Friday, September 20, 2019

What are your new discoveries?

Sometimes I get kind of discouraged, and then I’ll notice a small change in myself and it’s enough to kind of give me a nudge back. Recently, I’ve just noticed that Im more confident. I still have a long way to go with weight loss and confidence, but it’s been a little easier to approach random people for random things and not feel judged. There’s some cool physical changes that I’m proud of too, but the self esteem stuff just kind of hit me hard when I realized that subconsciously I’ve been holding myself back.

What are some of your favourite new discoveries? Cheers to you all and your journeys!!

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My Fitness Journey - And Why I Trust Bro Science More Than Instagram

Roughly two years ago, I was over three hundred pounds. I felt sick, tired, and miserable, and decided to change that once and for all. I've written about my weight loss journey in detail, where small and gradual mindset and lifestyle changes over the course of a year led to dramatic weight loss. When I began to share my story, I mentioned that my journey has no end, and so I'm writing once again about where my journey has gone this year - my fitness journey. Because of the amazing reception I received last year and the kind words of all who said I was an inspiration to them, I wanted to share my new story - how gaining 30 pounds felt better than losing 160.

Fat: https://i.imgur.com/1O9IWgX.jpgg

Sick: https://i.imgur.com/zqhPvXE.jpg

Happy: https://i.imgur.com/Gx3gFb8.jpg

Original Thread:

https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/comments/9ycemb/my_incredible_journey_300lbs_to_150lbs_in_13/

Let me get back to the basics, real quick. I'm of Italian-American descent, from suburban New Jersey, and first started lifting weights in the early 2000s. You already see where this is going, I'm sure. Bench and curl is a program. Chicken, broccoli and rice are food groups. "Starting Sylvester Stallone" is motivational material. And you know what? It was pretty damn fun. I remember tons of good times in the garage and basement gyms with my brother and friends, miserable hours on the treadmill and epic cheat days with no shortage of pizza.

When I began my weight loss journey, I emulated what I had known from my youth - basement gym, meal prepped tuna, and "bro split" workout routines. But as I neared toward my goal weight, a new and, in my opinion, sinister influence began to creep into my life - "Instagram fitness". If you've even glanced at one post of someone squatting before, you know what I mean. "Full for minutes, full for hours", people rolling around on the floor with kettlebells, and jacked Bart Simpson. Seriously, why do they all use Bart Simpson fanart?

I can't sit here and blame a piece of software for my own faulty programming. Maybe it was the stress of being a new parent, or the abhorrence of the lifestyle I once lived and the way I once felt. Regardless I was primed and ready, and as these new voices spoke to me, as I'm sure they do to countless others, I began to listen. I abstained from sweeteners, followed the plant based diet, ditched the weights in favor of daily calisthenics, convinced myself that lettuce tasted great and that cheat days were for fools. I ate nothing unless it came off a scale - not even unweighed cucumber. I stopped salting my food and did the daily calisthenics, no matter how sore and tired I was. After all, you don't need rest days, you just need "rehab" stretches like the countless accounts insist.

After less than three months, I became so skinny that my feet hurt when I walked, my hip bone hurt if I lay on my side, and my tailbone hurt if I sat for long. I could barely sleep more than a few hours, I was intense and irritable around the clock, I felt cold no matter what, and I was constantly urinating. I would later learn these are all symptoms of malnutrition. But I told the world I felt great, and even made an incredibly cringey account (now since deleted) of my own to share how great I felt and how awesome I was - complete with thousands of paid fake followers. Weekly weigh ins became daily and sometimes I would even work out twice a day. The stress mounted and my family and coworkers became distant from the way I was acting. To say my home life suffered greatly would be an understatement. I measured my worth 100g at a time.

One icy, rainy night in January I decided to brave the fire pit in the yard for a few minutes, and asked my wife to bring me a coffee. Instead I was handed a spiked mug, offered a walk to the bar, and then gorged an entire bag of junk food from 711. The next morning, I woke up not feeling awful as I'd feared - instead I set a new personal record on my Airdyne. Something clicked, finally; I was doing something wrong. I was subjecting myself and everyone around me to misery for nothing. What good is such a rigorous routine if there isn't even a benefit from it?

Over the next month or two, I began to undo what had been changed over the last few months. I deleted the Instagram account and picked the weights back up again. I went back to the drawing board with my program and began a more balanced version of the bro split I had always known (lower, back, chest, arms, off). I stopped weighing my food unless a recipe required it, I started guesstimating calories, and I stopped weighing myself. Instead, I'd take some photos every month or two to track progress. My feelings would guide me now, and once a week or two they'd lead me back to the Chinese buffet.

Fitness should be fun, engaging, and inspire confidece and happiness. For me, that's heavy weights and heavy metal. Maybe for you it's crossfit or yoga or long distance running. I know now the human body is not so rigid that it can be completely measured and calculated so easily. You need rest days because your body needs to rebuild and also because you're working late and have a lot of errands to catch up on. I know that a balanced and well rounded diet is essential to healthy living, but if we're being honest here, chicken breast and broccoli will never taste good. We enjoy eating it all week because it has been broscientifically proven that after 9pm on a Saturday there is no such thing as a calorie.

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Completely losing motivation.

About three or may four years ago I lost approximately 50 pounds. This was largely due to the fact that I worked at a gym, and really had no excuse to not work out. This was a huge factor in my weight loss, and the changes to my diet.

I'm now in a completely different stage of my life, where I'm working in an office from 8:00 AM to 6:00 PM, and surrounded with sugary food constantly. There is a free gym at the office that I try and take advantage of, but I just don't have the motivation or frankly the energy to really try at the gym when I do go. I usually end up doing maybe 45 minutes of cardio and then calling it before I can do any weight training.

What are somethings that y'all do to hold yourself accountable?

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Depression after weight loss

I’m a 36 year old guy. I’ve gone from 375 lbs down to 250 lbs over the last 14 months. It’s been a pretty big transformation and I don’t regret it at all but I’m really struggling with depression at the moment, partially as a result of the weight loss. Have others experienced this?

I’ve previously dealt with depression and usually I manage it pretty well, but this is the worst I’ve felt in a very long time.

It sounds kinda silly but I guess I really hoped that I’d be one of those ugly duckling stories. I’ve never had a partner and haven’t even managed to go on a single date in nearly a decade. I started out on my weight loss journey to improve my mobility and fitness but somewhere along the way I figured that also maybe it might help my chances of finally meeting someone special. I’ve been putting myself out there for six months and well, it’s been a complete failure. Not even a single date, just a whole lot of rejection. I see so many before and after pics which blow me away, and it guts me to feel that after all this work I’m still not considered dating material.

The other problem I’m having is that I used to use food or booze to cope with the loneliness. Especially on weekends. I have a few close friends and acquaintances who I meet for lunch or coffee but I live alone and the evenings can often be lonely. I used to order takeaways whenever I was down or needed to give me something to look forward to. I gave that up last year but never found anything to replace it with. It hasn’t been much of an issue until the last few months but now that my depression is back I’m finding it pretty hard. I’m refusing to revert back to the old habits as I don’t want to undo all the work, but instead I just stay lonely and miserable. Which isn’t much fun.

Has anyone else struggled with depression after losing weight?

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Weight Loss Journey - New Weight Training Routine Advice

I've started a weight loss journey about 3 months ago and about 2 months ago I got a YMCA membership and have been going Monday, Wednesday, and Friday each week since then. I googled beginners weight training routines and pretty much went with the first one I found.

Monday: Chest and Triceps

Wednesday: Back and Biceps

Friday: Legs and Shoulders

I start out with a 25 minute walk to warm up then hit the weights after that. In the website I found they said to not care about weight and to focus on form and technique. I didn't know what weight to start at and I figured that would come with time. Next week will be my 9th week in and I think I may be ready to change things up. I'm just not sure what to do. I'm sure I can spend hours googling away on what to do next but I know the internet and myself. I would probably read everything and then come up with some insane ridiculous routine plan that even the most seasoned of weight lifters would cringe at.

A little background on myself: When I started I was 410Lb. I started doing the keto diet and with that and my exercise I'm down to 363Lbs as of this morning. My goal weight is 250lbs or less. I'm 35 years old.

I'm not looking to get 'huge' but I want to build some muscle and strength. I know if I build muscle it will help with my resting metabolism. Should I continue just doing what I am doing. I'm not tracking how much weight I am doing. I simply pick a number of lbs and I do a set of 12, then a set of 10, then a set of 8. If I feel the first set was too easy I up the weight 5-10lbs for the next set. I try to spend little down time between sets to keep my heart rate up.

Should I keep doing what I am doing and start tracking my weight? Is it time to put together a formal training routine rather doing machines I think make sense? Maybe I should just pay for some time with a personal trainer at the Y...

I wasn't sure where to post this. I looked at r/StartingStrength, r/Fitness, r/strength_training but after reading their rules it seemed like this would get removed or be considered 'dumb'.

Any advice would be appreciated.

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TMI Questions with Dr. Nita Landry – Podcast 117

I’m asking Dr. Nita Landry about how to prevent yeast infections, urinary incontinence, sex before workouts and more!  Dr. Landry is a co-host on The Doctor’s TV show and has a great way of explaining awkward topics so you don’t feel weird about asking! Or at least I didn’t – make I should have? Get […]

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14 Delicious Recipes Starring Peanut Butter

It’s okay to get a little nutty while you’re dieting. If you’re talking about peanut butter, that is! The Leaf is filled with healthy peanut butter recipes that are diet-friendly.

According to Harvard Health, peanuts are’t actually nuts. They are a legume, similar to lentils or soybeans. Regardless of their origin, peanut butter is a delicious and healthy option for those trying to lose weight. Studies show that people who eat nuts and peanut butter have a decreased risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes says Harvard Health. Nuts and nut butters are filled with healthy fats and can help keep you full throughout the day. Never underestimate the fullness factor when you’re shedding pounds!

Fortunately, Nutrisystem has developed more than a dozen peanut butter recipes. All delicious, all healthy and all diet-approved! Keep reading to see how versatile peanut butter really is.

Go Nuts for Nuts: 10 Nuts to Add to Your Diet

Read More

Here are 14 delicious peanut butter recipes:

1. Chocolate Peanut Butter Popsicles >

Chocolate Peanut Butter Popsicles

Calories per Serving: 100

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel

This recipe is so simple, you probably already have the six ingredients for it in your kitchen! You just need some inexpensive popsicle molds (and not just for this recipe–check out these other Nutrisystem-approved popsicles! >). Blend together plain nonfat Greek yogurt, nonfat milk, stevia, vanilla extract, unsweetened cocoa powder and peanut butter in your blender or food processor. Pour into your popsicle molds and freeze. Enjoy your 100-calorie peanut butter popsicles as a dessert or snack!

2. 3-Ingredient Protein Bombs >

3-Ingredient Protein Bombs

Calories per Serving: 131

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

We hear ya!  You’re saying, “Three ingredients? I’m so there!” This smooth, creamy snack is even easier than it sounds. Nutrisystem Chocolate FreshStart Shake is mixed with peanut butter and fat free cream cheese to create these delicious protein bombs. The recipe makes 16 of these protein-packed peanut butter balls, with two balls as one serving.

3. 4-Ingredient Rice Krispies Treat >

4-Ingredient Rice Krispies Treat

Calories per Serving: 71

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 2 Extras

Who doesn’t like a crunchy and sweet dessert that is easy to make? Snack on one of these crispy bars filled our favorite nut butter. Crisp rice cereal is held together with creamy peanut butter, honey and vanilla extract. The recipe makes 24 bars and one bar counts as one serving. In one move you’ve stocked up on your snacks and desserts for practically month! Keep them in the fridge and grab a bar when you’re craving something sweet.

17 Crazy Good Dessert Recipes Under 200 Calories

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4. Chocolate Peanut Butter French Toast >

Chocolate Peanut Butter French Toast

Calories per Serving: 238

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

Though it sounds like a fancy brunch recipe, this deliciously sweet breakfast whips up in 15 minutes. You can enjoy a gourmet breakfast even on workday mornings! Start with whole wheat bread soaked in a mixture of egg, nonfat milk, vanilla and a scoop of your Nutrisystem Chocolate FreshStart Shake. Cook in a pan for three to four minutes per side. Melt some peanut butter in the microwave and simply drizzle it on top. Sprinkle with some chocolate chips and enjoy your peanut butter platter!

5. 3-Ingredient Peanut Butter Cups >

3-Ingredient Peanut Butter Cups

Calories per Serving: 139
On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 2 Extras

Keep this recipe handy for Halloween! After you’ve tried one of these, you won’t be tempted by the high calorie store-bought versions you’re handing out to the kids. Make your own peanut butter cups with semi-sweet chocolate chips, coconut oil and crunchy peanut butter. Enjoy your favorite peanut butter candy made diet-friendly!

6. PB and J Power Bowl >

PB and J Power Bowl

Calories per Serving: 282
On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb, 1 PowerFuel and 2 Extras

The staple of childhood lunches becomes your secret weight loss weapon at breakfast. Combine peanut butter with steel cut oats, almond milk and a homemade jelly made with fresh strawberries, lemon juice and chia seeds. You’ll be loving this deconstructed PB and J sandwich every morning!

10 Ways to Give Your Morning Oatmeal a Makeover

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7. No Bake Chocolate Peanut Butter Granola Bars >

No Bake Chocolate Peanut Butter Granola Bars

Calories per Serving: 199

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb and 1 PowerFuel

Unfortunately, many store-bought granola bars are often calorie and sugar bombs masquerading as a healthy treat. It’s so simple to make your own and control the ingredients that you add. These bars are not only delicious, they are diet-friendly. Mix together rolled oats, peanut butter, honey and semi-sweet chocolate chips (or substitute some dried fruit). Throw them in the fridge and grab a bar when you’re craving a nutty treat!

8. Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Mug Cake >

Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Mug Cake

Calories per Serving: 146

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 SmartCarb and 1 Extra

The inventor of the mug cake deserves an award. They’re quick, delicious, mess-free and never see the inside of a hot oven. It’s microwave all the way.  This quick dessert combines powdered peanut butter (found in the same aisle as regular peanut butter), a little whole wheat pastry flower, baking powder, stevia, banana, almond milk and chocolate chips. Three minutes in the microwave and it’s ready to eat!

9. Apple Peanut Monster Mouths >

Apple Peanut Monster Mouths

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

These are so adorable, you’re going to have to fight your kids for them. When Halloween comes around, you need healthy and fun treats available for you and your family.  Slice up a medium apple and scoop peanut butter on one side of each slice. Line up a row of nuts (macadamias, peanuts, almonds or cashews) to look like teeth, then top with another slice of apple spread with peanut butter.  These peanut butter monster mouths are scary good!

No Tricks! Just 13 Healthy Halloween Treats

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10. Chocolate Peanut Butter Crunch Bars >

Chocolate Peanut Butter Crunch Bars

Calories per Serving: 176

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 SmartCarb

When you get a jones for candy, we’ve got just the recipe to help. This yummy bar gets its sweet flavor and crunchy texture from Nutrisystem Vanilla FreshStart Shake, dates, peanut butter, chocolate chips, oats and vanilla extract. A food processor does all the mixing for you. Form your bars and thrown them in the freezer for an hour to create an easy Flex Snack that you can enjoy throughout the week.

11. Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana Smoothie >

Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana Smoothie

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 2 PowerFuels and 1 SmartCarb

Add this one to your lineup of peanut butter recipes! This rich, delicious smoothie could not be easier to create. Blend together a Nutrisystem Chocolate FreshStart Shake with peanut butter, frozen banana, water and ice. Start your day with this beverage and you’ll be having a peanut butter party all morning!

12. Peanut Butter Banana Pops >

Peanut Butter Banana Pops

Calories per Serving: 160

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel, 1/2 SmartCarb and 1 Extra

When it hot outside, you need a cold treat to cool you down. In fact, you might want to make a bigger batch of these pops since you can store them in the freezer. Enjoy them any time that you’re looking for something cool and sweet. Simply combine peanut butter, bananas, water and honey in a blender. Pour into popsicle molds and freeze to create perfect peanut butter pops!

10 Banana Recipes You’ll Go Bananas For

Read More

13. Chocolate Peanut Butter Freezer Fudge >

Chocolate Peanut Butter Freezer Fudge

Calories per Serving: 116

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 1 PowerFuel and 1 Extra

This confection is so rich and creamy, you’re not going to believe it’s diet-friendly. It’s so simple to make and only takes a few minutes. Simply heat up some peanut butter, almond milk and a packet of Nutrisystem NutriChocolates in a saucepan. Pour the mixture into an ice cube tray or in circles on a baking sheet and stick them in the freezer. Enjoy them frozen or room temperature.

14. Chicken Kebabs with Peanut Dipping Sauce >

Chicken Kabobs with Peanut Dipping Sauce

Calories per Serving: 219

On Nutrisystem, Count As: 2 PowerFuels

Just to show you how versatile peanut butter is, we wanted to include one of our favorite savory peanut butter recipes featuring this delicious ingredient. These chicken kebabs have a sweet, salty and spicy flavor that is unique and satisfying. Our favorite nut butter is featured here in a peanut dipping sauce made with peanut butter, chicken broth, soy sauce, lime juice and cayenne pepper. Lean chicken and peanut butter combine to create a protein powerhouse!

6 Snack Habits That Melt Pounds

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