Saturday, August 31, 2019

Starting My Journey .

I decided to start my weight loss journey on August 17th, 2019 and for the past 15 days i have only been drinking water for beverages, as well as doing 30-40 minutes of cardio every day ! I plan on weightlifting once i feel i am comfortable enough to do so . i'm proud of myself that i even made it to 15 days because i normally try working out or only drinking water for a day or 2 then give up so this is a BIG step for me. But i still need to repair my relationship with food and that's been a struggle these last 15 days . I don't eat A LOT i just eat the wrong things and i'm slowly trying to cut things out . Any tips for beginning to eat healthier ?

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Someone noticed my fat loss today.

Exactly as the title says! :)

I am short, standing at only 5' 0" and weigh roughly 118 lbs. Last year, I gained weight because I was struggling with BED as I never really had a sense of control with food and the buffet-style of the college dining halls were hard to resist. The summer before entering college I traveled with my family and I gained roughly 8 lbs (which made me around 120 lbs) and never managed to lose it before I went to college, where I managed to gain another 5 lbs. A 13 lb weight gain may not sound like much, but on a small body like mine, it makes a big difference.

I didn't really end up losing a lot of weight this past summer because I was recovering from binge eating disorder and decided to take it slow and steady. My weight actually hadn't really changed throughout the course of summer but I'm starting to think maybe it was the result of fat loss and muscle gain? Anyways, I got back to school and nobody noticed my weight loss which made me think that maybe I really didn't look any different after all. BUT today (!!!) someone noticed my fat loss and asked me if I had lost weight over summer and I was so happy.

Sorry if this was insignificant, I just wanted to share one of my milestones :)

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Started a very physical job three weeks ago and lost some weight! I am a bit worried about comments on my size, though. Explanation in the post! Looking for support and tips.

This has been the easiest weight loss I've ever had. I'm on my feet eight hours a day, sometimes doing really strenuous tasks. I don't weigh myself anymore, but I definitely lost some due to pictures I've taken and just physical changes I see in the mirror.

I am sort of concerned though, because somewhere around the 15 lb mark is when people start commenting on my weight loss. A lot of people on here think that's a good thing, but I don't. I have an eating disorder and body dysmorphia, and when people bring any sort of attention to my shifts in body weight, I get very uncomfortable. I also have self sabotaging tendencies, so when people bring attention to the fact that I've lost weight, I want to sabotage it, both to stop the comments and because of deep rooted negative beliefs that I have about myself.

I want to keep losing because I want to be happy with my body and also to be more fit, but there are some deep rooted insecurities and anxieties about weight loss. I need to learn to get better about not asking for people to talk about my size, but in the moment I get so flustered that it almost never happens. I just hate that people think they are entitled to talk about other people's appearance like that. People talk about how concerned they are for bigger people's health, but when I lose weight, the first thing I hear is I look so much better.

I really am trying to be happy for myself and keep the momentum going on this journey. I had a really good kick start with the job, and I don't want to give it up or start binge eating again. I want to keep this up. I wish I was at my thinnest again, in order to avoid all the attention during weight loss. Maintaining was easy for me for a while. I'm upset that I threw it all away, but this is where I'm at. People see me as the way I am now, and I have to take the shock that comes with me getting smaller.

I'd like this to be a discussion post, so feel free to talk about anything that resonated with you on here, or any sort of tips for dealing with all of this.

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I reverted back to my pre-weightloss diet for one meal to rationalize to myself why "cheat meals" were a bad idea. [Long]

Some background: as you can see from my flair, I'm a 21 year old guy down about 25 pounds. I weighed in at 229 in late May and just hit 204 a couple days ago. I did this with diet alone- simply sticking to my MFP's calorie goal for 1 pound a week, with no additional exercise outside of my summer job at an Amazon warehouse, which no doubt contributed a bit. I've done CICO for a few months a handful of times over the past few years. It feels like I'm really sticking with it this time, I'm not shortcutting or lying to myself. Yay!

During the summer my stepdad asked for help with MFP, so I gave him the rundown of the basics and got him started. A couple weeks in I heard him mention his "cheat day" to my mom, and while I wanted to say something, I didn't. His relationship with food is much deeper than mine ever was, and it still took me a while to stop trying to shortcut the process or give myself passes.

My outlook on "cheating" is this: If you need a cheat day, that means you don't like what you're doing, so you need to change your process. I do have what I like to call "permission to fail", because this summer it finally clicked for me, and I believe that I've gained the discipline to know that I'm not going to eat over my goal just because. And so I have permission from myself to fail, to go over my calorie goal, but only for a good reason. If I came home from work, ate my usual but found I was still hungry before bed, I had permission to eat until I was satiated. I went on an out-of-state trip with some friends for an extended weekend, and the social nature of the trip was enough that I had permission to eat above my goal. That's not permission to go crazy; I usually went 200-300 over and I never ended up more than 600 calories above my goal on any of these "permission to fail" days. That's barely above maintenance! Such days probably made up about 10-12% of the summer for me, and I still got down 25 pounds and felt very little guilt along the way. Being hungry is okay. Social eating is okay. It was a matter of being honest with myself about my intentions. Hold yourself to a high standard, and you'll have a nice cushion when you need one.

And then last weekend I came back to my college campus, where I'm on the meal plan. Buffet-style dining halls.... yay? Because I'm being honest with myself, I accepted that my willpower isn't always what I'd like it to be. I've had a good week, at or near my goal every day until last night. My goal is 1900 calories, I had about 850 for lunch leaving me 1050 for dinner. Looking at the menu for tonight, I liked a lot of tonight's selection. I decided this was my chance to get out ahead of whatever mental health disaster will strike me this semester and have me spiral down into daily binges. And so, I had my first cheat meal since starting this thing for real back in May. I ate like I've eaten for the past three years here. Once I left the dining hall, I went back on my school's dining app (which conveniently has nutrition info for most items) and counted the night's caloric conquest up.

2800, conservatively.

I was fuller than I've been in months. Shortly after the last bite went down, my stomach hurt a little bit from fullness. That bad boy has definitely shrunk, because I used to down this much twice a day. If dealing with the weird pain of a stuffed stomach all night wasn't enough of a deterrent, the real reason I did this was to give myself the numbers so I could know just how bad a cheat meal was. 2800 calories, plus the 850 I already had, gives me 3650. My daily goal is 1900 calories. That's a 1750-cal deficit from my goal, a 1250-cal deficit from maintenance. If I had one cheat meal a week, it erases 2.5 days of work assuming I'm at or around my calorie goal every day. One meal, 2.5 days. I know it's not always that linear, but that number is huge.

Once my body is rid of all this grossness, I think I'll be happy with my decision. I've made great improvements on my mental health, but part of that is knowing I won't always be perfect in that domain. I'm a rational person, I like to make fact-based decisions over feelings-based ones when possible. This exercise gave me the emotionless numbers I need to rationalize to myself why I can't fall off the weight loss wagon even if I've already fallen off the mental health wagon. It strengthened my belief that if I felt like I needed a cheat meal, I must be doing something wrong, because I don't feel so good right now (physically) and I'd have to be really unhappy with what I was doing to actively choose to feel like this weekly.

I don't really know if this little anecdote will be useful to anyone. It's just some bored ramblings, but I felt like sharing. I know I can be pretty wordy, so if anyone read the whole thing, thanks for sticking around. This sub is fantastic inspiration and support. Let's all keep working, everyone!

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SV/NSV - Back in my teenage clothes!

Having just hit 40lb weight loss after 3 months, I still feel like I look the same. People comment on how much I've lost but I still see the same person in the mirror. So I count on objective things like numbers to keep me motivated.

I've been struggling with clothes lately as all my 24s are way too big and I can't afford to buy a whole new wardrobe when I'm still losing and will need to buy more soon anyway.

Then, in a flash I remembered 'ŕ cupboard'. The cupboard hasn't been opened for at least 5 years, after I acknowledged I needed a larger clothes size and packed away all my 16s and 18s out of shame.

Today, I went through the cupboard. Not everything fit, but a surprising amount did! I caught myself wearing dresses that are 3/4 sizes smaller than what I needed 3 months ago! Most of these clothes are from when I was 18 or 19, and I am just so over the moon about it!

Just thought I'd share - it can be really hard when the scale shows progress but the mirror doesn't. I find it better to find things you can objectively measure - weight, BMI, clothes size - to help keep up the motivation.

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One thing I’ve learned from a 70 pound loss that has taken me over ten years to achieve....

TL;DR - strive for consistency over perfection and find something that is sustainable!

Consistency! That’s what it boils down to for me. During my ten years of trying to lose, I tried EVERYTHING! Different diets (sometimes extreme sometimes not) exercising like crazy, OTC pills, even Adipex prescribed by a doctor. I’d lose a little, gain it back and sometimes even more. I started at 230ish and got under 200 fairly easily. But then it was nine solid years of bouncing between 198 and 182. I’d occasionally get into the 170s if I did something really strict and restrictive, such as two straight months of Whole30, only to go back up shortly afterwards.

Now, I am sitting in the low 160s, where I haven’t been since racing by this weight when I was pregnant with oldest.... 14 years ago! It wasn’t until recently that I’ve been able to lose weight slowly, steadily, HEALTHFULLY, and not bounce right back up after any significant loss.

And it’s just being consistent. I really think that (within reason) it doesn’t really matter how you curb your calories - paleo, vegan, straight CICO, keto, IF - as long as your intake is below maintenance. For me, I have definitely been able to find what works best for me, physically and mentally, so there is definitely an aspect of doing what is best for your body, but I don’t think there can be a blanket statement that one way is absolutely the best.

So find what is sustainable for you and just stick with it! Consistency is NOT perfection! There’s a lot of stress and guilt that comes along with the weight-loss perfection and it is absolutely detrimental to mental health and weight loss efforts. Slipping up or choosing to indulge once in a while does not mean you’re bad or a failure. It also doesn’t mean that you need to abandon all your efforts or that previous efforts are somehow now null and void.

Consistency is sticking to your plan for the majority of the time, for a long time. One day is not make or break; it’s the aggregate that counts!

I don’t mean to sound preachy and maybe you all already know this. For me, it’s been a lesson that’s taken a long time to learn. And the idea of weight perfection led me into a really bad mental state where foods were good or bad, feelings of guilt accompanied my efforts, and my self-worth was connected to my food choices. Now, I have a lot more freedom in my “diet”, enjoy “bad” foods more frequently, and still see weight coming off easier than it ever has before. It’s not fast, but it’s effective. And I’m so much happier, that I will gladly do it this way rather than doing crazy things that may result in faster, but more temporary, weight-loss.

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

One thing I’ve learned from a 70 pound loss that has taken me over ten years to achieve....

TL;DR - strive for consistency over perfection and find something that is sustainable!

Consistency! That’s what it boils down to for me. During my ten years of trying to lose, I tried EVERYTHING! Different diets (sometimes extreme sometimes not) exercising like crazy, OTC pills, even Adipex prescribed by a doctor. I’d lose a little, gain it back and sometimes even more. I started at 230ish and got under 200 fairly easily. But then it was nine solid years of bouncing between 198 and 182. I’d occasionally get into the 170s if I did something really strict and restrictive, such as two straight months of Whole30, only to go back up shortly afterwards.

Now, I am sitting in the low 160s, where I haven’t been since racing by this weight when I was pregnant with oldest.... 14 years ago! It wasn’t until recently that I’ve been able to lose weight slowly, steadily, HEALTHFULLY, and not bounce right back up after any significant loss.

And it’s just being consistent. I really think that (within reason) it doesn’t really matter how you curb your calories - paleo, vegan, straight CICO, keto, IF - as long as your intake is below maintenance. For me, I have definitely been able to find what works best for me, physically and mentally, so there is definitely an aspect of doing what is best for your body, but I don’t think there can be a blanket statement that one way is absolutely the best.

So find what is sustainable for you and just stick with it! Consistency is NOT perfection! There’s a lot of stress and guilt that comes along with the weight-loss perfection and it is absolutely detrimental to mental health and weight loss efforts. Slipping up or choosing to indulge once in a while does not mean you’re bad or a failure. It also doesn’t mean that you need to abandon all your efforts or that previous efforts are somehow now null and void.

Consistency is sticking to your plan for the majority of the time, for a long time. One day is not make or break; it’s the aggregate that counts!

I don’t mean to sound preachy and maybe you all already know this. For me, it’s been a lesson that’s taken a long time to learn. And the idea of weight perfection led me into a really bad mental state where foods were good or bad, feelings of guilt accompanied my efforts, and my self-worth was connected to my food choices. Now, I have a lot more freedom in my “diet”, enjoy “bad” foods more frequently, and still see weight coming off easier than it ever has before. It’s not fast, but it’s effective. And I’m so much happier, that I will gladly do it this way rather than doing crazy things that may result in faster, but more temporary, weight-loss.

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