Monday, May 13, 2019

Late night "snacks"

Hello, I've been lurking for probably about 4 months now and I've lost about 53 pounds.

Currently I'm 6' and 185 pounds, and my goal weight is 165 pounds, so only 20 pounds to go, which is awesome.

What's not awesome however, are my my late night "snacks" Lately, usually on Sundays and Mondays, I start binging, one moment i eat a light snack, the next, I have had like 700 calories, and this has had a massive impact on my weight loss, because I can't seem to break 185. I know I'm not hungry when I binge, and that it's mostly likely a combination of boredom and stress, but I can't seem to contain my cravings. Any tips?

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

Those who have lost the weight, what does your loose skin look like now after maintaining for awhile?

Looong time lurker here and first off I just want to say THANK YOU to all of you whether you post progress pics or respond with advice or however you may contribute! I wouldn’t be on the path I am without this subreddit.

I have looked at countless pictures of amazing before and after transformations and read many accounts of loose skin after the initial weight loss. However, it doesn’t seem as common for people to post pics of the progress in the following years. Is there an unspoken reason I’m missing? It seems to me people should celebrate maintaining just as much!

Also, like a lot of us, I have my concerns about loose skin. Nothing can detract from the benefits of being healthier and altogether looking better, but this is something I want be prepared for and learn to love now (rather than be surprised and possibly disheartened later). Eve still, I know the biggest variable to loose skin is genetics and everyone’s story is different.

Now to my question: to everyone who has lost a lot or hit their goal weight and maintained for awhile, how are things now? Comparison pics from initially losing to now would be much appreciated, but anecdotes and words of wisdom are just as helpful :) hell, use this moment to brag on yourselves! Be proud for continuing your journey.

[i see this usually asked in the comments so here are my meager stats thus far lol F 25 5’2” SW: 238 CW: 230 GW: 130]

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Hummus Recipe Round Up for Best Ideas National Hummus Day

Hello! It’s national hummus day! Hummus is still one of my top 5 favorite foods [bonus points if you know all 4 of the others] so I’m celebrating big time. How does one celebrate a food holiday? Well it depends on what food we’re recognizing!

If it’s green bean day… well, maybe give ‘em a nod at the grocery store as you pass by on the way to the grapes.

If it’s chocolate lave cake day… research the top 5 chocolate cakes in your area –> buy all 5 –> taste test to determine if reviews were accurate –> post about it on social & your food blog. Repeat.

Anyway.

I’m celebrating National Hummus Day by eating hummus, sharing fun hummus memes and a few of my favorite recipes! Enjoy!

Hummus Spoon meme

in front of hummus gif

Hummus Where The Heart Is...

 

hummus guy gif

hummus meme 5

hummus meme 3

I consider myself a bit of a hummus expert… do you?

hummus meme 4

Speaking of hummus… remember that time I visited the Sabra Headquarters??

They have the best hummus!

hummus heaven 1

Captain Hummus reporting for duty!

sabra hq

Favorite Recipes and Ideas with Hummus

The best way to top hummus … 

adding some extra protein and dippers can make this a whole meal!

hummus snack plate

Easy Warmed Hummus Dip

hummus dip easy cheese hummus-01

Hummus Quesadilla Recipe

hummus quesadilla recipe 

The best way to use the hummus at the end of the container

hummus covered broccoli

Question: When was the last time you had hummus?

The post Hummus Recipe Round Up for Best Ideas National Hummus Day appeared first on Run Eat Repeat.



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4 months in and it's going great.

I’m 4 months into my weight loss plan and it’s going great so far.

The main reason I started this is because a radio presenter that I listen to regularly started a daily podcast on weight loss that is tracking his own weight loss journey. It’s really helped me out by keeping weight loss at the forefront of my mind daily, and a couple of the ideas below have come from this show. Here’s a link if you want to give it a listen. #365 - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-alex-baker-show-podcast/id446798798.

I started on 14/01/2019 weighing in at 130.3kg (287 lbs) and thought to myself that is way too much.

Prior to this, aside from a couple of mile stroll to work each day I did no exercise, I ate crap food that was easy to cook like oven pizzas and frozen chicken and chips, and that doesn’t even include the stuff I’d buy from the bakery or chocolate bars etc. (I can cook really well but if I’m being honest, I was pretty depressed and didn’t have the energy).

So, I put in my numbers into myfitnesspal and it churned 1720 calories a day without any exercise to lose 1kg a week. So far, I’m averaging a bit under that per day while doing some running and it’s been going great. I’m down to 105kg (231 lbs), I’m no longer obese and I need a significantly smaller belt.

Here’s a few tips and other things that I’ve worked out along the way that really helped me.

1 – Keep track of your calories.
This is really obvious but most people are pretty bad at knowing how many calories are in their food. Weigh your food, and don’t lie to yourself. myfitnesspal is a great tool for this and there are others as well. If you do use myfitnesspal, look at the reports, I feel you are really missing out if you don’t. Seeing the graph can really work for visual people who aren’t driven by numbers.

2 – Learn to cook.
This is another obvious one. If you know what's in the food you're eating, it's much easier to control. Lean meat and vegetables are a great way to get nutrition you need while keeping the calories low. You get a great sense of accomplishment when you learn to cook something, it'll be better for you than the store-bought/restaurant equivalent and it is a great life skill for you to have. You can make your own "ready-meals" for the freezer, and there are plenty of under 20 minute recipes for the times when you don't have the effort. And it's usually cheaper too.

3 – Have micro goals.
If your goal is to lose 50 lbs over the next year, that is great but a number that high can be daunting. Set yourself up to enjoy successes over the year with small weekly/monthly/quarterly goals and you’ll feel better for it because you are winning battles.

4 – It’s OK to start slow.
Losing weight isn’t easy. Many people are practically addicted to food (just listen to the justifications you give for that takeout/cake and try telling me you don’t sound like a drug addict/alcoholic). If you struggle to exercise, start taking mild walks. You’ll be happier for it, the walking will boost your endurance, and the weight loss will make the exercise easier.

5 -There is nearly always room for exercise.
If you have an hour lunch, take a walk for a couple of miles. If you get the bus, get off a stop earlier. Jogging is great and once you’ve built yourself up to it a 5km jog is under half an hour which you can probably fit in your busy schedule three times a week.

6 – Alcohol can ruin a day.
You lose your inhibitions and with it, your willpower and you will order that kebab/burger/pizza. Also, alcohol and other drinks have calories in them that need to be accounted for. I'd rather eat my calories rather than drinking them.

7 – Weight isn’t everything.
How do you feel? What’s your neck/waist measurement? Do your clothes fit better? If you do strength training this can be incredibly relevant as muscle gain = weight gain. Also work out how often you should weigh yourself. Daily will keep it at the forefront of your mind but can be toxic if you put on weight. Weekly can be easier to see weight loss but it may be even more devastating if you put on weight/don’t lose any. Also weight yourself at the same time of the day when you do weigh yourself. Monthly, you’ll definitely see a fairly accurate difference but you might not have it at the forefront of your mind regularly.

8 – Mondays aren’t special.
The amount of times someone says “I’ll start again on Monday” boggles me. Hell, I used to do it. Get back on the horse immediately. If you overeat on Wednesday, that’s not an excuse to not carry on with the diet till Monday. One day doesn’t ruin a week.

9 – Beware calorie creep.
It doesn’t matter if the sweets were brought in for the office by a coworker, they still have calories. Also, ketchup/mayonnaise/oil/drinks all have calories. Keep track of them.

10 – Control the chimp.
The idea is that you have your conscious brain and your subconscious (the chimp). Your conscious brain is sensible and tries to lose weight. The chimp is terrified that you’re not eating as much as usual and will do its utmost to convince you to eat more. You'll be craving food and depleting your willpower. Do what you can to not let it win. Put plans in place to stop it before it starts. If you always stop by the bakery on the way home from work, change your walking route. Delete your Just Eat account. Eat some food before you go food shopping so you’re not buying food when hungry. Make it a lot of effort to do the things you know you shouldn’t do. After a while you will get better at it.

11 – Keep hydrated.
Some people have real difficulty knowing if they’re thirsty/hungry. Drink a glass of water if you feel hungry then wait twenty minutes. See if you’re still hungry. (Also waiting 20 minutes before you get food if you’re hungry is a great way to train your ability to resist temptation. If you can wait twenty minutes, odds are you won’t be craving that donut anymore.)

12 – You need routine.
Routine is willpower’s best friend. If you go running on Monday and that is the default in your mind, it becomes easier to put your shoes on and go running. If you are intermittent fasting, then saying no to the donuts at work is much easier as you don’t eat at that time.

13 – What works for you is all that’s important.
I’m currently doing Intermittent fasting and it works for me. It might not work for you. With these sorts of things, the only golden rule i've ever seen not disproved is calories out > calories in = weight loss. But this isn’t necessarily healthy as you need a certain amount of protein/fibre/vitamins/etc. If you keep track of those and keep track of your calories, odds are you’ll do fine.

I’m not close to done yet (my target is 90kg). I still crave belgian chocolate shortbread from the bakery, I’m still struggling with the running and I’m still not happy with my body, but it really has been going well and I think that if you can break past the first few weeks the rest will be a lot easier that you could believe.

Keep on pushing yourself to where you want to be. This isn’t a Sisyphean task and you can finish it.

Good Luck

PS if you have any more tips, let me know below. I'm no expert and don't claim to be and any help would be appreciated, I've been doing this by myself for the last 4 months.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2Hpv7kn

My first 10 pounds!

I started my weight loss journey about 6 weeks ago, eating better and working out three days a week to start, and I just stepped on the scale for the first time since.

The last time I was weighed was at a doctor's visit where I came in at 349lbs. Definitely not where I wanted to be, and after years of emotional, bored, and binge, eating I decided that I have had enough.

Today I stepped on the scale for the first time since that doctor's visit, and I thought I was seeing things! It said 339! I stepped off and right back on just to make sure my eyes weren't playing tricks on me, and sure as shit! 339!! I'm so happy I was the only person in the gym at the time because I honestly cried.

This is the first time in 3 years that I've stepped on a scale to see that, instead of gaining weight, I've lost weight. No more excuses, no more self pity, I've got this!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2E6oDWS

A reminder to not be discouraged when the number on the scale increases a little bit

I'm still pretty early in my weight loss journey, but I've been doing CICO for 2 months now and I've lost 14lbs. I've been tracking my weight daily since about 2 weeks in and charting it in Excel in various formats.

A problem that I've had previously is that I would get super disheartened when my weight went up at all, or didn't change. And then it was like "If I'm going to restrict my eating and still put on weight, why not just eat what I want?", but this time I told myself I had to stick to the diet regardless of what the scale said. I was merely monitoring the scale. I would remind myself that I couldn't have really put on a whole pound in a day because I ate within my calorie limits and I certainly hadn't eaten 3500 excess calories and it was probably retained water or something and it would come off soon.

Here's a plot of all my daily weigh-ins, with a trend line drawn onto it. This covers 10lb of weight loss over 7 weeks. Although the trend line very clearly shows the weight is coming off at a reasonable pace, there are lots of individual days or even weeks where my weight was going up, despite the fact that I wasn't eating any differently. But it comes back down eventually and the general trend was down.

I had a bit of a disheartening week last week where (as you can see on the chart), my weight went from 176.8 to 179 in a few days and that freaked me out a bit, but it really helped me to look at previous little spikes and remind myself that it will eventually come back down, just like it did then.

So just a reminder that your weight probably won't get lower every single day in nice neat increments. As long as you know that you're eating within your limits, the rest will follow, so focus on the general trend and don't let a small increase throw you off!

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Treadmill and elliptical tips for those who havent done a distance run since the seventh grade.

I’m 20 years old, 67 inches, and I weights 145lbs. I’m not happy with what my body looks like so I’m going to join my local gym here in the next few days and I’m going to start using the treadmill and elliptical there. I know that weight loss and fat loss starts in the kitchen and I’m going to better my eating but I’m afraid I’m going to get on that treadmill for the first time and give up completely. I don’t even know where to start I just want to like what my body looks like. I have a pair of incentive jeans that I’ve had for 15 months that I still can’t get into and id like to fit in them because they are adorable. I just want to lose 18lbs or so.

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