Tuesday, June 11, 2019

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Wednesday, 12 June 2019

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

NSV: First cheat meal in 121 days, didn't feel guilty

So last night I went out to celebrate handing in my last piece of assessment to complete my undergrad degree. This is my 17th week of weight loss and I've managed to drop 31kg, and at first I was really hesitant to sway from my diet but this was one of the few things that deserved a celebration.

Ended up having a truffle chicken burger and some loaded bbq beef fries. Was still the only thing I ate that day, so I think I may have even stayed under my 1500 calorie limit! My TDEE recommends 3278 so either way it shouldn't matter too much. The scales might not move this week, but hell, that could just be from all the extra salt.

Time moves regardless, and one bad meal means nothing over such a long time. Cheat days are okay, even though you want to deny yourself until you're happy with looking at yourself in the mirror. Sometimes you don't always like what you see. that the hard work doesn't seem to be helping too much, but plateaus happen. The thing is, sometimes it's hard to say yes when you've been doing so well for so long, but its good to take a break, even for a day.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2WDqY6M

Coke Zero

Hows it going everyone, I have a quick question for all of you awesome people.

In your personal experience, has Coke Zero stalled your weight loss? I've been drinking these suckers whenever I get a craving for sweets and so far it hasn't shown any impacts on weight loss. However, I keep seeing articles that are stating "any diet drink is bad for you blah blah blah". I've been eating a ton better now that I'm home from college and have already seen the results. I'm starting to workout like I did back in high school so I'm off to a really great start. Anyway, Being that Coke Zero has been the only alternative to combatting any cravings I get, it would mean a ton to have some personal experiences with Coke Zero. If you need any background I'm a 20 year old male that is 5'10 and 242 pounds (down 10 lbs in 17 days so again, doing great so far!) Anyway, thanks for taking the time for providing any input. I really appreciate it!

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

Going to Disney in 362 days. I'm the fattest I have ever been

Hi there, Long time lurker, weight loss failure several times. My parents surprised my family with a trip to Disney almost a year from now. I'm the fattest I have ever been. 33 year old full time dad. 345 lbs. This isn't the first trip to Disney with my family and our children, but dang do I not want to be fat in Disney again.

Since my divorce I thought I was going to lose weight and get in shape to one up my X. It was the other way around. She lost all the weight and one upped me. Because I was the food enabler. It's hard to admit, but when she didn't have my income to eat or me getting it she lost weight.

Now I'm at 345. 3 4 5. Gross. I hate my body, my joints hate me, work is hard becuase I have to stand all day and put 3 4 5 lbs on my knees. I have a sports car I don't drive becuase getting in a out whilr being fat sucks.

I keep seeing success stories about losing weight in a year. If I was able to lose 100lb in a year I would be so happy. I haven't been 245 lbs in a decade probably. Lowest I ever got to was 200 Taking a pill that is no longer made.

So here's to hopefully starting and staying on track this time. Just doing cico at 1200 to 1500ish calories a day. 2lb a week x 52 weeks is 104. How hard can it be?

Hopefully I can get out of my own head and this depression type feeling and kick this in the butt.

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

I thank myself every day that I made the decision to start

Weight loss/fitness progress is something that money can't buy. There are probably out of shape millionaires out there who would give insane amounts of money if they could get a fit body instantly. Everybody is equal when it comes to that, it only takes time and determination. It is also quite simple - you eat less and train more, everybody understands what they have to do in general, but most people don't have the determination to actually do it. Having a fit body is really something that has huge value in your life and something you should be proud of, it is much easier to be out of shape.

Every single day since I made the decision to transform my body 5 months ago feels like an accomplishment. And I know that 5 months of hard work is already behind me, I don't have to go through that again, and that's why I know that I will not fall of the rails once I achieve my goal body, because I never want to go through that again. It is much easier to maintain than to transform. So I thank myself that I made the decision 5 months ago because now I am enjoying the fruits of it instead of having to start from zero all over again. Altho it will always require that you put in work, I still have days when I want to skip training, I still have cravings, I still want to party but I have learned to do that in moderation too.

I have managed to force myself to train and not to cave in to cravings, it does get easier with time but laziness/cravings will never completely disappear, you will always have to fight them. At the end of the day, having a fit body IS WORTH IT, 100%, it is something that you will enjoy for the rest of your life instead of enjoying short term dopamine boosts, and you never have to be embarassed about your body or worry about your health either. I also feel like I owe it to myself, to look the way that god intended me to be, instead of being an out of shape piece of meat, bones and fat.

submitted by /u/Skizzy4325
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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2MGMVgw

Does cellulite really not go away?

5’10”, 178 lbs here. I used to be 155 and my heaviest was 189, so I packed some on. In that, I ended up with cellulite on my thighs (front and back).

I’m really self conscious about it and am hoping that with more weight loss, it’s going to diminish. However, I just looked it up recently and the Mayo Clinic states that once you get it — that’s it. Fat cells are there for life.

I know the Mayo Clinic is very official and all, but I’m more of an experience person. Can anyone who was either similar stats or put on 30+ lbs/gained cellulite share your experience with it post weight loss? Like did it become less noticeable, or smoother, or is it really how the Mayo Clinic’s research say it is?

Also, if you did experience it going down, will you share what moves you thought helped? If there’s nothing specific, that’s cool.

And if I have to start coping with the fact that I’ll now always have cellulite, well, that’s not really cool, but better now than later.

I’m currently doing Jillian Michaels 21 minute HIIT videos and cardio, but am starting to incorporate more strength moves after the videos, so any specific leg exercise recommendations for targeting cellulite (even if it just goes down a little) would be appreciated!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat http://bit.ly/2F5LbaJ

3 weeks and 4lbs of a 30lb goal on CICO. Thoughts on what's been working for me so far.

Hey everyone,

I'm a 28 year old male, 201lbs to start which worked out to a BMI of 27, solidly overweight and I looked it. I've slowly gained for the last two years and my clothes no longer fit. If that wasn't bad enough, my blood pressure and blood sugar has been creeping up to the point where I've been starting to worry about my long-term health.

A couple weeks ago was my birthday and I decided I needed to make permanent change. In the past I've tried OMAD and keto but failed after a month for different reasons:

OMAD had quick results but was too hard to maintain. I'm used to skipping breakfast but was not able to skip lunch and so skipped dinner. I would wake up famished and needed to eat before I could go back to sleep. I proved unsustainable for me.

I had some success on keto but that ultimately failed too because it reinforced my taste for high-calorie foods, and was too difficult to keep myself in ketosis while living with my partner and maintaining a social life. Eat carbs for one day, you're screwed, for days afterward.

The problem with both was that they weren't good long term diets for me. I couldn't wait to be "done" with weight loss, which ultimately would have led to a rebound. At the end of the day, I came to view them both as just "tricks" to get you to consume fewer calories. Enter CICO.

CICO appealed to me because it's quantitative, simple, and intuitive. No tricks, no complex science, just math. I've been doing CICO for three weeks now and am averaging a very sustainable 1.33lbs per week loss, without much pain. I'd like to share some tips on what's been working for me!

  1. A food scale and strict logging is the #1 pro-tip for CICO. I personally have a spreadsheet of every day and the calories of each meal + extra (snacks, etc). Everything I eat I weigh out and plug in. I have a tab on this sheet containing the calories per gram of the most common items in my kitchen so I can quickly calculate calories on the fly. Find a way to make it easy and you'll do it. Cooking at home makes CICO easy for me because you can figure out exactly how many calories are in your pot when you weigh everything out as you go!
  2. Figure out the most calorie dense foods in your diet and curtail them. For me, peanut butter, nuts, bacon, and potato chips were major problem foods because I could easily eat 1000 calories without feeling full. They're not inherently bad, but the calorie density made overeating easy and common.
  3. Conversely, figure out healthy snacks from foods you already enjoy and indulge in those instead. My favorite snacks these days are a bowl of greek yoghurt with honey or sugar-free jam mixed in, or cottage cheese topped with pesto. I've also re-discovered popcorn. Popcorn is great and cheap for snacking and can be topped with any seasoning you like. Definitely satisfies my junk food craving. My favorite is popcorn spritzed with olive oil and tossed with cheddar cheese powder and salt. I highly recommend an air popper and oil spritzer for this.
  4. Keep in mind that while exercise is good for you and you should do it (I run 2 miles 3x per week, have for years), diet is what's going to make you lose weight, or not. Put your energy and focus there.
  5. A big problem for CICO is eating out and "cheat" days. I eat at a 1000 calorie deficit most days but have actually still been doing a decent amount of eating out and "cheating" on the weekends. Estimate as best you can and try not to go overboard. For nights I really want to go "all out", ie dinner and drinks, I do OMAD in preparation, which has worked well
  6. Speaking of which, alcohol is a big problem. Try to order low-calorie options (my favorite is whiskey on the rocks) and limit yourself to 1-2 drinks. Log the calories in the booze, of course. I've found, like with food, I'm satisfied after drinking less now.
  7. Similarly, for those of you who use marijuana and get the munchies, find tricks to mitigate this. Mine is to only take 5mg edibles (less than my normal dose) and only later in the night than I would have in the past. I find ice water with a flavor enhancer is a great thing to sip on and prevents me from wanting to binge.
  8. Lastly, it's massively motivating to see your progress happen in realtime. Take progress pics, in the same lighting, every week on the same day. I love data and weight myself in the morning every day. I've added graphs to my spreadsheet showing that my theoretical calculated weight loss lines up almost exactly with the actual reads on my smart scale. When you get it dialed in, you'll actually be able to measure how many calories you consumed on a day you didn't track by your weight! You'll also be able to accurately predict when you'll hit your target weight based on your trajectory. See these graphs for what I'm talking about.

Anyway, this wound up being long, and I recognize i'm not as far in my journey as some on this sub (and don't have as far to go). Nonetheless, I'm excited with my progress and feel happy that I feel I've hit on a formula that I can keep up and hope some of my tips will help you too!

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