Wednesday, September 4, 2019

What is the most accurate way to track your calories burned?

For context; I'm 19/F, about 171cm/5'7", and weigh about 74kg/163lb at the moment. I use MyFitnessPal to track calories and my streak is at 112 days now - I usually aim to eat 5,700kj/1300calories each day for a weight loss of 0.5kg/1lb per week. When I started tracking, I was about 81kg/178lb.

I find tracking my food/calories in fairly simple and I've lost a good amount of weight (around 7.5kg/16lb) over the past few months, solely from being in a calorie deficit each day without regular exercise.

However, recently I've started going back to the gym about 4 times a week for the past month, and my weight loss has dramatically slowed / plateaued during this time. It either seems to be at a maintenance or less than 0.2kg/0.5lb a week. At the gym I typically do about 30 minutes of strength/weight exercises, 20 minutes on the stair master at level 10-12, and 15 minutes on the elliptical trainer.

I suspect the weight loss plateau is probably due to a combination of muscle gain, and also overestimating the amount of calories I've burned during my workouts (which then leads me to believe I have more calories left in my budget for that day, eat more, and be in less of a deficit than I should be).

I know that MyFitnessPal and the number shown on the machines at the gym (what I've currently been using to estimate) is wildly inaccurate in determining how many calories I'm burning, but I've also heard that wearable fitness trackers or MET calculations can be inaccurate too.

So, what's the most accurate way to track the amount of calories I've burned so I don't accidentally overeat and slow down or stop my weight loss? Or is weight loss plateau when you start exercising normal, and I shouldn't worry about it?

Thanks for any advice :)

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Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Anyone else lose sense of who they are after a fitness / weight loss journey? / the dark side of a “successful” weight loss journey

Hey guys, a little backstory:

Started: January 9th - M/22/5’9”/297 lbs Current: 187 lbs

My progress pics are in my post history.

I generally am very positive about the journey and changing my life, but I feel like I’m losing sense of who I am. I feel like that while certain aspects of mental health have improved (confidence, energy levels, self image), others have deteriorated (anger management, stress management, general happiness).

I find myself putting more weight onto social media likes and attention, and I’m about to purge all of my accounts because of it.

Also, my libido is all thrown off - idk if it’s being in a cut for 7 months, but my sex drive is basically nonexistent at the moment.

Sorry if this seems disconnected and ramble-y, but I’m just trying to connect the dots and see if anyone’s dealing with the same.

I just feel very hollow and fake at the moment and I don’t really like the person I am currently

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Anyone else feel weak?

I feel weak for gaining 30lbs in 4 months and not having lost any of it. This whole year has been nothing but failure for me because I can’t stop stop binging like the hog I am and eat my feelings as if it’s gonna help. I’m so ashamed, I’m so weak, and I’m so disgusting. I was supposed to be happily maintaining my weight loss but no, here I am maintaining my weight re-gain and feeling worse than ever.

I’ve accepted that I will forever be stuck in the binge cycle... doing good for a few days, then gaining the 5lbs or so back, losing it again, and so forth. It’s just impossible. I’m too weak to change and no amount of confidence, positive thinking, and motivation ever made me change. It’s basically over for me. I’ve accepted I will never know true happiness. I will forever just watch skinny, beautiful people get all that they want out of life while I cry and fantasize about having what they do. Having what I was too weak to work for.

Anyone else in this forum as hopeless as I am? Or used to be?

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30lbs down and feeling "good" for the first time since I can honestly remember.

I've been having some serious stomach and digestion issues for so long now that I don't remember what it was like without them. They are the reason I got into nutrition in the first place. I'm pretty sure they are also the reason I'm a senior in college studying biochemistry to learn more about my issues and maybe fix them. Through all the time I've put into figuring it out, only one guy really helped me. Not all weight loss is healthy. I had to figure out on my own that I gained weight because I was unhealthy, instead of I got unhealthy because I gained weight. It lead me to look more into metabolically stimulating diets instead of weight loss diets (a lot of these are very bad for the working of the metabolic system). Nathan Hatchs' book "Fuck Portion Control" both in theory and biochemically (I brought some of the more scientific material to my professors and they all agreed with it) made so much sense to me. His ideas seem to be the most correct to me if you define health by metabolic function. I highly recommend this book over anything else for health and, as a result, weight loss. Picture maybe nsfw??: http://imgur.com/a/U8wP9c9

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NSV: Mom noticed my weight loss

I love my mom, and she knows how I've struggled with my weight, but doesn't comment on it unless I mention it. She definitely follows her own mom in baking a lot of food/treats for her kids and grandkids while never eating much herself.

I was at my heaviest at 267 at 5'9" earlier this summer but managed to lose about 30 lbs through CICO using my FitBit and MyFitnessPal, exercise about 5 days per week (doing P90 and occasionally riding bike), and being in the LoseIt challenge (currently at 234 lbs, shout-out to Cassiopeia!). I also really love diet soda and have used it to suppress my appetite, though not to replace any meals, and to use it as a snack (Diet Dr. Pepper and Coke Zero mostly). Also keeping my alcohol drinking to a minimum.

I visited her recently and she said pretty nonchalantly "I can tell you lost weight." Told her that I want to lose even more, and she said "Do it! Keep it up." She proceeded to tell me about her own weight and how she wanted to lose (she's in normal BMI range but 5'2" and somewhat self-conscious about her weight). She ended by saying we could exercise together (we live in the same city) and I thought we totally should.

Anyway, totally low-key conversation but I was super happy to get recognition of my weight loss so far. Good luck, all!

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Finally hit "normalweight" after a deliberately long and careful weight loss plan

I've posted here before but now that I've been in the "normalweight" category for exactly 1 month I'm going to share my findings of this whole weight loss thing. I'll also share progress pics, but since I didn't take any until I lost 30lbs I can't show the full transformation. I started my journey on February 6th of 2018, so this has all taken place over roughly a year and a half.

I'm now 33 years old and 5'10". I started this whole journey when I realized I had a PROBLEM with eating. I'm not here to shame anyone for eating what they want, when they want. If you are legitimately happy doing what you're doing that is 100% your business and nobody else's unless you are causing harm to others.

That said, it took a wake up call for me to realize that my "status quo" was not healthy. In my head, I was fine. I might have been a "little chunky" since grad school, but that was fine. I might have cravings for food at strange times, but that also was fine. I was just hungry, people get that way right? It wasn't until my wife thought I was cheating on HER because she found a receipt for two breakfasts (in the same sitting) in my pocket that I had deliberately not told her about when she was looking for my truck keys. At that point I had to sit back and ask myself "why did I not tell her about having breakfast that day?". The answer was simple. Deep down I knew I had a problem with eating too much and too poorly.

So despite my early statement saying that what, when and how much you eat is not anyone's business but your own. MAKE IT YOUR OWN BUSINESS. I was objectively overweight, had poor blood pressure a general lack of energy and my love live was suffering for it and had my wife not been loving and supportive regardless of my size she may well have left me since I struggled to do any of the activities she fell in love with me doing.

That day I sat down and researched weight loss. I found Keto, Atkins, Veganism, IF, Weight Watchers and a whole pile of free, paid and restrictive plans. I know for a fact I wouldn't stick with Keto. I like carbs, and I don't stick with stuff I don't like doing. I am fine eating a plant-based diet, and 90% of the time I do simply because it's cheaper, healthier and easier than cooking meat, but I do like a steak and I didn't want to "fall off the bandwagon" everytime I wanted some meat. I also often work remotely for weeks on end, so a plan like WW or JC would probably not work out for me. That left IF and counting calories. IF is simply a way of restricting calories. I can't guarantee that I'll be able to eat in the same window every day so I decided plain old vanilla CICO was the ticket. I downloaded my app and set a goal of 1.5 lbs per week. This is a slower goal than most but I wanted to minimize the impact on my life and reduce the chance for loose skin. I still have a little, but not bad considering a weight loss of 80lbs.

At first, it was easy. At 260lbs my base calorie intake was still pretty high to hit my target. It was easy to still have 1000+ calorie treat meals in the day while still having 1200 other calories throughout the day. As I dropped below 200lbs I really had to be more selective about what I ate and have consequently begun eating healthy as well as lower calorie, almost by accident. Once I hit 190lbs I dropped my goal to 0.5 lbs per week so that I would gradually transition into maintenance rather than bounce off the bottom so to speak. It gave my body time to acclimate to increased intake without starting up cravings.

Throughout this journey I have gotten back into cycling in a big way. I'm actually faster than I ever was in my early 20s. I've competed in 3 races this summer with another one scheduled in September with over 1400m of climbing in a single day. My bike actually works properly now that my suspension doesn't have to be inflated to the max pressure just to keep from bottoming out on every little bump and I have SO MUCH ENERGY. Like, I'm one of those people I used to despise. I used to be "tired" after riding 15 minutes to the store and back for a pack of candy, last month I rode Silverstar bike park 3 days in a row, drove home to Calgary and rode another bike park for 2 hours before going home. Then proceeded to drive back out to the mountains the next day to go for a 30km ride with a buddy and haven't missed a day of riding since. I've gone and pedaled up Moose Mtn 3 times in one day, then just as I was about to leave a friend showed up and asked if I wanted to shuttle for another 4 hours and I while I was exhausted afterwards, I still felt good.

People I know don't recognize me anymore, and I've gotten some snarky comments from overweight friends and family. They all shut up quickly when they realized I just simply don't care what they think. I'm happy, healthy and energized and eventually that just sort of wins people over. A few of them have decided to start their own weight loss journeys and I'm all for it. I provide help when asked and support when needed but I will never push my own ideas on anyone.

I'm lucky in that I never had a back slide. I credit this to finding a sport I love again and to setting very conservative goals. To say I was targeting "healthy" over "weight loss" is incorrect. I absolutely wanted to lose weight first and foremost. But I wanted to do it in such a way as to improve my performance in every aspect of my life. I wanted to be a better rider, a better geologist, a better husband and a better dog owner.

So, long story short: do what you can do to get healthy and lose weight. But if my experience is any indication it might be easier to make it stick the first time if you are OK with the long-game. Crashing a bunch of weight in a short period of time may feel awesome, but never having a back-slide feels pretty stellar too.

Progress pics (I'm a pudgy topless dude in this so be warned).

235-178lbs

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Running Planner with Day and Weather free printable

Hello! How’s it going? I have a free printable Running Planner with space for you to note the day and time of your run AND what the weather forecast is for that time. This is super important when you’re training for a race and the weather adds an additional challenge. Extreme weather conditions affect your […]

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