Friday, November 8, 2019

how to set a goal weight?

hi all - i am wondering something pretty simple. i’m not really sure how to set my own goal weight.

i am more motivated to work on multiple smaller goals than one huge goal, so i’m applying that same logic to weight loss.

however, i am struggle to determine a good “final goal” GW for myself. here are some deets about me:

i’m 26F and 5’2” HW: around 190 (i stopped weighing myself for a time but i know it was around that), SW: 184, CW: 176.4

according to my BMI, “normal” range would be 104-131 lbs. for me, that has never really been a comfortable weight. as a teenager at 108 lbs, i stopped menstruating and got sick often. then, after taking birth control, i leveled out in the upper 120s/low 130s.

about 5 years ago, i was running distance and racing half marathons, eating a somewhat healthy diet, and my weight was in the 140-145 lb range.

now, my current goal is just to hit 170 before holiday break in late december, and go in about 10 lb increments from there. i am just not sure where a reasonable goal weight would be... as the 140s are technically “overweight,” but i love strength training and having a muscular build. even being in the 140s seems like such a lofty goal to me now, let alone less than that!

what gives? how do i pick the best goal weight? should i focus on body fat % at some point instead of weight in lbs?

submitted by /u/tofufordinner
[link] [comments]

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

Has anyone quit nicotine during their weight loss period?

I'm sad to say I'm quit addicted to my Juul, and have turned to it even more since dieting. I've been seeing awesome results from CICO OMAD, but I'm definitely vaping more than ever. The problem I'm having is that I'll vape as a replacement for snacking. It gives me that similar buzz to snacks. I also vape as a self-soothing method. I had this habit when I was at my heaviest weight too, but I feel like I'm not replacing the feeling food/cards/bingeing used to give me with something else that's harmful to my body.

Has anyone accomplished kicking two addictions at once? I don't even know how to start with this one.

submitted by /u/saltlamp94
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/34ALlB8

Is ‘get fit quick’ a myth?

EDIT: is getting fit quick a scam?

I see all these get fit quick adverts for subscriptions to the latest fitness/food guides etc and I was just wondering if anyone has had a ‘speedy’ weight loss story that’s actually worked?!

I’m 24, 5”3 and well in the red zone (if you know what I mean) and I’ve always struggled with not seeing results quickly. I know I should be patient and wait for results but I’m sure I’m not the only one who suffers from ‘giving up quickly’ the minute I haven’t lost what I deem enough or ‘still cant fit in my nice jeans’.

The whole premise of weight loss eludes me and I wonder that if it can be done quickly would it work for me?! (I know everyone’s different and doing it a healthy way is important!!)

The whole idea of weight loss being quick seems so far fetched to me but can’t knock it till you try it I guess?

submitted by /u/Rhiannonw1
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2CsuK6m

My worst week calorie-wise was followed by my highest weekly weight loss

The week of 10/24-10/31 was terrible for me in terms of calories. I'm not a binger, I just made the conscious choice to overeat all week, which is obviously dumb. It wasn't even a particularly emotional week or anything where I'd overeat from that, I just...... felt like eating so I did. I had it in my head that Halloween would be my last hurrah before getting back on track (yes I know this is a stupid attitude to have but I was lost in the moment lol). Anyway, that whole week I still tracked diligently, and though I was tempted to skip my weigh in, or try to take a picture of it without looking, I didn't. I looked. I went from 241.8 to 246.6, a 4.8 lb gain in a single week. And I had been so close to the 230s!

Well luckily, I more or less got back on track the following week (this past week). Still had a few days when I ate over my 1400 cal limit (which before I almost never did), but only by a few hundred calories vs. the 1000+ that I was eating over before. Anyway, I was tempted to kind of punish myself and restrict maybe down to 1200, but I didn't, just kept with my 1400 and did my best. Well, I was rewarded on the scale today. 239.4! Down a whopping 7.2 lbs in a week-- the highest weekly loss I've ever had. I'm sure this is partly due to water weight and maybe period-related things messing up my weight, but still, I'm so happy. I also got my first ever comment about my weight loss from my coworker the other day, which certainly helped to re-inspire me to get back on track. I just did some calculations and at the rate I'm losing (2.1 lbs per week on average), I should just make my goal of 199 by my birthday in March!

submitted by /u/frontcross359
[link] [comments]

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

A case for the relationship between mental health and weight loss/maintenance

DISCLAIMER: First, this is going to be long. Second, I'm not a professional (though I have consulted with one on this stuff). Third, as with anything, take what resonates and leave the rest.

There's a TLDR at the bottom, though it's kinda obvious.

My mental struggle throughout the years

I've been heavy my entire life. I've also been a depressed/anxious wreck for my entire life. Seriously, I had my first panic attack in the third grade and my mom had to come get me (we didn't know what it was at the time, just assumed it was a fluke).

Throughout my teen years, I was having panic attacks at least once a week, and as much as twice daily. At my peak anxiety, around twenty years old, I spent a solid month having 4-5 panic attacks each day. Yep, 4-5 full blown panic attacks each. day. for over a MONTH.

My self-worth (or lack thereof)

Since adolescence, I've tied my self-worth and identity to my weight.

I can see all the good in me. I'm empathetic. I'm kind and compassionate. I'm extremely giving. I'm smart. I'm thoughtful. I go out of my way for others and expect very little in return.

But it was never enough. Because I was the fat girl.

Being fat negated every single good quality I had. Why? Because I saw skinny girls who could do anything. They could be mean. Cold. Catty. Selfish. And it never mattered. Because they were skinny. And skinny meant worthy.

I was not worthy.

There were three points in my life where I shattered this belief.

My brief (but important) breakthroughs

  1. I was fifteen. I'd just discovered I had a gluten allergy and cut it out, which made my bloating go away, cleared my acne-ridden skin, gave me mental clarity, and a whole lot more. A holistic doctor gave me an eating plan, which I followed carefully. I ate the same exact thing every day. I did not count calories. I ate when I was hungry. I adjusted when needed. I did not step foot on a scale for four months. My mind cleared. I felt happy, confident, worthy. I finally hopped on the scale and noticed that I'd lost 40lbs in that time. My mental health later declined and it was all gained back.
  2. I was seventeen. I'd made new friends after a very difficult falling out with my childhood friends. We went out often and formed very close relationships rather quickly. They adored me for all those good things I mentioned earlier. My self-esteem soared. I felt worthy again. We ate out daily. Our routine consisted of me picking up 2-4 of them bright and early and dropping into a diner or an IHOP. We'd indulge. Sometime in the afternoon, we'd get fast food. Chinese, KFC, deli food, whatever. Dinner was normally eaten at home. We spent the entire day outdoors and loving life. I did not step on a scale. When I finally did, I'd lost 30lbs. My mental health again declined, and I gained it back.
  3. Twenty-two. I was freshly single for the first time in over four years. I was happy, confident, excelling in my career. I felt like a million bucks despite being at my highest weight. I met a man who adored me. Loved every inch of me. Couldn't get enough of me. I stepped on a scale about 2 months into our relationship, and without changing a thing, I'd lost 15lbs. Again, mental health declined and progress was undone.

What was going on between these (brief) breakthroughs...

What I didn't detail above is that in between all of those times, I was dieting. Keto, low carb, CICO, WW, Whole30, 21DF, Carb Cycling, EVERYTHING. Over and over and over again.

I didn't half-ass a single one. I was diligent. I worked hard. I did not see any sustainable results. The best results came from WW, which helped me lose just under 20lbs and led to several mental breakdowns. The rest did a maximum of 2-5lbs before stalling for months on end (which, of course, led to me throwing in the towel and hating myself even more than before).

Why am I sharing all this?

Because I finally realized my key, and it's not a particular diet. It's all about my brain.

When I'm happy and relaxed and feel valued by those around me, I lose weight effortlessly, whether I'm eating according to a strict plan or eating total crap with my stoner friends. It didn't make a difference. The weight fell off.

When I'm stressed and swimming in a pool of self-hatred 24/7, I can do every little thing right and NOTHING changes. I. can. not. lose. weight. while. sad. End of story.

Sooooo... who cares?

There are plenty of "normal" people on here who are just fine doing CICO, keto, or whatever other diet there is. You want to be more confident, yes, but you feel like a person no matter what your weight is. You're working to improve your body and as difficult as it is, you know it's worth it.

But there are also people like me. People who feel worthless, anxious, depressed. People who don't see a single redeemable quality in themselves because the only thing that matters is their weight/appearance. People who become obsessed when they try to count calories and constantly yo-yo between "this is the only way I'll ever be worthy!" and "who even cares, I'm a waste of space, might as well eat a pizza."

There are people like me who are suffering so deeply in their own minds, no diet will work. And even when one does, it won't last, because the real problem is never dealt with.

The real problem?

The real problem is that you don't love yourself. You don't care about yourself. You don't see yourself as worthy.

And if you think of the person you hate the most in this world, do you get filled with the desire to care for and nurture them? Make good decisions for them? Struggle endlessly for them? HELL NO!

If you look at YOURSELF as someone you HATE, how on earth can you expect to make good decisions for yourself and your body?

Yeah, in the short term, you can make things work. But if you keep "falling off the wagon," maybe it's because there's a bigger battle going on inside of you than too many calories.

So what now?

Awareness is the first step, and as uncomfortable it is for me to bare my soul like this, I know I'm not alone, and if one person can see this and feel like their struggle is validated, then my prying open my rib cage for you all is worth it.

Look at your own patterns. Really analyze what has and hasn't worked for you in the past, and moreso, why it has or hasn't worked for you in the past.

  • What was your most successful period of weight loss? What were you doing at the time? How were you feeling?
  • When you think of your end goal, think about your why. Why do you want that end goal? What will it bring you? Is it just health you want, or is it confidence? Love? Worthiness? What do you want to achieve by losing this weight?
  • Look at yourself in the mirror. What feelings come up? Are they loving, nurturing, hopeful? Or are they filled with guilt, shame, disgust? Why? What do you want to feel when looking at yourself in the mirror?
  • Close your eyes and imagine your end goal. You've lost the weight. You have a whole new wardrobe. You achieved it all. What do you feel? What's it like to look in the mirror now? What opinion do you hold of yourself? Why don't you hold it now?

These are just some ideas for getting to the bottom of your mental blockades. I'm not a professional here by any means, but visualization can be a powerful thing. Talk to yourself, see what your body needs, seek help if you don't think you can tackle it on your own (so many of us need guidance here, myself included).

Either way, you need to tackle the monster of your mind before you can begin to show yourself the love, tenderness, and patience that is needed to lose weight and keep it off.

My new plan, for anyone who's still here...

From now on, I'm not focusing on a diet. I'm not assigning moral value to food. I'm not going to feel shame or guilt toward myself as I am.

I will be implementing the following habits, sticking to them as well as I can, and loving myself on the days where it's more of a struggle than it seems worth:

  1. Daily self-improvement practice. Currently, this means a Louise Hay workbook on self-love. Obviously, it will change, but I love self-help books and I love workbooks, so this is my daily practice.
  2. Actively challenge my negative thought patterns, particularly the ones I hold toward myself.
  3. Eat whole, unprocessed foods. This always seems to be my sweet spot, the place I do best. Intuitive eating with foods whose ingredients I can pronounce.
  4. Exercise for strength and confidence, NOT to beat myself up like I've done in the past.
  5. Choices that support my chemically imbalanced brain and work to balance out my happy hormones. My brain is the key, and I need it on my side.

The biggest thing I realized through analyzing my past successes is that my self-love and self-worthiness always came from outside sources. Positive reinforcement from those I respected, good friends who let me know how much they valued me, a partner who couldn't keep his hands off me... all those things gave me value before.

So my biggest goal right now is to find that value in myself. On my own. Because when it's coming from me, nobody can take it away like they have in the past. No situation can unhinge me. My mental health won't ride on the backs of finicky humans... only my own.

TL;DR

Take care of your mental health and self-esteem. It plays a huge role in every aspect of your life, including weight loss and fitness.

submitted by /u/ohhokays
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2Nvdy6P

Down 48lbs. Stuck on those last two to hit 50! Barely notice the change so far, but occasionally it hits me!

July 27 to Nov 8

I started my weight loss journey with out much ado because I didn't want to get into the weight loss mindset without the work. They say you get the same endorphins from telling someone about a goal as you get from actually achieving it so I didn't even tell my mother until I was 20 lbs down. I've been taking it relatively slow, making as few changes as possible as slowly as possible. I started by just counting calories and eating less of the same stuff. Then when I plateaued, I started actively making better choices, packing my lunches, making my own coffee rather than buying it. My next plateau encouraged me to get a gym membership, but now I've hit another and am unsure what to adjust next. I'm down juuust shy of 50lbs and those last two lbs before my halfway point are driving me INSANE.

I'm 24/m starting at 340, and my first goal is 240. My final ideal goal is about 225, because that's that my body composition says I ought to be based on my size and muscle mass.

Just thought I'd do a proper post here, since I've given almost no updates since I got fed up with being fat and in pain and started my journey. My "before" photo was taken at 340lbs the day of our company photos, and seeing how fat I looked in all those photos was my breaking point. The right is this morning at 292. i still feel super fat, but the lost weight really helps my chronic pain, and occasionally i see some results for a day or so before waking up feeling like a fat piece of shit again. i hope i'll notice unmistakable change here soon.

submitted by /u/Jerrshington
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/33uPO8l

3 Delicious Donut Recipes You Can Enjoy on a Diet

Who doesn’t love a good donut? Donuts are one of those sweets that falls into the comfort food category. And on some mornings, you just wish you had a few donut recipes that won’t totally wreck your healthy diet.

But, donuts on a diet? It sounds entirely too good to be true.

Actually, the truth is, with the right donut recipes, you can enjoy everyone’s favorite sweet treat while still sticking to your healthy eating regimen. A lot of it comes down to how you prepare them. By baking, instead of frying, you save yourself quite a few calories. On top of that, swapping out some of the unhealthy ingredients—such as the loads of sugar traditionally used in donuts—you can bring that calorie count even lower. And the shocking thing is, they still taste absolutely delicious.

Don’t believe us? Well, here are three delicious donut recipes you need to try to believe:

1. Chocolate Donuts >

Chocolate donuts

If chocolate is your favorite indulgence, then you’ll want to try this delicious guilt-free donut recipe. Baked instead of fried, these donuts will only set you back 135 calories each. They’re made with healthy ingredients like whole wheat pastry flour, nonfat Greek yogurt, milk and eggs. The chocolate flavor comes from cocoa powder as well as a delectable chocolate glaze that is drizzled over top. On the Nutrisystem meal plan, one donut (a serving) counts as one SmartCarb and two Extras.

2. Jelly Donuts >

jelly donuts

The jelly donut is the quintessential breakfast donut that adults and kids alike love. If a donut with jelly filling is your go-to choice, then you’re definitely going to appreciate our “skinny” version—which is also baked and not fried. While your average jelly donut is loaded with sugar, this version uses healthier ingredients like whole wheat pastry flour, nonfat Greek yogurt, and sugar-free jelly. They’re easy to make and will save you from that morning trip to the drive-through window—not to mention how much they’ll save your waistline, too. One jelly donut has only 132 calories, which is less than half the calories of a traditional jelly donut from a popular national donut chain. It counts as one SmartCarb and two Extras on the Nutrisystem plan.

3. Blueberry Cheesecake Donuts >

donut recipes

How indulgent do blueberry cheesecake donuts sound? Well, this version may sound—and taste—decadent, but it’s a lot healthier than the traditional fried variety. Besides being baked, these donuts also have significantly less sugar. Instead, they’re sweetened with more healthful ingredients like nonfat Greek yogurt, vanilla extract, Truvia and blueberries. In fact, this recipe calls for a whole cup of antioxidant-packed blueberries for the six donuts it yields, as well as another half cup for a sweet glaze. A little bit of cream cheese helps to give this donut a cheesecake taste. On the Nutrisystem plan, a single donut counts as one SmartCarb and three Extras.

Running out of time in the morning? We’ve got a full menu of ready-to-go breakfasts for those on-the-go days >

The post 3 Delicious Donut Recipes You Can Enjoy on a Diet appeared first on The Leaf.



from The Leaf https://ift.tt/2soLTcF