Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Don't loose what you've gained. Or well actually don't gain back what you lost. lol

Two years ago I was 250 lbs. I was miserable. On Christmas Eve my weight somehow messed up my knee without me realizing it. I was in eminence Pain. Lots of swelling, and could not bend it without it hurting. Well, that was my final straw that led me to start my weight loss journey. I was surprised by how much self control I was able to show. I started loosing weight. I wound up getting as low as 190 lbs. I was so ecstatic. I was hoping to loose about 25 more lbs, but I figured I was moving in the right direction.

That was about a year ago. Now fast forward back up to today. I'm right back were I started at 250lbs. I started being more relaxed for a bit as a bit of a reward for my hard work. That probably would not have been the worst, but then my Sister-In-Law and her family moved in with us when they lost their house. No big deal, I love em and all, but their eating habits are way worse than anything mine was. They had large dessert each night on top of the big meals. Well one thing lead to another and I slowly started gaining the weight back.

It feels like I blinked and lost all my progress. Well, on Halloween this year my knee got injured again because of my weight, but this time I was aware of how it happened.

So I'm starting over again. I know I can do it this time, because I was so close to doing it last time. One of the biggest things that got me was the mindset that if I had a bad meal, then I doomed myself for that day, and I should just re-start tomorrow. Well, each day I had bad days, so instead I should have said that's OK. Ill finish my day as strong as I can, and watch what I eat the rest of the day. Because sometimes tomorrow never comes.

If you have fallen off of the horse, get back up on it! That's what I am gonna do. But this time around I plan on finishing the race, so I can start the next one: Maintenance!

I don't know if this helps anyone, but I think its going to help me, because I am trying to make myself accountable, by posting this for all to see. I'm also going to start posting more often as well to help keep me on track.

submitted by /u/tekkaman01
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2q59OzK

Down 50lbs! Halfway to my goal!! Now a nutrition question... Protein - how much is too much?

24m 6'2" | sw: 340lbs | cw: 290lbs | gw: 240lbs |

I'm having a problem which is sort of confusing me honestly. I've started to switch my focus away from calories and over towards macros, but I'm noticing that before, while I almost always stayed below my calories goals, my fat and protein was always high. Lowering fats and adding carbs was easy enough, but I'm finding it incredibly difficult to stay below my protein goals, especially with my recommended protein suppliment.

Now, the way I am recording is as follows:

I have mfp set up to lose 2lbs a week (which has not been happening sadly) and I have it set to not active at all. This gives me 1970 calories day, 99g protein, 246g carbs, 66g fats.

I work out every day, but do not record my work outs in MFP because when I did that I would go running to squeeze in an extra taco and my results were slower. I eat like I do not work out at all, and usually do 30-60mins of lifting and 30-60 mins of cardio 5x weekly, averaging 1.5 hours at the gym between the two. I was told by my buddy who lost a bunch of weight and got ripped, my trainer, (who I only had one freebie visit with but plan to go back to) and the folks at GNC that I should take a protein suppliment 2x daily to help my workout. I take 1 scoop in the morning and one scoop immediately after my workout. However, every single day, I exceed my protein without fail. My suppliment alone is 50% if my protein allocation, and if I eat any amount of meat or cheese I go WAY over. Like, around 150% of my daily amount. Without my suppliment, I would be hitting my macros almost perfectly. If my carbs and fats are at or below my allocation, and my calories are fine, is it a big deal to go 9ver on protein, especially when I am more active than I tell my app that I am?

My MFP stats and settings, as well as today's nutrients are here I already recorded what I will eat for the rest of the day.

Is too much protein a bad thing if I am more active than I tell my app? Will going over my protein but not calories slow my weight loss? I've recently pushed thru a plateau to hit my halfway point, but things have been slow for me lately.

Thanks in advance!!

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

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

Blaming myself.

To start, I am taking full blame for everything I’m saying. I know it’s solely on me, I just need to vent and maybe reading it back will make me realize how stupid I’m being. I’ve lost weight. A lot. About 50 pounds, and it was the best experience of my life. I loved myself and how I looked, and I loved the process. I got into a new relationship and continued losing weight. Mostly because it was so new and I wanted to keep him interested so I wasn’t eating much at all, and I was spending all my time with him. I lost another 15 pounds at this time. Still, I adored my body and how my clothes were fitting me. I was 140 pounds and in a size 5. Something I never thought possible. I wore a bikini for the first time comfortably! Huge milestone! Fast forward to the end of summer, and I’m getting more comfortable with my boyfriend and we go out to eat and for drinks a lot. I slow down on the calorie counting, skip the gym most days. I can feel my clothes tightening. No big deal it’s just a few pounds I thought...

Skip to today, I’m miserable. Utterly disgusted with myself and how I look. I avoid mirrors at all times. It’s bad. My boyfriend (same one) and I bought a house, and I’m in a totally new town. No gyms around. Nothing. I eat whatever I want and I know what I’m doing. I then beat myself up about it for days. I wake up every day with the intention of counting everything I put in my body and I start off well, but half way through the day I give up. I thought the hating myself would be enough to give me motivation back but it’s not. I’m just eating my feelings now. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I’ve tried intermittent fasting, but fail on that. I’ve tried just not eating. That doesn’t last. I’ve tried diet pills, they don’t do anything. I know the correct way to do it, and I know for a fact it works for me, I just can’t. I honestly don’t know what my issue is. I’m depressed and I don’t even let my boyfriend touch me anymore. He assures me I look perfect, but I know he’s lying. He has to have noticed how much weight I’ve gained. I’m back up to 165 and just typing that makes me sick. I need to get myself together and do something about this or I know it will get out of control.

For reference, I started my weight loss journey at 189 pounds, got to my lowest of 140, and now I’m back up to 165.

I don’t know why I typed this out. I just needed to get it out to people that may know what I’m going through. Sorry for formatting and how all over the place I am. Thanks for reading and any input would be appreciated.

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/34Z5Sj3

The Facts About Food Addiction

You won’t find “food addiction” listed alongside other disorders in any psych textbook, but an increasing number of scientists believe it’s a real thing. That’s because a number of them have looked at your brain on food.

They used high-tech scanning devices that measure blood flow to look at what was going on in the brains of people eating highly palatable foods such as chocolate or those high in fat. They found that the same areas that light up in the brains of drug addicts—the regions linked with pleasure and reward—are also most active in people eating something tasty. A 2007 University of Oxford study found the effect is more pronounced in people who “crave” chocolate or other foods. “Craving” is the same powerful drive that makes substance abusers anxious to score their next hit.

Animal research suggests just how strong the desire for intense sweetness may be. In one study done at the University of Bordeaux in France, 94 percent of rats given the choice between intravenous cocaine and water sweetened with saccharin (which is sweeter than sugar), chose the saccharin drink over the drug. University of Washington studies found that naloxone, a drug that blocks the effects of opiates, also quells human cravings for cookies, candy and other sweets—more evidence that food and drug addiction occur in the same place in the brain

How to Stop Sabotaging Your Weight Loss

Read More

Some scientists propose that there is an evolutionary reason why our sweet-seeking senses are so powerful: Our inborn desire for sweet and palatable foods kept us alive by motivating us to hunt for food when getting something to eat was more taxing and dangerous than heading to the fridge.

But like drug addicts, food cravers aren’t satisfied with just one, just this once. Repeatedly stimulating your brain’s rewards centers—with drugs or food—keeps you coming back for more. Sometimes much much more, leading to loss of control and, in the case of food addiction, bingeing, according to researchers at the National Institute on Drug Abuse and Alcoholism, who have turned their attention to food addiction as well.

Binge-eating disorder, or BED, was added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of Mental Disorders, in 2013. The DSM is the “rule book” that establishes diagnostic criteria for all psychological conditions. According to the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA), BED is characterized by chronic overeating of large amounts of food, usually until uncomfortably full. People with BED eat when they’re not physically hungry and usually eat alone because they’re embarrassed by how much they eat. They feel out of control, unable to stop.

How to Stop Emotional Eating… for Good

Read More

Unlike bulimics, people with BED usually don’t purge after eating. But, like bulimics, they do experience enormous guilt, shame and self-loathing—negative emotions that can lead to more bingeing. It’s emotional eating taking to the nth degree, according to the NEDA.

If you’re someone who is trying to lose weight—or who has tried multiple times before—you’re at higher risk of BED than other people. experts say. Repeated dieting, a history of significant weight changes, emotional problems such as depression and anxiety, feeling stigmatized because of your weight, trauma, loss or emotional or physical abuse can all predispose you to binge eating. Genes may also play a role.

According to a review of studies by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), research has found that both interpersonal therapy, which focuses on improving the ways in which you communicate with and relate to the people in your life, and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), a short-term form of psychotherapy that helps you change the thinking and behavior that are behind the problems you’re having, can be effective in treating BED. CBT was particularly effective in decreasing the frequency of binge episodes, the report found.

How to Beat a Binge

Read More

Some drugs, including antidepressants, may also help, says the AHRQ report, In fact, antidepressants were 1.67 times more likely than placebo-a fake drug used in testing—to help people stop bingeing. Drugs also helped some people stop thinking about food and curbed the drive to binge eat.

One drug approved for BED treatment, lisdexamfetamine, which was originally developed to treat attention deficit disorder, was 2.61 times more effective than a placebo in curbing binges. An anti-seizure drug, topiramate, also reduced bingeing abut was associated with more side effects than other medications, the report says.

If you think you have BED or are addicted to food, your best bet is to talk to a professional—a psychologist or counselor who treats eating disorders. He or she will be able to help you decide on a plan that will work best for you.

The post The Facts About Food Addiction appeared first on The Leaf.



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

How to resist unhealthy food cravings

Everyone has their weakness and Achilles heel when it comes to their weight loss journey. Mine is fast food and desserts.

I just want to go to a fast food drive-thru and get some cheeseburgers, I want to eat a giant slice of cheesecake, I want to down a whole box of Cheez-Its and cookies.

I know our brain is wired to crave fat, sweet foods, but is it possible to re-wire or re-train it? This is the hardest part of losing weight for me. The thing is, I don’t want to cave in to it because once I do I’m done for, I wouldn’t be able to just stop at one bite or stop at one “cheat day”. I would totally relapse if I allow myself those things. It’s like saying to an alcoholic to allow one shot per week. It doesn’t work that way.

These cravings drive me crazy and tests my will-power every single day.

submitted by /u/trwwy321
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/2X9yjbq

Is this normal on keto?

SW: 118.1Kgs CW: 109.0Kgs TW: 60Kgs Hi everyone. This is my first post here. So, I began some kind of keto on the 20th of October this year. I wasn't really strict with the carbs initialluy. I started meticulously noting down everything only from the past weeks. Here's the weird thing and something that has been freaking the eff out of me and annoying me to no end: I've lost just 9 kgs (today is Day 23). Everyone around has been telling me that usually the weight loss is more on keto and that my metabolism must be slow/ hypothyroid/I'm doing something wrong etc etc etc.

I just wondering if I'm doing anything wrong.

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

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

It gets harder to start over again each time I have to start over, I feel like a failure

I first started losing weight at 17 due to really bad body dysmorphia. I've been struggling with binge eating disorder triggered by depression since I was 15, and that made me gain weight rapidly.

By the time I was 18, I managed to lose 30 lbs. I was happier with how I looked, but I felt like it wasn't enough and I was still stressed about eating and exercising. I ended up relapsing. But the first time I attempted to lose weight, I felt so encouraged by the small changes happening.

Sine then I've regained it all back and then some. I turn 21 next month and I've relapsed and started over again well over 50 times by now. Each time, I get a little more discouraged because I know how hard it is to lose all that weight, and I always had to start at a higher weight each time I started over (it doesn't help that I absolutely hate working out as well).

This year, I've almost just given up on myself. It is so damn hard to fight my eating disorder, small changes isn't enough for me anymore because I am so overweight anyways. I don't understand how I can get that first time motivation and encouragement back...

I've just started associating weight loss with personal failure. I've just tried so many times now, and I only succeeded once, it feels like insanity. It's just gotten harder and harder to get back on the horse each time. The idea of working out and eating less is so discouraging to me now it just makes me want to cry.

I've seen two therapists in attempts to get rid of my depression and eating disorder, but it hasn't helped. I don't know what the point of this post is, I guess I just needed to vent. I only recently realized that I've come to associate weight loss with failure, and it breaks my heart.

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

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/32H7mN4