Tuesday, September 17, 2019

SV / NSV: I lost my 30th pound today [5’10” SW300 CW270 GW175]

Today, I lost my 30th pound after just over 2 months of CICO. I've learned/experienced a ton that I wanted to share.

Getting started:
- I started this weight loss journey in July after following r/loseit, r/intermittentfasting, and r/progresspics back in April. A constant stream of inspiration was what I needed to finally take the first step.
- I realized a large part of why my weight had gotten so out of control was because I was so focused on my career and climbing the ladder that I was constantly postponing fixing my health. I still am career-driven, but my priorities have been reorganized. To some degree, it took "getting over myself", recognizing that some amount of ego was preventing me from taking responsibility for all aspects of my life including my health.
- I started reducing my calorie intake sort of by accident. I just wanted to track what I was currently eating to see what my typical calorie intake was before I tried setting a realistic calorie limit goal. Day 1 of starting to track calories, I was getting ready to order a fast food lunch. When I plugged in the calorie counts, I was floored. "That's not worth that many calories!" I started tailoring my fast food orders that day to only include what I felt were "high-value" calories.
- The bar for "high-value" calories seems to be getting higher and higher as I move along. For example, I really loved Panera's Mac and Cheese. I'd usually order a large portion. I cut that back to a small portion. Eventually, I realized that even the 500 calories for a small portion just wasn't worth the cost relative to other options. I cut out the mac entirely now. If I want some again in the future, it'll still be there when I hit my weight goal.
- I rarely ate breakfast before, so I decided to make it official and explicitly fast breakfast. I eat lunch at 11:30ish. Dinner at 5PM, and a snack around 8PM. I'm not so strict about the times, except for lunch. I try to hold out for noon most days, but let myself eat at 11:30 if all I'm thinking about is eating. Not exactly 16/8, but roughly.

Challenges
- I initially started tracking calories via the LoseIt! app. The initial calorie goal this app provided me was pretty high (2300+). This wasn't difficult to stick to at all once I had started limiting myself to "high-value" calories. After a while, my weight loss plateaued, and I felt that either I wasn't tracking my food correctly, or my calorie limit was too high. I switched to the MyFitnessPal app, which gave me a much lower calorie limit based on my average fitness level (I don't move much as a programmer, I go to the gym about once a week). I honestly prefer the LoseIt app overall, and would use it over MyFitnessPal if it would let me set my own calorie limit to match more closely at what MyFitnessPal estimated for me.
- The first month of tracking calories was both fun and difficult. It was kind of like a game - "How can I fit everything I want to eat today into this limit?" The challenges came when I needed to measure homemade dinners my wife would make, or other difficult to measure meals. Initially, I was eating 2 servings of Chex Mix with a banana for lunch, pretty much daily. This was satisfying, but definitely led to some mean heartburn after a few weeks. I mix it up more now, but that's a staple meal if I'm in a pinch, easy to measure and I genuinely enjoy it. I eventually bought a kitchen food scale which has helped out a lot with measuring homecooked meals.
- I really enjoy soda, I still incorporate soda into my calorie limits today. I realize the processed sugars/carbs/macronutrients aren't the best, but I've tried cutting soda cold-turkey before and it lead to constant regressions, and eventually more weight gain. Part of the reason why I ate out for lunch so often is just to get a soda. The rest of the food was just a bonus. For as long as we've been married, my wife and I decided not to keep too many sweets and snacks in the house to avoid temptation. This unexpectedly worsened my own problem. So now, I keep a stash of small portioned soda cans / bottles in my office closet, and portion those out into my calorie limits with a homemade lunch. I'm willing to solve what I see as the larger problem of my weight before I focus on drastically changing what I eat.

Benefits / Life Changes:
- My clothes fit so much better! Particularly my shirts. I was suffering from a bit of body dysmorphia (I thought I was a lot thinner than I actually was). I have a bunch of t-shirts that I still wear that have survived since before my weight gain that are literally hanging on by a thread (filled with holes, stretched out, faded) that I refused to get rid of because they were the only clothes I felt comfortable in. Because my wardrobe looked like it belonged to a beggar, I was constantly faced with the dilemma of having to go out and buy new clothes, specifically shirts. I loathed the fashion industry. It felt like there had been a change in how t-shirts have been manufactured over the past decade so that they fit more tightly than before, and that's why I had to stick with my homeless person's wardrobe. It went so far as me googling any companies who were still manufacturing shirts "the old way" to try find decent looking shirts in the size I thought I was. Clothes shopping has gotten much better now. I really enjoyed the sizing guide at redbubble.com (see below) for teaching me how to measure shirt sizes so I could find shirts that match what I'm expecting. For a decade or more, I've just been guessing that a pack of L or XL shirts is gonna mean a certain thing, regardless of brand or fit. I'd buy them, get them home, try them on and be completely disappointed in the way they fit/look. No one ever taught me how to do this.
- My wife appreciates my weight loss. For years since we've been married, she's insisted she doesn't care about my body size one way and also felt I was pretty slim. She was just being supportive - has had friends whose husbands insist they lose weight despite not wanting to, which they found offensive/rude (completely understandable, it's a difficult subject no matter how you approach it). After having lost this much weight this far on my own, she's been much more supportive. Before, my wife insisted that I eat meals with her to guarantee we spend time together. Now, she's understanding when I eat at different times due to fasting schedules, and we make sure to spend higher quality time on a regular basis in other ways.
- Much less back pain! I was waking up every morning with terrible lower back pain. I attributed this to a bunch of different things, but definitely not my weight. It had been getting worse and worse over the past 2 or 3 years. Nowadays, I wake up most days with no back pain. It still comes around if I sleep in certain positions but I expect this to get better as I continue to lose weight.
- I went down 3 notches in my belt. Just before I decided to try to lose weight, I had to go buy an extra large belt (had trouble finding one big enough to fit around me). Now I'm halfway there to being too small for it.
- I've stopped fidgeting so much. I had to constantly make sure my shirt was situated a certain way to de-emphasize my body shape as much as possible. Getting in and out of a car is so much more comfortable now, same for my desk chair.

Motivation:
In hindsight, I was constantly overeating to try to keep myself in a sort of food coma. Now, I'm completely obsessed with a) fitting a bunch of good tasting food into a daily calorie limit and b) watching the number on the scale go down.
I know these are also not the healthiest replacements for just straight up living a healthy lifestyle for the sake of it, but I'm ok solving one problem at a time, I'm not perfect.

Shirt sizing (from redbubble.com):

How do I choose the perfect size?

  1. Take your favorite t-shirt and lay it flat.
  2. Measure the distance from under the armpit on one side to under the armpit on the other side. Multiply it by 2. This is the chest measurement.
  3. Measure the length from the top of the shoulder next to the collar straight down to the bottom of the garment.
  4. Match this information to the shirt your interested in.

TLDR: Weight loss is good, sometimes hard, but definitely worth it and definitely doable for anyone who wants it.

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Monday, September 16, 2019

I'm not complaining, but anyone else have..

Hi all! 28 yr old female here. I'm 5'3.

So I was dumped earlier this year. In February, I was 140 lbs. After the breakup, I jumped up to 203 as of September 1st. I handled it pretty bad by eating fast food almost every single day, twice a day. I finally decided I'm done feeling sorry for myself. Since the 1st, have been counting calories, working out twice a day and replaced my empty caloric coffees with matcha or black tea(no sugar or sweetener.) I've had a trainer in the past, so I'm using the meal plans he'd make for me while I was his client. I decided that I'd eat 1200 calories.

I'd wake up and walk on my treadmill for 40 minutes and at night, I'd jog/walk around my neighborhood for an hour.

I ended the week 1 weighing 201. I was slightly bummed because I figured the first week you lose mostly water weight, so the first week would be a higher number. I went from eating roughly 4000 calories a day to 1200 so I thought I'd shed a lot of water weight initially, especially since I'm significantly overweight. Then, week 2, I weighed myself and I was 198. And as of today, I'm 197.

Is this normal? A slow first couple of weeks? I know after a few weeks, the weight loss slows down significantly, but I wasn't expecting a slow start either. I'm still highly motivated and I have gotten into a routine of working out first thing in the morning so I do feel like I have more energy than when I first started.

Sorry if I sound like I'm complaining! I am happy that I'm feeling more energy but in the past, usually the first week of working out I lose a good amount of water weight the first week.

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Tantrum Tuesday - The Day to Rant!

I Rant, Therefore I Am

Well bla-de-da-da! What's making your blood boil? What's under your skin? What's making you see red? What's up in your craw? Let's hear your weight loss related rants!
The rant post is a /u/bladedada production.

Please consider saving your next rant for this weekly thread every Tuesday.

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One of the hardest thing’s I’ve dealt with on my weight loss journey is still self-image.

I’ve been an overweight guy for my ENTIRE life. Just thought that’s how I was gonna be forever, even though I hated it. I was used to it, still am tbh. I’ve lost 48lbs in the last 7 months & 67lbs in the last 3+ years. At my highest I was 232 and now I’m at 165. It’s weird, and it hasn’t clicked in my head yet that this is how I look. I think it has to due with the majority of my weight being dropped in such a short amount of time. I’m proud of myself for sure, it’s just hard not to see myself as that fat, unhealthy guy I’ve always been, regardless of how many compliments I get. All I know is I gotta keep on keepin’ on no matter what. Same with all of y’all. It’s tough but it’s better than being fat and tough.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/31DSFLn

A lot of people probably don't comment on your weight loss because they really don't pay that much attention to your body.

Was chatting with a friend today who I think might have lost quite a bit of weight, but I really can't be sure at all. We see each other about once a month or so, and I'm only wondering because I know she was on a low carb diet last summer. I feel like maybe I think she used to be a lot bigger than she is now, but I don't carry a mental catalogue of my friend's bodies. She quite possibly could have lost 100 pounds or more, but how she looked last year is really not fixed in my mind - why would it be?

The point here is that she might feel hurt that nobody has commented, but there is no way on gods green earth that I am going to comment until she has lost 200+ pounds (again, not got a mental encyclopedia of weight equating to a person's shape, just a general, vague sense) because I am not ever ever ever going to embarrass my friend, and if I ask if she has lost weight I will be saying "wow, in my head you are reeeeeeaaaaally fat, way fatter than you are now". And if she hasn't lost weight that would be so, so, awful and rude and hurtful.

So don't lose hope if people aren't commenting, it's not because we don't love you, but that we do love you and don't spend our days analysing your body, plus we don't want to hurt your feelings.

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What the Foot! I Hurt My Foot and the Internets Aren’t Magic

I hurt my foot! Help!! Seriously… I need help because I was trying to diagnose myself and the most common foot injuries dominate the Dr. Google search results. But I have different symptoms so that wasn’t helpful. First let’s take a step back – um, I mean limp back… to when the pain started, how […]

The post What the Foot! I Hurt My Foot and the Internets Aren’t Magic appeared first on Run Eat Repeat.



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Major Milestone - 105lbs loss so far, another 30lbs or so to lose! However I'm proud I can get into children's hoodies now. [photos included]

http://imgur.com/a/fEBWvF6

It's been about a year and a half journey so far, but I'm so proud of how far I've come with my weight loss! I was about 285lbs at my biggest, but being 5 foot 2, it means that I look far far heavier then that.

It's been abit tough, what with my disability, I've have EDS, So it's alittle hard for me to push myself to keep going sometimes and is super painful as well.. but my walker helps with that.

I still have alittle bit more to go however, I think another 30lbs should do.

I've done it mostly via calories control, and recently I've begun IF and Calorie counting.

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