Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Why you should exercise during your weight loss

Hi all,
I've been on this subreddit for a while and noticed that there are still people that don't exercise during their weight loss journey. I can't stress enough how important exercising is in general for your body. There is research that shows that losing weight without exercising doesn't make you healthier. Also does exercising reduce cravings and mental problem that usually hold you back on progress.
To give you all some extra information about the importance of exercising, I've put together a guide to explain the benefits of exercising. It includes the research I mentioned before.

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It’s the little things that can keep you motivated.

Lately I have been going through a lot mentally, emotionally and just came across challenges that I felt were impossible. I have been on my weight loss journey for over a year and a half now and have had some bumps along the road, but I still manage to keep going. Lately I haven’t been able to do much but I have kept my weight steady and today I’m ready to keep going.

Over the course of a year and a half— I have lost about 30 pounds and people can totally see the difference in my face a physique. Sure I have my days where I don’t eat okay or work out, but I always have my weight on the back of my mind.

Tonight I went out to eat Panda Express (yeah I know it’s not authentic Chinese and not good for you!) and was complemented by an employee. The employee told me, “Hey, you have lost some weight haven’t you— how many pounds have you lost?”, I was so thrown off by what she was saying because never would I imagine a complete stranger complementing me. I replied back and told her, “30 pounds” and she said, “Well 30 pounds made a huge difference and keep it up”, this small comment almost brought me to tears.

I feel that it’s these little things that will keep me motivated and keep me going for my goal of 180lbs (currently at 247lbs).

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I will always be fatter than when they knew me

Up until I was 23 years old, I was skinny. Throughout college I was about 125 pounds. Now I weigh 188. I've lost ten pounds this year and I am proud of that! But I am going to a bridal shower on Sunday where people from high school and college will be. Many of them have not seen me since I was sixty pounds lighter. I am terrified. I don't want to go. I want to hide in my house. None of them know or care that I lost ten pounds. They will all see me and say "Wow, she got fat!" No one from my past will ever look at me and think "Wow, she looks great!" I will always be fatter than when they knew me.

The chances of me hitting and maintaining 125 pounds again are slim (I carry pretty curvy and was really only able to maintain 125 because of young metabolism and unhealthy habits), and even if I did, pretty much everyone I am close to in life knew me when I was skinny. Me being skinny again won't matter. No one will ever compliment my success or realize how hard weight loss is for me. Maybe they'll just stop being disappointed I got fat.

I know it's shallow and I know their opinion doesn't matter - my health and happiness are why I'm doing this. I know that this is a stupid feeling. I know I need to get over it. But I am jealous of people who get these waves of compliments from people. Even though I crave validation, I don't get to have the motivation of old friends complimenting me. I will always have "gotten fat." I will always be fatter than when they knew me.

Sorry about the rant. I just needed to post this somewhere. I wonder if anyone else out there feels a similar way.

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Almost halfway to my weight loss goal!

This’ll be long, sorry!

(I’m a 5”9 female, was 175, now 161) About nine months ago I looked in the mirror and realized, oh boy, those are rolls! I absolutely did not like what I saw, and I pained over how ugly I thought I looked for another FIVE months before I actually had the will to change how I ate and lived, because I finally realized the only way to stop looking how I did was with actual effort. It also didn’t help that about 8 months ago, I met my would-be boyfriend around the time I tried to start working out. It just faded when I met him since we hung out so much, and we both liked food. A lot. We went out to eat multiple times a week and ate fast food and snacks often.

Anyways, starting four months ago, I started simple, and downloaded an app to keep track of what I ate (my sister suggested the app, and it was a total game changer for me). It wasn’t long until I realized just how terrible my diet had been for so long. That 16 ounce Wawa cream smoothie I’d have a few times a week? A whopping 760 calories, on top of typically getting a massive sandwich with it, maybe even some candy. I never tracked anything I ate, hell, I never even looked at nutrition labels. If I wanted it, I’d eat as much as I’d like, and that was that. I know exactly when I really started to gain weight, too.

When my family moved across the country, crap happened and we were a family of 7 living in a tiny one bedroom hotel for a year. We were a two minute walk away from a McDonalds. So what did sweet, depressed 17 year old me do? Go there as often as possible, wolf down a milkshake, fries, nuggets, the whole deal. It made me happy. When I was 16, I was 145, by 19 I was 175. Thirty pounds overweight. I know that doesn’t sound like much, but my weight really snowballed when I moved, and I think I actually gained those last 20 pounds after coming here.

I never even gave what I ate a second thought. I had lots of candy, juice, sweets, fast food, and a whole lot of snacks. But by taking it one step at a time, in the last four months, I’ve lost 14 pounds. It’s accelerated as of late as I’ve been taking it more seriously, which feels great! When I started I didn’t increase my activity at all, but I did start watching what I ate more carefully. I’ve been sure to keep goals small and attainable, as I don’t want to cause my own downfall by having such high expectations that I couldn’t possibly reach and killing my motivation. At the start my goal was merely to lose thirty pounds in a year, and in just four months I’m almost halfway there.

My goals are more than just physical now, and I genuinely want to be healthier, not just thinner. I exercise up to two hours a day now (I worked my way up to it, I started with only 20-30 minutes of walking on a treadmill and maybe a 10 minute cardio session every once and a while).

Personally, I don’t believe I can ever truly return to my old ways at this point. I couldn’t just sit down and eat a Big Mac with a milkshake and not think about what I’m doing to my body. Of course, I still eat some garbage. The main thing is that I portion it, I keep track, and I don’t feel any qualms anymore about taking my mini scale to a restaurant to know what I’m putting into my body. In fact, I feel much more of a need to weigh and track funnel cake over an apple. An apple at most will be 100 calories of nutrients, natural sugar, and yumminess all wrapped in a filling six ounce snack. Funnel cake is a not-so-great 125-200 calories PER OUNCE.

I’m learning how to hold myself accountable, have self-control, and be happy with how I am now and look forward to what I can become. I’ve also been learning a lot about myself, and how I ended up the way I did in the first place. It isn’t just my relationship with food I’m fixing anymore, it’s how I am in general. I’m also seeing how changing myself in a positive way is effecting those around me. My sister says I inspire her a lot, and she looks to me for motivation now with becoming the best version of herself, and even my boyfriend is picking up healthier habits with me. He’s lost 15 pounds so far, and he isn’t even trying at all, just paying attention to the way he eats! 14 pounds down, 16 (and possibly more!) to go!

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Am I doing CICO right?

I’ve been doing CICO set at 1410 and IF 16:8 (eating 12p-8p). I’ve actually lost 7.6 lbs in 4 weeks. I am 32.4lbs from my weight goal.

1) I am wary of actual calorie counts so I feel like I’m overestimating the calories eaten and underestimating the calories burned by exercise. I don’t want to slow down my progress but can it hurt me if I am eating too few calories? I don’t think I’m off by much.

2) I was eating to the max calories allotted to me but my (now ex) boyfriend made a comment about why I always “had to eat the most.” So I started just eating to 1400-1500 no matter how long I worked out, usually leaving a decent amount of calories left that I could eat but don’t. Is that going to hurt my weight loss? I’m never hungry except in the mornings when I first get up.

Lately I’ve been a little more fatigued and I was attributing it to my period but I started to worry that I was not getting enough calories or protein or something. I’ve upped my protein already, but was hesitating on upping my calories. I just wanted some advice. Thanks in advance for anyone who comments.

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My journey so far

Hello everyone. It's been a while since I have been here. Since the last time I have been here, I have officially lost around 25 lbs. I was weighing 190 lbs in Feb 2019 and now I weight 165lbs. So quick background about myself, I am a doctor, 24 and 5'10. I knew that the fastest way to lose weight would be to be on a deficit diet. Now everyone knows this but in my weight loss journey, I noticed a few additional features which might be helpful around here. Hence I thought of sharing it. * So basically when I was overweight, I ate a lot of food and my body also knew that it needed a lot of food. So hence it burned a lot of energy. But when I suddenly started my deficit diet, my body took some time to realise that I was eating a lot less than required but still burned the same amount of calories before my deficit diet. Where do you think the calories are coming from for this extra energy ? Yes, my body fat is getting burned now. * So fat loss is very easy upto a point. You can rapidly lose weight if you just eat less. But after hitting 170 lbs, my weight loss plateaued a bit. So I lost last 5 lbs in 2 months compared to 20 I lost in nearly 4 months. And yes, I workout everyday of the week. And I do eat healthy as much as possible (Haven't eaten outside or takeout for 3 months) Learning cooking little by little as well (probably the biggest advantage) Remember people, it's all about the diet ( Diet is about a whooping 70%. Don't ever ignore it) PS : Did anyone else go through something like this and I was wondering how many months were you in that rapid loss phase.

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NSV: Going in for my first loose skin consultation tomorrow (VERY NERVOUS!!!)

I can honestly say that I would not have lost this amount of weight if it hadn't been for this subreddit. Finding this community changed my life so immensely that I cannot thank you all enough. Starting at 297 and currently at 190 (As of this morning), I'm sitting at 107lbs down in 11 months. I'd like to continue to lose weight, my next goal being 185 (which would put me in the overweight BMI category for the first time since 6th grade). Like a lot of you, I have loose skin. Right now it's not so much "flaps" but kind of just saggy sadness. I hate that I have to deal with this at 20 years old but it's better than being a severely obese 20 year!

I'm going in tomorrow afternoon after work without my mom (Which, I know I'm adult now blah blah. She doesn't usually go to my regular doctors appointments but this is a huge step, it feels very scary to go without her. She really wants to but I think I would be too humiliated to talk frank with the doctor if she was in the room). I don't even know if I have enough loose skin to qualify for surgery! They'll probably ask me to lose more or I'll have to wait and prove I can maintain my weight loss for ~6 months (both of which are reasonable requests). Above all, I'm hoping that the doctor will be able to give me some advice on how to move forward with my weight loss because honestly, I'm fucking burnt out man. Being home for the summer has been really hard and as I get smaller, it's getting harder and harder.

Anyone who has or is going through the process, words of advice are greatly needed. Thank you!

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