Friday, July 12, 2019

Please help me calm down because I’m freaking out

I went to the doctor today for a physical. According to their scale, I’m 80 kg. I’m 5’0.5”. That’s a BMI of 35. The last time I weighed that much was many years ago.

Way back when I started my weight loss thing, I was 212 pounds. I was wearing an XL/Size 18.

I made it down to about 135, size 8-10, and have been there ever since. I’m active-ish with biking, and walking, and I’m starting I get back into running, but apparently I’ve still managed to gain almost fifty pounds even though I’m still a size 8/10. I don’t get it.

I figured because my clothing sizes weren’t changing, I was still hanging around in the 130’s. How did I gain fifty pounds and keep the same clothing size?

Please help me rationalize this because I’m scared I’m going to fall back into disordered eating. I’m already trying to fight my brain that’s telling me I don’t deserve to eat today.

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2JL47wG

I've lost 39 pounds in 100 days and am 25% of the way to my goal

On April 1st I got on the scale and weighed in at 351 lbs (159.2 Kilos for those that don't like freedom units). This wasn't an April fools joke, seeing that number on the scale scared me and I knew I needed to do something. The problem was I didn't know what to do. At first I ate less at meals and cut out carbs where I thought I could. Then I stumbled on this subreddit and started reading. The stories of weight loss and transformation inspired me.

On April 15th I started using MFP and from that day on I have tracked every crumb I have eaten. This is an incredible pain in the ass sometimes, but it has been so worth it for me. I've also tracked data in a spreadsheet and created graphs to follow my progress. Along with that I've managed to make it to the gym 40 times in those 100 days which isn't as often as I would like but it's better than I was doing.

What I've learned isn't new or groundbreaking but I'll still share it with you.

1) Losing weight isn't linear. I weigh myself every day that I can. My weight will rise and fall seemingly randomly but at the end of the week I weigh less than I did at the start of the week. I know a plateau is likely coming at some point and I'm mentally preparing for that.

2) Losing weight is a slow process. Yes I've lost a lot in a short amount of time but I know that pace won't continue. I didn't gain all this weight overnight so it's not going to go away overnight.

3) Not everyone looses weight the same way. Whether it's Keto, IF, CICO, Intuitive Eating, or something else pick what works for you. Just make sure you are being healthy about it. For me it's CICO. My TDEE according to the spreadsheet in the FAQ is 3380 Kcal. I talked with my physician and 'm averaging 1719 Kcal per day (I'm shooting for 1700 so I think I'm doing pretty well.) This is pretty aggressive weight loss but still has me in the 1% body weight per week loss range.

4) You really don't have to workout to loose weight. If you eat fewer calories than you need to maintain, then you will loose weight. Working out can help to get you into that deficit, just be sure you don't eat back those calories.

5) Stay positive. At first weighing myself every day almost threw me off the rails. I would not loose any weight or I would gain weight which would demoralize me. I had to keep telling myself that this is a long process. This is also why I started a spreadsheet and started tracking data. I can see that over the long term my weight is going down and that gets me through the times where I don't see the progress.

6) Time is going to pass no matter what you do. I kept telling myself I'll start on Mondy or I'll start on the first or I'll start after X event or holiday. There is no reason to not start today. Start right now, don't give yourself another excuse not to. 100 days from now you can be in the same place you are now or you can be on the journey to a healthier you.

7) If I can do this you can do this. 100 days ago (102 but I was too busy the last 2 to post this) I was a lazy lump that spent too much time sitting around and eating everything I could get into my mouth. Now I'm a less lazy lump that eats whatever I want (just less of it) and I'm down 39 pounds, my blood pressure is lower and I feel better. I know I have a long way to go but I'll get there eventually.

If anyone has any questions or needs someone to bust up their excuses hit me up.

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2xN5fuk

Fallen off track and trying my best not to be upset with myself.

Hello everyone, I hope you're having a wonderful Friday.

I started my weight loss journey in August of 2018 with a goal of losing 40 pounds (about 18kg) and was making steady progress until January of 2019. I sustained a knee injury-my right knee is prone to spraining, and have gone completely off the rails with my diet and exercise since it happened. I know regaining 5 pounds out of 20 doesn't sound like a lot, but how do you ladies, gentlemen, and non-binary friends return to diet and exercise after a bump in the road? I'm really upset with myself and it's causing me to fall deeper into my old habits.

Thank so much for reading and have a lovely weekend!

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2l686LI

I lost 2 pounds in one week using the CICO method and MFP

Just a little background,

I lost 100lbs a couple years ago and had been maintaining around 160 for a good year. I was 264.3lbs at my heaviest. I am a female, 5'9, and I weighed myself last week at work and I couldn't believe it. I was up to 184.2lbs. Since I've lost weight before, I knew I was capable, but each re-start attempt becomes increasingly difficult. I've been trying to get back at it for months, but I just couldn't stick to a routine. Something clicked inside me when I saw those numbers. I feel like it was my promise to myself that I would never be over or close to 200lbs again. I downloaded MyFitnessPal when I got back to my desk, calculated my TDEE, and set a deficit. I haven't exceeded my daily calorie count for the past 7 days. Today marked a week, so I weighed myself again on the same scale, with the same amount of clothing, and at the same time of day.

TWO POUNDS!

I know it's not much, but it's good for a week, right? And I mean hey, any pounds lost is still pushing me in the right direction. It feels amazing to see the progress line on MFP go down, and I can't wait to see my future progress. I guess the point of this post was to share my excitement, but also to encourage my fellow loseit redditors to keep going. Weight loss is so hard, and we as humans crave instant gratification, but Rome wasn't built in a day. Weight loss is a slow and steady process, but the journey is well worth it in the end.

Thank you for listening. It feels good to be back on the path to health again :)

submitted by /u/huffelpuff333
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2jzu2hQ

F, 5'2 215-240 lbs: I feel bad I gained 25 lbs in seven months

I went through a lot of changes that got me to let my body go. I am taking medications for my schizophrenia and during the three years and eight months of taking meds I gained 75 lbs (180-255). Two years ago I focused too much on losing weight and I admit it took a toll on me since it's all I think about. I managed to go down to 215lbs. During new year I let myself go. I steadily gained weight and going to the scale scares the beejesus out of me until three days ago. I found work online so I focused on that, too.

I feel bad, but I feel much better than I don't obsess about weight anymore. Now I got back to herbalife shakes as a way to control my weight because it's so hard to choose healthy food at home. It took my mind off calorie counting. It's been one week of herbalife shakes and I lost 2.6lbs. it's much slower compared to before because when I was in high school I lost 5lbs a week. Now I'm medicated even losing a goddamn pound is hard.

Just want to put my story out there so I may be a successful weight loss story of a Schizophrenic. 😂

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2jEQ8zv

Should I exercise? If so what should I do and how much? Been losing weight via food for 3 weeks & thinking of stepping up my game.

I’ve been eating at a 500-calorie deficit and in the last three weeks I’ve lost somewhere between 3-4 pounds so far, amount depends on what time of day I weigh myself (I weigh less in the morning, it fluctuates). Importantly, I’ve been paying close attention to both what I eat and how much I eat, with a special focus on getting lots of protein so I don’t feel lightheaded. I don’t always eat perfectly but I’ve been hitting my calorie goal more often than not. At my worst lately I’ve eaten at maintenance for a day.

I’ve also gone swimming a few times. I like swimming so it’s not hard for me to tell myself to do it. After I swim I tend to allow myself to eat up to half of the calories I burned swimming as long as I haven’t already gone over my amount for the day.

So for example, yesterday when I went swimming for 25 minutes I had about 250 calories left in my budget. I logged the swim as 20 minutes because I know that people overestimate calories burned in exercise.

A 20-minute leisurely freestyle swim for someone my weight (184) burns around 200 calories. I then allowed myself to eat my remaining 250 calories for the day, plus an extra 100 since I had gone swimming. My tracker showed that due to the calories I’d burned swimming, I actually came in under my deficit goal for the day by 100 calories. If I’d only been looking at food, I would have been over by 100.

It may help to know that I also had a craving for the particular food that put me “over” the limit, and had I not gone swimming, I probably would have ended up eating it anyway.

Anyway, I’m wondering if I should make it a goal to swim regularly. I’d like to do 2 45-minute swims on the weekend and maybe an extra 20-30 minute swim during the week if I can fit it in. I’m planning to keep using my same approach where I only eat up to half the calories I burn in swimming. (I track everything as sedentary by default.)

I’m also wondering if I should be doing strength training. That would be something I’d actually need to push myself to do. It would just be some basic calisthenics because I am out of shape. I don’t really have a desire to do it, I’ve just read that cardio + strength training is better for weight loss than cardio alone.

Please advise, thanks!

submitted by /u/throwawayacct5962
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2XO80Gt

19 lbs down - Thoughts on the first 2 months

So I stepped on the scale in early May and I weighed 249 lbs. I'm 40, male and 6'4", for reference. It's the most I've ever weighed. It scared me a bit because I knew the next time I weighed myself I'd probably be 250 or more. I thought I'd give some thoughts about what I've done - maybe it will help some people.

I started tracking in MFP on May 12. I started weighing myself every day at the same time. Every day I would record my cals and weight in 3-Suns Adaptive TDEE Spreadsheet. If you've never heard of it, it's a spreadsheet where all you do is enter your start date, your starting weight, your goal weight and your goal weight loss per week at the top. Then you just log calories eaten and your weight daily. It uses that information to calculate your TDEE and to tell you how many calories to eat to meet your weight loss goal. I highly recommend you use this spreadsheet.

Here's a picture of what mine looks like after 2 months.

A few things to notice:

  • If you miss logging a day, that's okay. The spreadsheet compensates for it. You'll notice that I never weighed myself on weekends. The reason is because I weigh myself on a scale at work.
  • Column K gives you your average weight and calories for that week. I tried not to pay attention to daily weight because it swings around so much. The weekly average helped me avoid worrying too much about staying the same for too long. You will also notice that the spreadsheet reports your Current Weight as the average of the current week, not as what you weighed yesterday. So for me it says my current weight is 230 lbs even though my scale showed 228.5 yesterday.
  • Column M gives you your calculated TDEE. To be honest my TDEE was a lot higher than I thought it would be. I thought it would be around 3000 based on my size and activity level but it is closer to 3300 or 3400. I had read that the spreadsheet takes about 3 weeks to get your TDEE right and that is about what happened with me.
  • At the end of each month, on the far right side, the spreadsheet gives you a nice summary of your average weight loss per week, how much you lost that month and how many pounds until your goal weight.
  • You'll notice my calorie intake is all over the place. One day I only ate 1846 cals and one day I ate 3500 cals. My goal has been 2400 cals per day but rarely do I make that exactly. This goes back to what I said above about being more concerned with averages than daily stats.

Ultimately, this spreadsheet helps me know where I'm at but the reason I'm losing weight is because I drastically changed my diet. I cut out all soda and snacking after 8:00 pm. I used to think nothing of going up to the vending machine at work and getting a snickers at break. I realized a medium Oreo Concrete Mixer at Culver's is 960 calories (!!!) and had to cut them out completely. Before May 12, I can't remember the last time I actually felt hungry. I ate stuff out of habit, not because my body needed it.

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2xJwvKb