to start including exercise in my daily routine. I began to go on more walks, and would also frequent the exercise bike. I've since upped that even further, and spend at least 35 minutes on the exercise bike, cycling at what I'm pretty sure is a high intensity. I am always drenched in sweat by the end of the session, and try to aim for about 17-18mph at intensity level 8-9. I also track my macronutrients now, and while beforehand I ate very high carb, I now focus on eating lower carbs and higher fat/protein content. I also eat at maintenance (~1,650 calories) on week days and go over by about 200 on weekends (which I'm okay with because of the exercise). I feel AMAZING and healthier than I ever have before. I want to start doing body weight exercises more as well, and also challenge myself by jogging more often.

I still struggle with disordered thinking a lot of the time when it comes to food, and am slowly working on changing my relationship with it. As I sneak up on my ultimate goal (125lbs), I've allowed myself more cheat days here and there (although I do struggle with the occasional binge in these situations, and am working on that too). It's a constant work in progress, but I'm excited to see where I go from here. There is still a lot of improvement that I can make in regards to my health, but I'm very passionate about it! If anyone has any questions, hit me up! I love to be of help.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2G2t70R

Need Motivation and Advice (Injury during weight loss program)

Hey all,

So I've always been fat and gained more weight while I was doing my masters thesis and finally reached a point where I took charge and did something about it. I used to weigh 255lbs and I'm around 6' tall.

I contacted a personal trainer and she put me on a diet and exercise regimen for 2 months. I meal prepped every week, went to the gym 6 days a week and worked super hard and lost 25 lbs and I was feeling great and I had much more fat to lose and more muscle to gain.

Then one day while I was going down the stairs at home (on my way to the gym funny enough) I slipped and fell on my ass and fractured my tail bone. That was five weeks ago. In those 5 weeks I fell off the wagon HARD!!! The doctor recommended I don't exercise to allow for proper healing and instead of sticking with my diet, I went with the "f*** it" approach and just abandoned that completely. I don't want to gain the weight back but I am unfortunately.

Whenever I think, "ok you need to get it back together" I think of all the hard work that goes into it and I just stop and take the easier route of going to a drive through.

My tailbone still hasn't completely healed but it's healed enough for me to go back to the gym and do exercises that I know won't affect my tailbone.

So beautiful people of reddit, if you've had a similar experience of having an injury which completely threw a wrench in the system you've had and fell off the wagon, what advice would you give someone such as myself who is going through the same thing?

Thanks :)

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2uQh3dR

8 Tiny Kitchen Tweaks for Big Weight Loss Results

Your new secret weight loss weapon: Reorganizing your kitchen. You may think that keeping snacks out of sight is a “duh” tip, but there have actually been well-done research studies proving that it really works. Here are a few other scientifically vetted housekeeping suggestions that may also help you peel off the pounds:

1. Clear the clutter.
A messy kitchen can make you feel stressed and out of control and encourage you to eat more, according to a study published this year in the journal Environment and Behavior. In fact, the women in the study, who were exposed to a neat kitchen and one strewn with mail, newspapers and dirty dishes, ate twice as many cookies in the messy kitchen as in the tidy one.

2. Hide the snacks.
If you have to have unhealthy snacks in the house, make sure you need to use a stepstool (and maybe a map) to find them. Studies from the Food & Brand Lab at Cornell University have found that when they’re out of sight, they’re also out of mind. Also, they point out, when you have to pass yummies a lot you’re constantly making the same decision—eat it or not—and you’re likely to eventually wear yourself down and succumb to temptation. Forget those cute little glass containers. Store goodies in opaque containers and use aluminum foil, not plastic wrap, for fattening leftovers in the fridge. (Cornell researchers have found that the average kitchen has four or five snack cupboards and recommended isolating treats to just one.)

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3. Put the good stuff where you can see and grab it.
Don’t get rid of those little glass containers or the plastic wrap. They’re perfect for the healthy food you want to eat. Likewise, it’s okay to have a few things on the counter, like a fruit bowl maybe, filled with grapes on the vine that you’ve snipped into easy-to-eat portions. Other research at Cornell—recounted in the book Slim by Design by the head of the lab, Brian Wansink, PhD—found that having healthy food where you can see and reach it makes you eat more of it. And the sweet spot? The middle shelf in the fridge. That’s where to keep your celery, carrots, apples, oranges and other healthy fare, not in the produce bin.

4. Consider buying little red plates.
A study published this year in Journal of the Association for Consumer Research found that downsizing your plates by 30 percent also downsizes the amount you eat by 30 percent, in part by cutting back the amount you serve yourself. Why red? Cornell research found that plate color also tends to affect how much you serve yourself, particularly if the plate and the food are highly contrasted. Portions of white food, like pasta and rice, look much larger on a darker plate, the researchers say. You’ll eat less of darker foods on lighter plates too. Mix and match?

5. Ditch the stools and chairs in the kitchen.
Or, at least, make your kitchen less comfortable as a hangout. The more time you spend in the kitchen, says other Cornell research, the more you’re going to eat.

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6. Serve from the stove, not the table.
You’re less likely to overeat if you have to walk to the kitchen for seconds, rather than just reach for the bowl or platter on the table, say the Cornell researchers.

7. Invest in healthy kitchen utensils.
Have you tried “zoodles” yet? Those are the “noodles” made by using a special device to spiralize zucchini. For as little as $30, you can get a spiralizing device that turns out piles of noodle-like veggies—all kinds—that you can use in place of pasta. Consider a collapsible metal vegetable steamer that not only lets you steam veggies, but other healthy foods like tofu or homemade spring rolls made with shredded veggies. And take the guesswork out of portion sizes by keeping a counter-top food scale. You can find one that’s only about six-by-two inches so it won’t add to a cluttered look.

8. Keep an aromatherapy diffuser in the kitchen or dining room.
Studies have found that just sniffing the scent of fruits such as apples, bananas and grapefruit can help you eat less. A 2012 Dutch study in the journal, Flavour, also suggested that strong aromas—things like onions, garlic and chiles—may encourage you to take smaller bites.

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