Sunday, August 18, 2019

Does portion control matter for weight loss if you stay in a calorie deficit?

I see lots of people emphasizing the importance of portion control when it comes to diet. I have 15 pounds to lose and honestly, I HATE portion control. For example, I tried the keto diet and the meals were too small! Not to mention fat bombs were tiny in size as well. Nuts don't satisfy me either. Neither does fatty meat, avocados, or a few spoonfuls of cream cheese. I gained weight on keto because I was relying on the fatty meals to satiate my hunger to the point where I wouldn't need to consciously count calories (this is what other people do who follow keto, apparently). Would I lose weight if I just ate a huge amount of shirataki noodles, seaweed, fruit, and/or lettuce but kept my calories low? The portions would be enormous though.

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Long time lurker and finally decided to join.

Hello r/loseit! I’ve been lurking on this subreddit and other health related subreddit for about 3 months now and I’ve finally decided to join Reddit.

I’m a little bit over a year into my weight loss journey and have managed to lose 11kg so far. I’ve still got about 30kg to go, but I’m motivated now more than ever. I start my first job in February 2020 and received a message from the HR rep asking about what t-shirt size I am. I told her I’m a medium (although I am still a large) and I’m using this as my motivation to keep going so I can fit into a medium by then.

Wish me luck on my journey!

Just a few stats: 22F SW: 94kg CW: 83kg GW: 55-53kg

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Saturday, August 17, 2019

How my cat made me lose weight (down 100lbs in 8 months - my story)

Me: 40/M

Height: 5' 11"

Starting Weight: 335lbs

Current Weight: 232lbs

Diet: Uhhhh... CICO? Mediterranean? I'll try to describe below.

Exercise: 1 hour of low(ish) intensity cardio 5-6 times a week. 30 mins of weight training 3 times a week.

My Story: I've struggled with weight basically my entire life. I've weighed as little as 169 lbs (in college) and as much as 335 lbs. A healthy weight for me is around 200 lbs.

Years of a very crap diet and using food as a coping strategy caught up with me in the form of a triple threat: gout, kidney stone(s), and high-ish blood pressure (135/85 most times). None of those things were immediately life threatening, but it all pointed to increasing health problems on the horizon. My A1C/Blood Sugar/Cholestrol were all fine. No matter how okay my health stats were, though, I was always convinced that I was going to suffer from a heart attack sooner rather than later. I worried about it constantly. If I drank a coffee and felt the most minor palpitation, I'd start sweating and freaking out and deciding that this was it... the big one...

Besides all the worrying, I felt like total shit most of the time. I couldn't walk very far, wanted to sleep constantly, and basically lived for the moments where I didn't have to move my body. It was miserable. My wife and I took a trip to Japan-- my dream international vacation-- and I spent the majority of the time off my feet because of a gnarly case of plantar fasciitis. It sucked.

So cut to January 2nd and I'm in the bathroom, sitting on the cold tile floor, and having a little 3AM freakout about my weight. I'd started envisioning my future: thinking about how one day I'd have a heart attack and then start the inevitable cycle of hospitalizations. And the worst part is that I felt solely responsible. This was my fault. I'd abused my body so much and now there was no going back. That's how I felt. I was 39 and obese and simply didn't have the will to change it. Why bother?

Everything felt impossible. I felt trapped.

And here's where it gets weird: Suddenly, there was a scratching at the door. I turned and opened it and in trotted my cat, Bean. She's a shaggy gray Persian and she's usually pretty standoffish and never seeks out my attention. But suddenly she advanced right towards me, meowing the entire time. She started padding at my legs and she climbed up into my lap. Tears strolled down my face and tumbled onto her fur. She looked up at me. It was bizarre. And through my sniffles I had this weird thought-- this, like, momentary epiphany-- what if my cat was trying to tell me that I /could/ lose the weight? What if I just took this as a sign that I could get off this horrible weight-related merry-go round and make a change?

I know that sounds nuts-- and NO, I don't actually believe that my cat has magical powers-- but I do believe in the power of stories and I decided to tell myself a new one: I was going to accept the power of my cat's feline spirit and lose weight. No matter how long it took, no matter what I had to do, I was going to remember this empowering moment. I was going be honest with myself and make a change.

Here's the core of what I did:

- Started doing very low impact (eliptical mostly) cardio at a slow speed but for a long duration (1 hour, 5-6x a week) and weights every other day.

- Started eating 80% of my food in the form of fresh produce (apples, carrots, red peppers, blueberries, broccoli, bananas, kale, etc.). This required me to start going to the supermarket 2-3x a week (which I still do).

- Started eating fewer processed foods. My quick rules for processed foods is to look at the ingredients on the label. If I could find all those ingredients in the store, it meant that I could actually make the food myself and I'm just too lazy. That's fine because it means that the food isn't highly processed. If the food had weird stuff that I can't find (red dye #5 or like multixylerglobate or whatever), I didn't buy it.

- Started eating much less meat in general. I'm now at 4x meatless days (I eat soy/plant-based) and eat chicken/shrimp other days.

- Here's the big one: Admitted that I'm a food addict and recognized that I'll never be able to enjoy food with wild abandon the way I used to.

- Another big one: Reframed my vision for how good my meals should generally taste. In America, I feel like we become conditioned to expecting our meals to taste like an 8-10 on a 1-10 scale. I've tried to get used to eating an average tastiness of more like 3-4. It has completely reset my palate. An 8-10 meal is a special occasion.

That's the core of it. Here's been the results:

- For the first few months, I didn't even count calories. I lost 60lbs in about 5 months at a rate of 3-4lbs a week.

- Eventually the weight loss started to taper down to 1lbs a week, so I started counting my calories. I now use a combo of MyFitnessPal and my Apple Watch and I eat 1850 calories a day. I'm back to losing 2.5lbs a week.

- I feel amazing. I can hike, I can walk far, I can enjoy the sunshine, and I don't feel like I'm constantly going to die. I mean, one day I definitely will die-- but I won't feel like I haven't at least tried to live a healthy life and avoid an early grave.

- I feel muuuuuuuch calmer. My resting hr is a 52 and I've got a great post-exercise heart recovery. ;)

- I'm planning to lose 25-35 lbs more and then I'll just maintain.

- The hardest part of all of this was just starting. Tell yourself a new story!

* Note: I also did consult a doctor about my plans.

Okay, that's it. I know that what I did may not work for everyone, but it worked for me. Feel free to ask any questions.

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Cardio Everyday okay?

Hi everyone,

My husband actually went on this subreddit a lot back when he was overweight and so I followed for motivation. Honestly, it’s so real in this sub and it has helped me stay focused on losing weight in a healthy way.

So I started my journey with just CICO and lost about 25 pounds in 2 months. I also gained 4-5 pounds after that due to some personal issues but I got back to the swing of things and started working out about 2 months ago. So far, my total weight loss as of last week is 39 pounds. (231 lbs to 192lbs).

Here’s the thing... I have an Apple Watch and since August 1st I’ve pretty much been trying to meet all the rings and it’s kind of addicting cause it’s like a game to me. Is it okay if I do 30-45 minutes of cardio everyday? Will it hinder anything?

My knee hurt last week but I just did less intense HIIT work outs and now it’s better and so far nothing else has hurt. I tried to rest today but I kept staring at my empty spot where the green ring should be and I did a low intensity 30 minute workout.

I feel fine, opinions? Google isn’t much help because you can find tons of articles why and why not. So I’m still lost.

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I have a butt! I can’t even say «finally» because I never thought it was possible!

TL;DR- I just wanted to share this because it might be motivating to those not finding any exciting goals for when the road seems too long, I hadn’t thought of this as a thing that could happen but I wish I would have!

I’ve (F23) lost about 25 pounds, which is still 20 pounds away from my goal, but I just realized today that it’s possible to grow my glutes (!!!!)

I have always, at least for as long as I have been overweight and unfit(which is the last 6 years at least) had a flat butt that just went in a straight line from my love handles/lower back fat. There was nothing there. What perked out on my body in a side profile were my boobs, but biggest of all, my stomach.

I lost half the weight I want to lose by now, and I’m feeling a bit deflated. Bored of eating the same foods and counting calories, plus my weight loss is slowing down and my motivation is starting to wear out. Also, as many of you might have experienced, my weight loss this far has just lead to me feeling equally bad, if not worse, about my image in the mirror. I feel like there is still such a long way to go, even after working so hard to lose all this weight.

I was looking at myself like that in the mirror every night for a week, seeing everything I was displeased with. And I started obsessing over my non-existing butt, and convinced myself that what would make me look way better would be getting a round butt, as opposed to the pancake flat one I saw.

I started one of those 30-day challenges you find everywhere (I just googled), and have only done it for a week — but I see the results! I’m growing a round butt! I’m shocked that it’s already visible, it’s probably because I examine my body in the mirror every day, but this makes me so motivated to continue working hard. It really feels like my work is paying off :D

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Are Artificial Sweeteners really bad for you and your weight loss goals? What the research says.

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Starvation Mode and starting over

Current stats 5’4”/38 years old female/ sw360/cw209/gw140-125.

I have lost 151 pounds in the last 11 months. And I have reclaimed my life. I lost 70 pounds before having a vertical sleeve gastrectomy in December 2018.

I continued to lose and get stronger. In July I hiked 60 miles on the John Muir Trail through the Sierras. I had not figured out my food and had a loss of appetite due to the altitude. As such in a matter of a week I lost over 20 pounds, hiking up about and down mountains with a 45 pound pack burns a lot of calories.

When I got home I did not weight myself, but I do know that I had a voracious appetite and really struggled to keep from seriously over eating. I believe I was under 200, and have regained 10+ pounds. I don’t believe in starvation mode, but my rapid weight loss was followed by a desire to eat, a lot. Anyway...

I am getting back on track. I’m doing what’s called a pouch reset, which is a liquid diet for 5-14 days which resets the restrictive feeling I get from my pouch. I am recommitting to measuring everything and not giving myself bigger portions just because I feel like it.

And I am getting back on my training. Hiking with weighted pack, doing C210k and weight training.

Just putting this in writing to really commit and be accountable to myself.

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