Saturday, October 19, 2019

I hit my lowest weight in 12 years, weighing the same as when I was 21!

It feels great to have reached this goal, finally, after 3.5 month of losing about 0.9 kg per week (very steadily).

I am 81.3 kg right now. IN 7-10 days I expect to hit the 79.x kg. Then I will be lighter than I ever was in my twenties and thirties! I have been wanting this for so long, I am happy that I am really doing this for myself now!

I look forward to being done with this journey. I estimate that I need another month to reach my goal weight. Fortunately, my life is much more fun and relaxed than ever, so I expect the time to pass quickly. I have lost 15 out of the total 20 kg I wanted to lose, so I have already gone most of the way.

When I am done losing weight, I look forward to not having to create a deficit and thus have more energy. I will learn to cook better, and eat healthy meals, and I will exercise more. Being light makes me much faster at triathlon and ice skating, and much better at climbing. So, I look forward to doing that more.

Also planning to do a good fitness routine. I have a schedule now for the coming 6 weeks. I wish to build 5-10 kg of extra muscle. So, I won't be bored.

However, will not go overzealous with that. If I live an enjoyable and healthy lifestyle, than good things will come!

Will also take care of my inner self. Meditating, letting go of my past, getting rid of every unnecessary source of stress, listening to my own needs and pursuing my dreams in a balanced way. I think my weight gain was mostly due to emotional eating and a loss of desire to take good care of myself due to mental issues, so if I take good care of my inner person than I expect to be able to never have to go on a weight loss journey ever again (perhaps lose 1-2 kg every now and then, but that is nothing :P).

I hope you are doing great as well! All the best!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2oV9FOT

My app has been lying

I had a sad and frustrating moment last night. I plugged my stats (32F/5’8”/182lbs) into an online calculator. To be more specific it’s the online calculator I use to give people on this sub calorie related advice. It said my weight maintenance calories were ~ 1900. I thought it was was wrong, my app says 2160. Check a few others and boom, all are around 1900. What the hell? Google a bit, and I find this: https://www.mynetdiary.com/weight-loss-topic/Weight-Maintenance-Calorie-Calculation-Seems-Too-High-1005.1407, which tells me they’ve known its been off since at least 2012. By the way, I’ve been using this damn app about that long (on and off, ya’ll lmao the story).

I was so angry. I’ve been eating ~1700 calories for a couple months. Apparently just 200 shy of my current maintenance instead 500 as I’d planned. I know this shouldn’t be that big a deal. Everyone’s body is a little different and I could just adjust up or down a bit based on actual results, but dammit this part was supposed to be certain. In all the uncertainty of weight loss and changing my lifestyle and trying to get fit, I felt like I was supposed to be able to trust the damned app I was using to do it all.

No, I won’t quit the app, I really like this one more than the others, I’ll just continue moving my calories down gradually. Last week I started down at 1550 and found that quite doable. I’ll probably aim for 1500 next week. If it’s too hard to go lower I can always lose slower. I’m not racing anyone. I can be more patient if that’s what I need to do.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2MU3Glp

Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Saturday, 19 October 2019? Start here!

Today is your Day 1?

Welcome to r/Loseit!

So you aren’t sure of how to start? Don’t worry! “How do I get started?” is our most asked question. r/Loseit has helped our users lose over 1,000,000 recorded pounds and these are the steps that we’ve found most useful for getting started.

Why you’re overweight

Our bodies are amazing (yes, yours too!). In order to survive before supermarkets, we had to be able to store energy to get us through lean times, we store this energy as adipose fat tissue. If you put more energy into your body than it needs, it stores it, for (potential) later use. When you put in less than it needs, it uses the stored energy. The more energy you have stored, the more overweight you are. The trick is to get your body to use the stored energy, which can only be done if you give it less energy than it needs, consistently.

Before You Start

The very first step is calculating your calorie needs. You can do that HERE. This will give you an approximation of your calorie needs for the day. The next step is to figure how quickly you want to lose the fat. One pound of fat is equal to 3500 calories. So to lose 1 pound of fat per week you will need to consume 500 calories less than your TDEE (daily calorie needs from the link above). 750 calories less will result in 1.5 pounds and 1000 calories is an aggressive 2 pounds per week.

Tracking

Here is where it begins to resemble work. The most efficient way to lose the weight you desire is to track your calorie intake. This has gotten much simpler over the years and today it can be done right from your smartphone or computer. r/loseit recommends an app like MyFitnessPal, Loseit! (unaffiliated), or Cronometer. Create an account and be honest with it about your current stats, activities, and goals. This is your tracker and no one else needs to see it so don’t cheat the numbers. You’ll find large user created databases that make logging and tracking your food and drinks easy with just the tap of the screen or the push of a button. We also highly recommend the use of a digital kitchen scale for accuracy. Knowing how much of what you're eating is more important than what you're eating. Why? This may explain it.

Creating Your Deficit

How do you create a deficit? This is up to you. r/loseit has a few recommendations but ultimately that decision is yours. There is no perfect diet for everyone. There is a perfect diet for you and you can create it. You can eat less of exactly what you eat now. If you like pizza you can have pizza. Have 2 slices instead of 4. You can try lower calorie replacements for calorie dense foods. Some of the communities favorites are cauliflower rice, zucchini noodles, spaghetti squash in place of their more calorie rich cousins. If it appeals to you an entire dietary change like Keto, Paleo, Vegetarian.

The most important thing to remember is that this selection of foods works for you. Sustainability is the key to long term weight management success. If you hate what you’re eating you won’t stick to it.

Exercise

Is NOT mandatory. You can lose fat and create a deficit through diet alone. There is no requirement of exercise to lose weight.

It has it’s own benefits though. You will burn extra calories. Exercise is shown to be beneficial to mental health and creates an endorphin rush as well. It makes people feel awesome and has been linked to higher rates of long term success when physical activity is included in lifestyle changes.

Crawl, Walk, Run

It can seem like one needs to make a 180 degree course correction to find success. That isn’t necessarily true. Many of our users find that creating small initial changes that build a foundation allows them to progress forward in even, sustained, increments.

Acceptance

You will struggle. We have all struggled. This is natural. There is no tip or trick to get through this though. We encourage you to recognize why you are struggling and forgive yourself for whatever reason that may be. If you overindulged at your last meal that is ok. You can resolve to make the next meal better.

Do not let the pursuit of perfect get in the way of progress. We don’t need perfect. We just want better.

Additional resources

Now you’re ready to do this. Here are more details, that may help you refine your plan.

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

documenting my entire weight-loss journey

ps. if I'm on the wrong sub please guide me to the right one

START WEIGHT : 95 kgs/~210lbs, 23M, 175cm/~5'10

goal with the post: create a mega-thread for people to join in and post daily pictures of their own journey. if you do it with me and reach your goal I'll literally buy rgold and give it to you.

I decided to use this thread as a way to keep me accountable for going to the gym and what I eat. I will use this post to continually add daily pictures of myself using the same mirror and poses along with everything I eat that day and my exercises, complete with sets, reps and weights. I'm trying to make this the most comprehensive diary I have ever made, something that may help someone like me someday who don't wanna be fat their entire lives. if you want to join in I encourage you to comment on this post and edit in your pictures/exercised/meals DAILY.

so a little background, I was 120kgs/~270lbs (175cm/5'10 I think) in 2016. i worked out from January till July 2016 and went down to 80kgs. I managed to stay the same weight for around 2 years but then cape town happened. I moved there for a year and beer was so cheap that I started drinking every day, trying different craft beers constantly, never cooking (I had pizza 5 days a week on average) and generally living an extremely unhealthy lifestyle.

that meant that when I returned home I weighed a total of 95 kgs, quickly approaching my old weight. I can't let that happen. no fucking way is that gonna happen. I started exercising this month and so far I've seen zero weight loss. I will start exercising harder and doing intermittent fasting instead, perhaps going full OMAD (one meal a day).

if this post becomes big and I don't post for a day, bother me until I do. more often than not I will keep updating daily, even on rest days, to edit in my meals and stuff.

if you can't do it alone, you don't need to do it alone. I'm here for you, I'll be at the gym with you, and if enough people follow this post then they will too.

currently sitting at the gym writing this so I'll make this day quick.

OCTOBER 18TH

EXERCISE :

all sets of 3

tricep pull down max 40lbs/18kgs • 8 rep burn • slight pain in elbows but bearable • 35lbs/15kgs is better for elbows

pull ups 75 kgs assistance • 8 rep max • no pain • mostly shoulder burn

concentration curl 10kgs • 8 rep medium • 6 rep 12.5 kgs hard • no pain

tricep overhead cable 35 lbs 15 kgs • 8 rep easy • no pain • probably bad form • lower back burn

vertical leg raises • 8 rep slow • lower ab burn • good form I presume

cable bicep hammer curl 18kg I think • 8 rep medium • good form • lower bicep burn

Finish off with HIIT on elliptical

  • 1 min active rest usually 50-60 RPM

  • 30 sec of sprint at >110 RPM

  • repeat for 10 min

*heart rate usually goes from 140/150 up to 165-170 and down again.

FOOD

BREAKFAST

• 4 slices brown bread • cheese & ham • 3 stripes of mayo from a squeezable thingy 

DINNER

• whole wheat spaghetti (not sure about portion • 250g chicken minced meat • wok mix (broccoli, carrots, cashews, onions and some other stuff I can't remember) • cream sauce (high fat low carb) 

total calories ≈ 1500-1700 perhaps even less

PICTURES:

http://imgur.com/gallery/anZM7aV taken today but let's act like it was taken yesterday 😂😂

let's go.

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Friday, October 18, 2019

Setting a Proper Goal...

I tend to ramble, but I’ll try my absolute best to make this short and sweet. Here goes.

I am 15 years old, just about 5’0”, and approximately 150lbs at the moment. I know. Not pretty. Just a little backstory- a couple years ago, for a window of time during both 6th and 7th grade, I began to become obsessive about calories and nutritional facts along with my weight itself, constantly and compulsively weighing myself, absolutely destroying myself and experiencing levels of self-loathing and miserableness that I could never even put into words. It was awful. I lived off of the things people said- asking me what I’d done to myself, if I was sick, if I even ate anymore. I wanted them to be scared. Being known for how thin I was gave me such a high, and I was so obsessed with it. I was the ONLY thing I cared about. I was so isolated. So lonely. I lost sight of everything that mattered. I dropped a good amount below what was considered a healthy weight for myself throughout that time period, but when I decided to turn over a new leaf.. boy, do I turn over a new goddamn leaf. On Halloween night of 2017, I decided to let go and binge after months upon months of self-starvation, and I told myself it was just for one night, but I couldn’t stop myself from that point forward. I started piling on the pounds, overeating every day- I had been so, so deprived, and it was like I was making up for it all at once, and I just couldn’t get enough. But, of course, I had screwed up my metabolism badly and gone into extreme starvation mode, so the weight came back very, very quickly.

December of that year, I moved across the country, and the depression that experience put me into only caused me to binge more and more. From October 2017 to summer of 2018, I managed to put on around 50 pounds. I continued to binge and overeat almost daily throughout eighth grade, but my metabolism had settled by then, so I only gained around 20 pounds as opposed to what I had put on during the prior year- bringing me to the point I’m at now. In all honesty, I am struggling very much to cease binging, and while I’m not really gaining weight from it at this point (I would assume my metabolism has had time to cool down a lot throughout all this and has kind of just settled), I know it’s extremely unhealthy and that I need to stop. It’s a work in progress, though, and I can feel myself getting better, for real this time. But that’s beside the point.

I know exactly where I want to be a year from now, and I plan to achieve it. See, I had to move back to my hometown after about a year and a half of living where I’d moved to, and I’m currently attending the high school that I’d always thought I was going to attend before I’d found out about the move. My school has a JROTC program, and they offer different teams for cadets in the program- and that includes Raiders. Being a Raider is all about toughness- mental and physical toughness, and you have to have a lot of it to endure the things you do throughout training. It’s composed of 5 different, physically challenging events that involve running, heavy lifting, and supporting yourself along with your team. It has been my dream to be a part of this ever since I’d heard about it years ago from my brother, but due to the fact that I’m not nearly in optimal shape for it, since I’d lost all of the motivation I’d had for running and physical fitness after the eating disorder and the weight gain and everything, along with the fact that I dealt with a really bad hip injury earlier this year, I had to give up that dream. I settled for doing Drill instead this year, and I’m truly trying my best, but I know in my heart that it’s not for me, and the only reason I’m doing it is because I needed a replacement for Raiders, since that had been my dream and my plan for such a long time. Everything- the team bonding, the physical training, the ways it so obviously betters you as a person and has already bettered all of my friends who’ve had the opportunity to be a part of it. It’s my dream- what else can I really say? In all honesty, I’m upset and angry that my eating disorder and my awful relationship with my body stole my dream from me, but I guess the only thing I can do to solve that personal trauma is to get over it and move forward. And, like I said, I know exactly where I want to be a year from now, and that’s on the Raiders team. I’m willing to work my ass off to get to that point, and I do believe I can do it, because I will do anything to get to where I want to be, and nothing can change that.

I’m a pretty methodical person when it comes to my goals, and I believe I have my weight loss plan in check already, but I’ve been feeling very conflicted about another aspect of this whole thing. As the title suggests, I’m having trouble establishing a goal weight. And look, I know it’s not really a necessity to have one, and that I can just move along in my weight loss journey and cross that bridge when I come to it, but, like I said, I’m methodical, and I don’t just want a specific, pre-established number to work toward- I NEED one. But, as I researched ideal weights for a 5’0” female, I realized the criteria was a bit lower than I’d expected. I’d previously thought 115 was an alright goal, give or take a little, but in discussions and online forums about this topic, that’s chubby, overshooting in terms of what I should aim for. It sounds like 100 and 90-something is the ideal, but I just don’t know if my metabolism will allow me to go there. Looking back on pictures, I was actually quite thin at around 100, which I was a little less than 2 years ago, and forget 90-something- I don’t believe I’d be physically able to get that thin, considering my history as well as the fact that I come from a family of larger-framed (yet in-shape) women. But then, I see pictures of 100 and 90-pound women who are the same height as me, and they perfectly healthy and nowhere near underweight. So now, it feels like I have to up my previous standards and shoot even lower, because it seems like I’d still be pushing fluffy at 115 or even 110. But I want to be realistic about what I can achieve in a timeframe of around 10 months, because I want to be in the best shape possible for Raiders when the time comes. I have my fitness and diet plans set for the most part, but I’d really like to set a goal for my weight. If I’m a couple pounds off, it’s okay, but I do want to be in the best shape I can be in. So, is 110 or so too much for someone of my stature, or can I set it as my healthy, realistic Raiders goal weight for a year from now? I will not achieve this in any disordered manner, I’ve gotten over that phase in my life and I plan to achieve it in the healthiest way possible. I just want to be shooting for the right number. If you have any viewpoints you’ve like to share, please do! I’d appreciate it so much.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/32G4f8U

I lost a total of 39kg / 86lb between Sep 2016 - July of 2018 and gained back roughly 20-22kg / 44-48lb since then. Need some advice please! F/25/5'6

Hi all!

Firstly I want to thank all of you guys here (and the /r/progresspics community), because of you and the motivation and inspiration you gave me I managed to lose a bunch of weight over the last few years. Here's my backstory:

  • I had a major knee injury in 2008 when I was 13 that completely screwed me over - I went from being a very active and healthy kid to being pretty sedentary. I had an ACL reconstruction and meniscal repairs, along with a bunch of other stuff at the age of 17 in 2012, and the weight started piling on after this, I gained about 10kg (22lb) over 1 year. I managed to lose this 10kg over the next year and was sitting at about 86kg or so in late 2014.
  • Knee pain and problems persisted and I got really depressed and started eating my feelings away, and on top of that I had a further 2 surgeries in 2015 and I ended up going on antidepressants (Setraline then Fluoxetine) to control my OCD which had gotten a bit out of hand, and at this point my weight ballooned all the way up to about 115kg (253lb) by August 2016. This scared the heck out of me, I had never been this big in my life and was having heart palpitations, serious shortness of breath, random pains and clicks and cracks everywhere, it was awful and I felt like an 80 year old.
  • This was the kick I needed to get back on track and try to do something about it, and in late 2016/Jan 2017 I went all out on CICO and managed to get down to about 76kg (168lb) by July 2018 (there were some minor setbacks along the way but I always got back on track), and was feeling amazing, I was closer to the weight I had been pre my first surgery in 2012 and was loving life! I still had issues with my knee and constant pain/locking/clicking/grinding/ literally everything, but I was proud of my achievement despite the knee situation. I managed to get my first job as well at this point (age 23 lol, but I just never thought of working before finishing uni) so everything felt like it was going amazingly. Also just to add, I never really exercised or anything, literally just power walked everywhere.
  • Things went a little rocky after this when I went back to university in September 2018, I was working and a full time student, work started to really stress me out because of a shitty manager and a pretty toxic work environment, on top of this, I ended up having another knee surgery in November 2018 and my weight was just piling on after this, and again I turned to food. In around march this year I decided fuck it, I don't need to deal with this shit and quit my job, got a different job and classes were almost finished for the year and I started to feel good again, but started to neglect my weight all together since I was juggling exams, new job life etc.
  • Fast forward to last week, the scale had peaked to about 100kg (220lb) and I was heartbroken. I felt like all that hard work and effort, measuring everything I ate, wearing a heart rate monitor to track calories burnt, walking everywhere, meal planning etc had gone to waste. It was so so disheartening to see a number on the scale that I had thought I'd left behind me. It genuinely made me cry and I started my weight loss journey again, and set a small goal for my 25th birthday on November 14th to try and reach 90kg or lower. I clocked in at about 96.5kg (212lb) this morning which has been the same for the past few days which is annoying, but it's still good progress so far, but I just feel so frustrated, and scared that I won't be able to continue and see it through. I know I've done it before, but back then I had done this for the first time, and I had never seen those numbers on the scale before, I wasn't used to being severely obese, so it felt natural to lose it all. But now it's like, I'm back there in that horrible weight range and it's not even the first time. I'm just so pissed at the decisions I made and for not being stronger over the past year, but what's done is done.

I came back here, since this place and the other weight loss subs gave me so much comfort and motivation, I had spent so much time reading through everyone's posts and seeing their progress and silently cheering everyone and myself on (was always a lurker). I think if anyone would understand my position, it would be you guys.

Do you have any advice, or tips to re-lose the weight you've once lost? For those who've done this once, twice or however many times in the past, what kept you going until the end, despite the frustration of having to go through the same milestones? I've tried a few time over the past year to get back on track and they've all fizzled out after a week at most, so I feel like once I go beyond this (2 weeks, or better yet, a month) I'll feel more positive about my progress.

It's worth pointing out that when I lost all that weight I had nothing else to do except go to university. I guess it was easier to focus on the weight loss when I had so much free time. The real challenge is now that I am working, in my last year before graduating, dealing with trying to start a real career and applying for graduate schemes etc. It may just be great practise for life ahead, things won't always be easy and if I can do this whilst juggling and multitasking, then I'll really have built solid foundations for managing my weight for the rest of my life, by finding a balance.

My ultimate goal weight would be about 65-68kg (143-149lb). I really want to go to the gym, but just feel embarrassed and self conscious. I tried once earlier in my weight loss journey and ended up going straight to the back of the gym and walking on a treadmill for half an hour - a waste of a gym membership when I could be doing the same thing outside with fresh air, so cancelled it after 3 months lol.

Tl;dr Lost a bunch of weight, gained more than half of it back, how to get back on track and keep going without relapsing?

The silver lining is I caught it before it went up to the highest weight I got to back in 2016, so I have that going for me eh!

sorry for the huge wall of text and thank you all once again!

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

Can safely say I have broken through a 2ish month plateau

https://i.imgur.com/0AEWrRv.png

Yep it finally happened. After trying so many different things to "fix" my metabolism I just went back to doing the exact same thing as the day I started counting everything and boom. Everyone knows your weight can fluctuate due to the things you ate (more carbs , sodium, storing more water weight etc) but after a month of being stuck between 220ish and 115ish I went crazy looking for reasons on why I was stuck in this thing.

I tried to increase my calorie intake to "fix" metabolism adaptation, slowly over time increase calories by 50, 100 until maintenance but that did nothing, actually I gained quite a bit of water weight which I quickly got rid of by going back to regular diets.

I guess it really is true that there comes a time when your body tries to adjust to the new weight and just gotta let it do its thing. I don't know if this is what helped kick start my weight loss again, but I started going for fast and long walks for about 2 weeks straight doing 10k walks or a bit less a day... of course while fasted.

If you are stuck like I was remember you are not alone, and I recommend you stick to whatever it is that worked for you in those first couple weeks/months and treat every day as your first day.

Cheers

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