Monday, June 3, 2019

Today my doctor advised me to eat 800cal a day.

I had my yearly physical today and have been going to this doctor for over a decade since I was a teenager. My whole family even goes to him and he’s always been a great doctor in the past. Always very caring and gave good advice and correct treatment plans for whatever was needed.

When I went in today I spoke to him about how I’ve been trying to lose weight and how I’m down 15lbs at the moment. I voiced my concern for wanting to lose weight rather quickly, because I have some important events coming up and just want to enjoy summer being thin. I’ve always been healthy with my weight loss and kept track of my intake which is around 1200.

My doctor told me that I can safely eat 800 cal a day for the next couple of months. I was pretty shocked because I’ve always heard not to go below 1200 and that’s even for a small female. I’m female, 5’6 and 140 (use to be 155) but he said as long as I can keep up with some vitamins and have blood work done regularly, it would be fine.

That being said, I don’t think I’m going to do 800 because I’m hungry as shit at 1200. But figured I’d share with you guys.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2IhgUq9

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Tuesday, 04 June 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


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

Learning to accept stretch marks

Hey all. I've been on my weight loss journey for a few weeks now and managed to get from 260 down to 228. It feels great fitting into smaller clothes and I'm happy to be making positive changes in my life for once.

I'm 20 years old and for the entirety of my life until recently I ate terribly. My parents never taught me how to eat healthy so I've always been overweight. I never really cared about my appearance until recently and I feel like my carelessness has resulted in a lot of irreversible damage.

I started looking at people's weight loss transformations online and I got so hopeful that maybe one day I could have an amazing body with lots of patience and hard work. I get really motivated when I look at the progress that others have made and the idea of being able to live comfortably in my own skin is something I've always dreamed of.

This weight loss journey has made me more conscious of my own body. For the first time ever I've begun to explore and slowly began to notice that the entirety of my upper body is effectively scarred with these deep, unsightly stretch marks. I've always been very secretive of my body and never change in front of anyone.

Being careless all these years means I was never paying attention to these things, and when I started standing in the light of my lamp I just felt terrible looking around and seeing all these nasty lines all over my body. I'm taking shoulders, stomach, back. Pretty much everywhere.

I've done my fair share of research and I know that these marks are permanent but it honestly hurts to know that even though I continue to work towards getting in shape that I'll never have the confidence to wear a tank top or go to the beach shirtless.

It's extremely depressing to run my fingers across my body and feel nothing but stretch marks everywhere. It really destroys my confidence because I can't even begin to fathom comfortably being shirtless in front of anyone.

These are the consequences of a lifetime of poor decisions and I'm aware that I must learn to accept them but it's just so extremely difficult. Whenever I see a guy with a flawless body with no loose skin or stretch marks in sight I feel nothing but shame because I know I can never achieve that myself.

Have any of you gone through something similar? How did you learn to accept these things? Any advice is sincerely appreciated.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2WJF0TA

Maintaining and going slowly

So I am a human and not a robot. Now that I'm aware of the problem of being overweight I want it fixed yesterday. We all know weight loss doesn't work like that. From the start of 2018 until now I have experienced the following things:

- Had a break up in Feb 20118 that messed me up a bit

- Provide live-in care for a close friend who ultimately passed of cancer

- Got made redundant from my dream job

- Lost another family friend to cancer (you know, the best mate of your Dad you call uncle, but he isn't your uncle? That guy)

- Work a minimum wage job to pay rent to make it through after applying for (in the end) around 80+ jobs

- Go back to full-time study

- Start a new relationship (few months in, seems to be going well!)

- Got diagnosed with ADHD

- Shaved my head for fundraising for cancer charities (I'm a woman with what was previously very very long hair, so it was quite a strange, fun, cathartic decision)

- Hit 89.5kg back in June 2018 and decide to make some changes

- Started bushwalking again. A lifelong passion that I had been previously neglecting

- Spend more time with a community group that I really value and did some fun projects with them last summer (I'm in Australia, so summer is Christmas time for me)

I'm not special. These are pretty standard life events for many people, both really super shit and also pretty good are up in that list. ADHD diagnosis was a huge positive revelation for me. We all have really intense shit going on in our lives. But last year, I did the Christmas Challenge Lose it organises and got down to 74.4kg. That was my target. For my height and weight somewhere around 66-69kg is optimum for me. But I've sat here at 74ish kg for the past 6 months. Just chilling. I've lost 15ish kg all told and that's huge. Sure, I've got around 7ish to go (I'm not into the exact number end goal, more about what 'feels' right), but it's not a sprint. So I've paused to maintain before the next push.

Maintaining is SUPER hard. Especially when you start dating someone new and it's exciting, so you want to go out and drink wine and eat cheese together. The temptation to get (what my brother calls) 'relationship fat' through food is pretty strong. But I eat sensible portions and go slow.

So I hang out here in Lose It. I read your stories. You (unknowingly) pump me up. Grief has been getting to me a bit recently. It was what should've been my friends birthday recently and grief hits ya hard. So, you might soothe with junk food, stay on the couch, wrap up in a blanket and weep a little. That's part of life and let yourself feel those things. Maybe you (like me) started with eating a whole large pizza in private shame. Now my grief looks like eating a cheese toastie with homemade soup or splitting a small pizza with my boyfriend and then eating some berries later if you're still hungry. It's still comforting, but not what it previously was and I feel better in myself for it.

I didn't really have a real reason for making this post, I just wanted to reach out to the community and say I see you. I see you making hard choices, but sometimes you're out of juice. That's ok. Think about the last year of your life. Make a list of the things you got through - both good and bad. Keep it in perspective. Instead of thinking "urghhhhh I've been losing weight for a year and I'm still not there!" I think about how far I've come and why I made the choice to go slow. I've heard about yo-yo dieting, not changing habits long term and how easy it is to fall off the posi habit train etc and I want it to be a change for my whole life, so it doesn't happen instantly. Instead of "I've still got 7 kg to go!" I think "Fucking hell I lost 15kg in 6 months last year! I'm 2 thirds of the way there!"

Other (unsolicited) advice from experiencing unemployment grief, family dying grief and relationship grief in the space of 18 months:

- walk around the block if you don't feel like a workout. It'll do heaps for your mental health

- leave the house every day. See above.

- Shower after you get back from your walk.

- the library is a nice place to visit with more than just books if you're poor. I eat when I'm sad and lonely. Books can be places to find new healthy recipes, magazines, community groups etc. I met a group to go on bush walks there and I see them every few months. Plus librarians have a rep for being harsh, but odds on you'll find someone there who likes a chat. I forgot about a book when my uncle died and got a huge fine on it. I was talking to the librarian to pay it and told him why and he wiped the fine. Then I cried I was so grateful. Then he made me a cup of tea and told me what he was reading at the moment and chatted to me about books. He totally saved that day for me and I see him there regularly and we have far more nice normal chats now and he never mentions the 'me crying' thing. He's a champ.

- Freeze soup in portions so you have a quick and easy healthy meal that you don't have to think about. You will be finished eating soup before the metaphorical pizza even arrives.

- I make constant bargains with myself. Eat the soup today, buy a long black at the nice cafe tomorrow and drink it in (not take away) and read their papers as a treat. "If you walk to that bridge and you still want to turn around, you can go home then". "You can't go finish this walk until you hear the end of this podcast"

- Ask your friends to go on a bushwalk/picnic on a certain day. If they can't make it, still do it on your own and then do it again with them when they're free. Being social helps my food habits and my mental health also helps my food habits, whilst still doing the thing is good for me and teaches me to be stronger on my own. Not everyone is free all the time, so do it regardless and then you'll become known for it. Friends ask me to go on bushwalks now instead of the other way around. I went for a walk with my boyfriend on Saturday and we saw a group of 5 teenage boys using the work out space in the park (my park has play equipment for adults) and part of their rest breaks on their circuit was cooking food on the BBQ. Then they all ate together at the picnic table between the gym gear and the BBQ. Honestly, it was so wholesome it inspired me to ask some of my friends to do the same thing this weekend.

- Get out of bed. Make your bed. Move to the couch instead. Don't go back to bed until bedtime.

- The community of r/NonZeroDay is really helpful. Sometimes it can be hard seeing people achieve their goals that seem so far ahead of you on loseit, even if you are happy for them. This community exists to support you through the hard times. Making your bed is an achievement and this space exists to support that.

I didn't really know what I was going to write here when I started. These are all the things that I've done to maintain my weight loss and not lost motivation long term. You get all jazzed at the start, then something shit happens and it trips you up. These things are what I do when I trip. And if you fall over, that's ok too. You've got that trip, give yourself a space to feel what you need and then get back up tomorrow. I believe in you and if I know anything about the Lose It space, they believe in you too x

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One year later and 45 pounds lighter

One year ago, I began my weight loss journey and a journey towards a generally healthier lifestyle. I started this journey at approximately 225 lbs and now I am down to around 180 lbs, which is a total of about 45 lbs. I didn’t cut out any foods. I just simply became more mindful of my portions and caloric intake, as well as light to moderate exercise. I also had to accept and address my sugar addiction (yes, sugar addiction is a real thing). I still enjoy sweets and desserts, but I am no longer plagued by the intense cravings of them. Losing weight was just one of the benefits to changing my lifestyle. I also have more energy and mental clarity overall. Before, I was feeling extremely lethargic and foggy. It goes to show that lifestyle changes can make a huge difference to your mind and body.

I know that 45 pounds may not seem like much, but I feel that it’s definitely healthier than what I was before.

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

After 4 years of maintaining weightloss - these are my thoughts

This is long and messy and has swear words in it. Forgiveness, please.

A dear friend of mine wondered out loud recently how other people stay motivated to lose weight or keep weight off.

I don’t even feel slightly qualified to answer that. Having lost a respectable chunk of weight, and being 4 years into keeping it off, I don’t think there is a pat answer. Something like that is entirely personal and individual.

And it’s a loaded question. Fraught with all sorts of booby traps about what we weigh, what we think we should weigh, what societally acceptable weights are, and the vast, seething, swirling quagmire of lies, pseudo-science and hot, runny bullshit about HOW people lose weight. (And how they don’t, and how they gain it back. And how they get all fucked up it in the process.)

And, there’s the pervasive belief that losing weight is good. For me, it certainly wasn't. Don’t misunderstand. I didn’t like being fat. I like being thinner much more. I didn’t do it to look better. I didn’t do it so that random strangers would find me more attractive. I did it because I wanted to be freer, happier, stronger, wilder, and less afraid. I really was scared. Scared of the negative health consequences of my weight. Scared that I would be looking at disability because of it in a few years. Scared that I was missing out on life, that my weight was holding me back and that that I could be living a fuller, richer, more complete life if it wasn’t for my weight holding me down.

And yet, when people ask, and when people notice - they don’t comment on how happy I look, or how I’m able to snowshoe all day without resting. They don’t comment on how fine my kayaking stroke is, or compliment me on my ability to climb up stairs without puffing. The comments are all about how I look. I know, I know. That gets me up on my gender politics soapbox. I get that our society IS geared that way. My issues are mine - but that was a bit of a mental block for me to clamber over. Sort of a sense of “look, I’m not doing this so that you’ll want to fuck me. I’m doing this to be happier. And quite frankly, you (random stranger) wanting to have sex with me does NOT make me happy.” But hey. That’s just me.

If I had any advice at all (and I’m not sure I do) I would say this: let joy and pleasure be your guide. Take pleasure in your body and all the remarkable things it can do. Be joyful about being strong and flexible and build on that. Enjoy your food. Eat for pleasure. Exercise for pleasure. Enjoy the way your body moves. As things change, be happy. Be scared if you need to - but be joyful. If your weight loss regime is making you miserable - you’re doing it wrong. You can’t starve yourself into being happy, and you can’t exhaust yourself into being thin.

I’ve cried a lot during my weight loss. The first time I threw myself into my kayak and the gunwales didn’t touch the water, I cried. The first time I saw I weighed less than 100Kg, I cried. The first time I saw I weighed less than 90Kg, I cried. I cried when I put on my bespoke shirt, and it wasn’t so bespoke anymore. I cried the day I walked right out of my pants. I cried in the T-shirt line at a concert for cripes sake. Bought an XL shirt and it hung on me like a tunic. I cried the day I didn’t recognize my own reflection and tried to say hello to the strange woman in the mirror. I cried for joy, mostly.

I didn’t quite believe in my heart that I could make these changes in myself. I was surprised when I did, and that choked me up. And, too - I was scared. It IS scary when you don’t recognize yourself. It was sad to me that I was saying goodbye to that fat girl. She was pretty cool, you know. I liked her a lot. It’s hard to say goodbye to someone you love. Not that you really ever have to say goodbye to yourself. You’re still gonna be YOU - no matter HOW much weight you lose. Just that you have to say goodbye to some of the mental images, and longstanding beliefs you have/had about yourself. For the most part, those are good changes. But you’re still allowed to be sad about changes in general.

Several years ago - I got married. Like it or not, there is a subtle shift in the way people treat you when they think you’re married. It’s like you take on a certain adult level of status, and people do treat you slightly more respectfully because of it.

I cry about this reality too - but the same thing happens with weight loss. I’m treated differently. It’s like people assume I’m more grown up, more reasonable, controlled, moderate and “adultier” than they did when I was fat.

What keeps me going is the joy. I love being able to shop in any store in the mall. I feel much joy when I throw myself into my kayak and the gunwales don’t touch the water. I love being able to see the muscles under my skin, and the way my body moves - loose and light and easy. I love not being scared about my weight, or thinking it’s going to kill me one day. Its a relief not being scared of my own body.

I’ve come to realize along the way that a lot of what we think we know about losing weight is bullshit. Almost everything you read in magazines about it is wrong. Shows like The Biggest Loser and My 600lb Life give a very, very distorted (and mindboggling fucked up) view on weight loss. Reality is more like this: You will never reach your “goal weight”. You will never weigh what you did in highschool. If you do, you will never keep it off. Simply because the factors and causes that led to you being overweight in the first place will not go away just because you managed to lose weight. You’ll still be you, in other words. The reasons you feel compelled to eat, the reasons you rarely feel satisfied, the drivers that cause you to use food for solace will still be there. You may think you’re overweight because you “eat too much and don’t exercise enough”. I can assure you, the truth is actually far, far deeper down the rabbit hole. The trick is to figure out WHY you eat too much, and then, figure out if its even WORTH doing anything about that. You may not like the answers. I sure as hell didn’t.

I will never be my “perfect” weight of 64kg. And I’m ok with that. Maybe as time goes by, I’ll get closer to that number than I am now. Maybe I won’t. Who cares? My boat floats. I’m wearing a pair of size 11 pants, and I can buy a swimsuit that fits me just about anywhere. I can run, I can lift, I can dance, and I can push your car out of a snowdrift if you need help. I’m no longer prepared to let Perfect be the enemy of Good. Don’t let Someday be the enemy of Today.

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[SV] Back On The Wagon - Down 26 Pounds Total Now

Hey all,

As usual I’ve been my own biggest enemy. Start strong, fizzle. Gain it back. Start strong, fizzle. Gain it back then maybe a few more pounds in the process.

I’m happy to say now that I’m at my lowest weight in two years. Hopefully I keep this trend going and hit my old weight before I ate my way out of a dark fridge.

How’d I Do This So Far?

My initial weight loss of 12 lbs was from weight watchers. I lost 20 lbs, but gained eight back when falling off the wagon. I lost around 14 in the past two weeks or so.

I recently started a new job where I’m working on average 12 hours a day. Some days will be 8-10, or I may be kept over for as many as 16. But the average shift is 12.

The biggest thing that changed is I’m out on my own now and I just don’t have the money to spend on all the excessive alcohol and pizza that was a staple of my past diet.

The biggest thing has been just eating significantly less while being significantly more active. During the average 12 hour shift I’m on my feet the entire time unless I’m doing paperwork, or on my 30 minute lunch break. On average I walk 10 miles or more in a shift.

While on shift I don’t usually eat. I’ll have a red bull before I go in, then I drink about 20 bottles of water or more a day. On my lunch break I’ll have a quick sandwich, then a coffee and get back go it.

When home I’ll make a quick burrito bowl with chicken, rice, and all kinds of delicious goodies.

On my last work day of the week I treat myself to something delicious. Maybe a calzone, or fried chicken. I usually drink with my coworkers the next day. Then it’s back to normal eating.

I’m still trying to get the routine down, but I’m hoping this’ll work for me for a bit.

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