Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Quick-fire Quiz?

Happy Wednesday supportive munchkins! I really enjoy when someone posts a question about people’s weight loss experience, and reading all the funny replies. So drum roll please:

  1. What’s been your most surprising NSV?
  2. What’s been your happiest NSV?
  3. What food is your ‘most dangerous food’?
  4. What food are you loving because it’s low-cal and tasty?
  5. What keeps you going when times get rough? (A mantra, an outlook, because you don’t want to go back to not being able to run for the bus)
  6. What are you looking forward to?

For me: 1. Finding bones (don’t make your own jokes!). My wrists and collarbone are back! 2. Happiest NSV is a change of outlook to being like WHEN can I get this weight loss done, not CAN I. 💪 3. Popcorn. It’s a low cal and fab snack but I eat a whole bag of it and my days suddenly wrecked.
4. Sweetcorn which I never had before! Okay I’m putting enough salt on for an insta-heart arrack but baby steps. 5. So when I have a bad day and indulge it’s ‘it’s a marathon, not a race’ and ‘you’re undoing a lifetime of bad habits you are going to slip up/it will take time.’ When I have a really bad day and want to quit I remember being worried about fitting in airplane seats. I also think ‘if I quit, what’s the alternative?’ I go back to my old eating habits and gain ten stone? Nah 6. I’m looking forward to losing 50lbs and being halfway to my goal AND to being able to go and have that warm feeling of smaller clothes!

submitted by /u/popcorndragon93
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2GT2JYG

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Couldn't tell I lost 10lbs while maintaining. What I found out about stubborn fat and the importance of nutrition while building muscle.

Hopefully my story will be helpful to people trying to get rid of those stubborn areas of fat and look great for the summer.

30 year old 6'1" male here. Started losing weight July 2018 by eliminating sugar and starch from my diet and only eating in the evening. Went from ~230lbs to 190s by December, when I added in a bit of gentle strength training at the gym (gentle due to bad back from sport back in the day). By February I was easily around my goal weight in the high 170s and stopped being quite so careful with what I ate nor bothering to get on the scale. Sugar and starch make me feel gross now so I figured maintaining would be pretty easy, and I had no problems continuing with the same foodtypes as before.

Just by what I saw in the mirror and the fit of my clothes I assumed I was maintaining over the next month or two. So I was shocked when I hopped on the scale again and saw the counterweights reading dead on 167lbs. [For reference BMI for me gives 140-189 as the healthy range]. Apparently I had gone down another 5-10lbs without realizing!

I'm not one to put much stock into what the scale reads. I had lost weight to get back my energy, be able to move around easier, and of course look good. I'd definitely been reaping the benefits of the first two, and I couldn't really complain about the latter either (at least when wearing clothes). In the mirror shirtless though I still had a jiggly belly and flabby chest. It seemed like no more than a couple pounds worth of fat and I had thought it was fine to carry it and it would slowly firm up as I toned up underneath. Yet this hadn't happened. Not only had I been going to the gym for months now, but I had lost 10lbs while at a healthy weight without noticing any reduction in the pudgy areas of my body.

So here I am thinking about ways forward in the beginning of April. I had clearly still been eating at a deficit while trying to maintain as evidenced by the continued weight loss. My strength and endurance had continually improved so I must have built some muscle, but it hadn't been enough mass to offset loses. I figured I could keep losing and see if those bits of fat eventually melted off, or take the fitness focused approach and bulk (eat above maintenance to help build muscle) before cutting (eating at a deficit) back down. I went with the eat more method and upped my nutrition game.

I haven't noticed much improvement with respect to gains in the gym nor recovery (though maybe I'm just not lifting heavy enough for back fears to realize them), but over the last 3 weeks I've gained three pounds and already my chest and belly are much firmer and look so much better! I know the squishy bits are probably still hiding spread out over the top, but the muscle underneath gives it a way better look and muscle definition is not a priority of mine.

I guess the moral of the story is you might want to address stubborn flabby bits by building muscle instead of losing fat, indeed it might be the only solution. And when you are trying to build muscle don't ignore complete nutrition. Apparently muscle can get stronger without getting larger, but it is larger muscles that helps smooth and tone the look of the body.

Kick ass on your own journeys and here's to feeling good and looking good!

submitted by /u/five-o-and-go
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2VK4G29

In the past 4 months I’ve adopted a plant based diet, started Orangetheory and Corepower yoga and got a personal trainer and also a nutritionist and a therapist. I’m also back hiking ~7 miles a couple times a week. Feeling better.

I’m 28 yrs 5’8”f and started maybe around 205-210 lbs. I didn’t realize my weight had gotten that high! I had been through a terrible break up, med school and intense internship. I finally got a real job and I have decided to invest in health, fitness and weight loss. I am feeling so much better, happier and light. My weight is down to 182 lbs this morning. I’m feeling more confident and much better. I do feel that my weight loss is slow, I’m not counting calories but I’ve instilled mindful sustainable eating practices per my nutritionist/wellness coach. This is the time for me to get myself into a good place. My body has changed and I’ve toned up and lightened up. I recently finally felt in a good place to give my goal weight to my nutritionist. It’s 145-150 lbs. I just hope I can get there. Anyone like me out there???

submitted by /u/kittenlikeunicorn
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Wc35yS

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Wednesday, 01 May 2019

Welcome adventurer! Whether you're new on this quest or are towards the end of your journey there should be something below for you.

Daily journal.

Interested in some side quests?

Community bulletin board!

If you are new to the sub, click here for our posting guidelines


submitted by /u/AutoModerator
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2vy9GYA

Back down to my high school weight

At the very end of 2018 I decided enough was enough. I had contemplated for months if I had it in me to lose weight. On January 2nd I weighed myself. 272 pounds. The heaviest I have ever been. I have struggled with my weight since I was around 10 or 11 years old. I decided I would start my diet that day. I put on my Fitbit I had only worn once before, downloaded MFP and got started with tracking EVERYTHING. I may went a little overboard with the tracking in the beginning. Since then, I've only had one week where my weight increased and only by 1.2 pounds. I've had a few weeks with a plateau but I expected that. I didnt change my diet much at all. All I really did was accurately track calories and weigh my food. Ever since I started my weight loss, I have weighed myself every Tuesday. No idea why. Just something about Tuesdays I guess. Today I weighed myself expecting a weight increase because of my birthday last week. Nope. Lost weight. That brought my weight to 234.6 for a total weight loss of 37.4 pounds since January. When I graduated high school almost 5 years ago, I was at 235. I haven't been at this weight since. It feels amazing. And I'm noticing changes finally in my once a month weight loss progress pictures. I'm more confident. My mental health has improved. I feel great. I still would like to lose another 64.6 pounds for a total of 102 pounds. I'll get there though. I'm excited, but also scared, to see my adult face and adult body not covered in a layer of fat. And I'm excited to eventually get a wardrobe and hair makeover closer to my goal weight.

submitted by /u/9Gmagoo
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2PG6xiE

Eating the same meals every day?

Hello!

So I am wanting to experiment with eating the same meals everyday. I am horrible when it comes to eating whatever I'm craving and binging on junk food. I've put on a good 50 pounds in the last 4 years, and I've tried and failed to lose it. I'm generally pretty lazy when it comes to food prep; I love to cook sometimes, when I'm in the mood to, but on a day to day basis I can't stand spending ~1 hr cooking and then 30 minutes to clean up.

I know I can't do this indefinitely, but I'm in a weird situation right now which has made it impossible to cook daily; I live with my bf and his brother, and often his brother has friends over or sits in the living room watching shows/movies with his girlfriend. I have pretty bad anxiety, so the idea of going out there and disrupting them so I can cook every day is awful to me. Not to mention that something that really helps me stay on track with cooking and not get bored is I love to put on a podcast, or music that I sing along to while I cook. Because of all this (and in addition not really feeling comfortable since it's not MY kitchen) my bf and I have gotten into a bad habit over the past couple of months of eating out for every single meal. Luckily my bf and I are moving into our own place in a little over a month, where I will be able to warble to my hearts content while I cook.

Until then, I am wanting to try to get us on track toward losing weight(we both want to). I'm hoping that by eating roughly the same things every day it will not only help us lose a bit of weight over the next month+ but reset our taste buds and hopefully how we view food. We both have a very unhealthy relationship with food and use it as a comfort. I want us both to move toward thinking of food as fuel the majority of the time and only rarely viewing it as a special treat.

I have the following planned as a sort of "detox" plan to reset our tastebuds and get us used to eating as a necessity rather than for fun. We're shooting to eat this 6 days a week, with one looser day(prob. have eggs and tempeh for breakfast, possible leftovers for lunch) and up to 2 "cheat" meals per week although only from a list I've made of relatively healthy foods like sushi, salads, and entrees from health conscious restaurants.

Breakfast: Huel made with half Silk Protein Almond & Cashew Nutmilk and half water/ice.

Lunch: Salad w/ "bacon" tofu, black beans, half an avocado, and salsa OR

Salad w/ lemon pepper tofu, navy beans, half an avocado, and Newman's Own olive oil vinaigrette OR

Salad w/ spicy ginger tofu, kidney beans, kimchi, half an avocado, and Bragg's ginger and sesame dressing.

(Note: After lunch, take Deva vegan multivitamin)

Dinner: Cabbage, quinoa, and potato soup w/dollop of unsweetened coconut yogurt and w/ one slice of seeded bread.

Snack Options: Hummus with Super Seed crackers and/or veg(broccoli/baby carrots), fruit(berries, apples, clementines), pickles w/probiotics, 80% dark chocolate(more of an evening treat type thing), pistachios, almonds.

So you can see I did create some variation with the salads which I think will be my saving grace. But they basically consist of the same things and will be SUPER quick and easy to prep. I'm pretty excited to start this tomorrow, my bf and I have had it with constantly feeling like shit because we eat like shit lol. It'll be nice to be a bit thinner when we move into the new place too, it'll be starting things off on a good foot.

Has anyone else attempted to eat the same meals every day as a weight loss method? How has that worked for you? What do you eat?

submitted by /u/FuckNugget9
[link] [comments]

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

Sweat is just fat crying, right?

This could be a weird question but Google isn't providing much help so here I am.

I did keto for a few months and lost about 45lbs. After doing lazy keto and my weight loss stalled, I decided to change up my diet and start Weight Watchers. I've been doing WW for about 2 weeks now and I have noticed that I am SO SWEATY! Just doing regular every day activities ex. Getting ready for work, sleeping, doing minor housework, cooking, etc. Is this normal? What is going on metabolically and physiologically causing me to be so sweaty? When I was on keto I was cold all the time and rarely had random sweats.

So additional information that could be helpful to the answer. 32F, 5'7", 215lbs but an athletic stature. I go to 60-75 minute intense spin classes 3-4 times a week, will go on additional bike rides on the weekends if the weather is nice, walk my dog multiple times a day throughout the week, and do weight lifting/strength training 1 or 2 times a week. As far as I know I don't have any thyroid issues as my bloodwork showed normal last time it was checked.

Why so sweaty?!

submitted by /u/LzbnBarBCumsinOwnBox
[link] [comments]

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