Friday, January 31, 2020

Focus on diet or exercise?

I recently started taking my health seriously after gaining some weight from a lifestyle change (moved to a full time desk job) and a stressful living situation.

I've heard the saying that weight loss happens in the kitchen and fitness happens in the gym.

I'm currently at my heaviest weight (130) which is right on the end of the healthy BMI range for my stats (28F, 5ft2in) I haven't always had the best relationship with my body or food and while I've never been diagnosed I suspect i suffer from ED tendencies at the very least.

I would like to get down to either the middle or lower end on my BMI range which would be 15-20lbs. I know that the smaller you are the harder it is to lose weight. My question is should I be focusing my attention on losing weight through my diet or would fully investing in working out achieve the same results.

Note: I know that no matter what I do I will have to be eating fairly health (or at least much health than I am right now) I just want to know if it should be my primary concern.

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February Calendar for Runners with Faster Tips

Want to run faster? Get the February 2020 Running Calendar with 10 Tips to help you get faster this month! Print out the calendar and plan out your runs and workouts. Incorporate the Run Faster Tips. Some are tasks to check in with your gear, body or mindset. Some are ideas for running workouts. And ... Read More about February Calendar for Runners with Faster Tips

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I need help *URGENT*

Age: 19

Gender: F

CW: 79-81 kg/ 176-180 lbs (haven't weighed myself since the start of this shit but I assumed I gained)

Height: 1m72/ 5'8

I've been on a restrictive diet for a few months now, usually ate below 1000 cal. I never binged. Always resisted. Could control myself very well. Not hungry ever. Since Christmas bumped up to 1100-1200.

In these last two weeks. I've had every 2-4 days we're I'd eat 2700 cal or so. It would happen when I ate too many calories already and so I was like fuck it. Or when I wanted something, and just let myself have it. I'd fast, purge, eat very low cal, try to burn if the excess cal. I could control myself. That was starting to become a huge problem.

But since Tuesday, its really really spiraled out of control. I've been eating 2200 cal almost everyday or so. I can't control myself anymore. I grab something. I finish it, I grab another. Finish that, grab more. Repeat. Sometimes eat horrible amounts in one setting. I'm not hungry at all, I'm beyond full very easily. Its not sugary or sakry food, but anything that's there. Whether I like it or not. I need to eat. I feel like I can't control myself anymore. I just need to eat.

It's like what I did when I was a lot fatter. It's the exact same thing.

I need this to stop now. Tomorrow I can't fail. Im not sure I will be able to alone. I really need fucking help to stop eating like this.

I feel so guilty and depressed since Tuesday because of this. I'm deathly scared of gaining that I'm considering taking extreme measures and at worst signing myself off to some weight loss program where I can eat what I'm giving if this continues for a few more days. I can't let my efforts be ruined by this.

I'm sure à lot of people on here gave struggled with this or still do. If you could tell me how to stop this and get right back on track (you can dm me) that will be very very appreciated ❤️

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8 yrs ago i started my weight loss journey, loss 75 lbs, ready to grow muscles in 2020

*it's a bit of a long story but hey, if you feel up to it, you might relate

Like many others out there, I grew up overweight and by one of my pediatrician’s definition, obese. Looking back it’s not hard to figure out why I was a fat kid. I loved food, I was all about giant bowls of sugary cereals, any and all sweets and bread, and omg how I love bread, could literally sit and eat a loaf of bread by myself. And I was also very lazy, didn’t really socialize outside of school, at some point I stopped playing outside (probably when my neighborhood friends moved away and then eventually we too moved to a new house in sixth grade). I was in dance classes but as my dance teacher would remind me, I wasn’t practicing at home. I just wanted to sit in front of the tv and snack away quietly in my room with no cares. And growing up Hispanic it wasn’t that I wasn’t constantly reminded I was fat. My parents, who I love dearly, would always remind me about my weight that I needed to exercise and stop eating so much. But I didn’t listen, I was perfectly fine continuing my lazy pattern.

And so the years went on and I just kept putting on the pounds. I was known in my family as “gordita”, which is a very latino thing to say as a form of affection to a fat girl. My mom would poke fun of me and my other fat friends, calling us the manatee club or when I worked at SeaWorld, referred to me as Shamu's stunt double. My dad would constantly tell me to go join a sport. But I was self-conscience, uncomfortable with the idea of trying out for a sport and looking stupid in front of all the others who were clearly more athletic than me. I would try to work out at home, picked up a yoga video, gave it up after a bit. I would go for walks around the neighborhood than lose motivation. I tried to hide under baggie clothes, though that was pretty short-lived since fashion was very much an interest of mine, so I try to dress my body better to help me feel better. I remember watching TLC’s What Not to Wear and eating up all of Stacy and Clinton’s advice for dressing your body type. So I let myself build some comfort knowing that I was at least trying to dress better, so it’s fine if I wasn’t skinny. I even got the courage to try out for cheerleading, joined the weight lifting team and even the track team my senior year. I mean, maybe a little late in the game, but I was keeping it positive. I managed to maintain my weight senior year instead of gaining more, so that was a plus! But the end of high school came, not a single date, I even went as far as taking the initiative to ask 5 guys to prom and got rejected each time, and of course, I figured it was because I was fat. But hey, I was funny, smart and had a bunch of friends, can’t be all that bad being fat.

So I went into college, still very much as inactive as I was in high school. And college was no joke, I had the unlimited food plan and you bet I was eat wayyy more than ever. I guess when the dining hall is buffet style, it really just doesn’t register that I’m on my 5 plate of food or third desert. So obviously I was gaining weight and faster than ever before, it got to the point where none of my pants buttons, so I would tuck the buttons in so people could hopefully not be able to tell. By the time I went home for winter break, I found that I surpassed the freshman 15 and doubled it. Yep, I gain 30 pounds my fall semester of freshman year and was official a size 16. After going with my mom to do holiday shopping and buying new clothes in larger sizes, I basically maintain that 30 lb increase through the rest of college, a few failed attempts of trying to lose weight here and there, but I never had the discipline to see any of those attempts through.

Fast forward to the being of 2012 and beginning of a new me. Both my mom and my brother had dropped a bunch of weight, I was feeling lost post-college and was just tired of my weight. So I finally started committing to the process. I signed up for the gym at the beginning of February and started counting calories and doing a meal replacement program. By Saint Patrick’s Day I was down a pants size and started really feeling a change this time around. So I kept on my journey. It wasn’t a perfect journey, but I was committed to eating healthier and getting my cardio on at least 5 times a week for about 30 minutes. Even though I use to lift weights during my senior year of high school, a gym was so much more intimidating so even though I was eyeballing the weights, I stuck to my trusty elliptical.

I ended up moving back home to Florida at the end of April and took a birthday cruise in May, yet I had manage by mid-May to celebrate on that cruise a victorious 25 lb lost. I hadn’t been that small in four years and if felt so good. It was weird too, cause even though I was back to my high school weight, a weight that I wasn’t all too crazy about at 18, it felt amazing at 22 wearing 2 pant sizes smaller on my cruise.

After all the cruising and boozing was done, I got back at it. But this time I had an extra reason to keep on my journey. I had decided that summer to try and join the navy which meant I had to dropped another 30 lbs. And strangely enough, the lazy girl inside me wasn’t protesting, instead there was a new determined me ready to accept the challenge and keep on going. So that summer I went to work, I was watching everything I ate and going jogging in the evening. I no longer had a gym membership, and I was never a runner, basically hated it. But I knew that if I was going to survive boot camp, I need to run a 1.5 mile under 15 minutes. So I started using that as my training basis. Little by little I would increase how long I would run during my powerwalk/jog session, and soon enough by August I was actually running a 1.5 mile without stopping to catch my breath.

Its strange how we our mentality can change when we truly decide to challenge ourselves, push our limits, stop thinking we can’t and start thinking we can. My willpower and determination that summer were on fire. I remember my coworkers would ask me to come out after our shift to a number of chain restaurants, and I sit there enjoy my social time while still being responsible about my diet. If I had already eaten dinner at work, I’d just order water, and politely decline everyone’s offer to try their food. Don’t get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with having a cheat meal every now and then, and I defiantly, but I also picked my battle. My willpower was strong and my craving for junk for was low, it just wasn’t appealing to break progress.

Then the weigh-in day came at my recruiters and I did it, I had hit my required weight, I was officially down 60 lbs since February, and I was down to a size 8! I never felt prouder of myself! I got placed on a 9-month hold for boot camp and maintenance mode started. I mean, sure I could have kept going and I did manage to drop another 7 lbs before my boot camp date, but I was so happy with where I was at that time that I just wanted to let loose and enjoy it. So I would eat healthily and exercise still but I also indulged in cheats more often. It’s funny cause you can read hundreds of things on how to drop the weight but maintenance is a whole other beast. Fast forward to May 2013 and I’m at MEPS ready to leave for boot camp, weight is under the max, all seems great…but do to a longer story, I was medically discharged for something in my medical record. Needless to say I was very lost and went in a depression cycle, and gained back almost 20 pounds.

But in summer 2014, I was tired of gaining weight and made a choice to get back in the saddle. I had moved to LA by that point and decided to start hiking at Griffith Park as my exercise of choice and went back into calorie counting mode, cutting sweets and junk food out of my diet again. And by the September I was down to a size 6, smallest I’d ever been, and at a total loss of 75 lbs since 2012. I felt AMAZING. Tackling the trails at Griffith was not easy, I pushed myself harder than I thought I could. I went from starting at a 30-minute hike that left me out of breathe, to a 1.5 hr hike that reached the highest peak in the park at least 5 times a week. I loved the challenge and I loved the results. And that’s where I cruised for my time in LA, I’d loosen up my diet a bit and fluctuated up 10 lbs but would get right back till life just smacked me in the face again and I was laid off and lost again. I’m not gonna lie, I seem to hit a lot of roadblocks in life that correlate to my up and down weight. But I always manage to get out of my funk and back into a healthier lifestyle. And that’s really what I take away from the last 8 years. That I have managed to maintain the weight loss. That I didn’t let myself go and get right back to where I started. That I know my limits even when I’m in a black hole of depression, which reminds me how strong I really am even if I feel so very weak and lazy. And now its 2020 and I am ready for my next fitness chapter to begin. I am concurring my fear of weight lighting at the gym in front of strangers and finally learning what it takes to build muscles. I’m ready to put in the hard work because I know it won’t be easy, I know I’ll want to be lazy and go back to simpler workouts, but I know my determination and perseverance from 8 years ago is ready to prove they haven’t gone anywhere and this will be an amazing journey. Like when I tackle hiking and kept pushing to climb higher, I’m ready to lift heavier and get result.

Anyway, I just want to drop my story, maybe it’ll be helpful to others who are struggling or have given up or still want to start and haven’t found the “motivation”. Motivation is a great catalyst but it can but often it’s short and fleeting. What you need to work on is the persistence and determination to keep going no matter how many times you fall. Build that willpower, cause in the end this is all a lifestyle choice to be healthier you, whatever a healthier you means to you.

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Here to officially start my story here, and sing the praises of intermittent fasting

This has been great. Really. Today I saw a number on the scale that I haven't seen since before I got pregnant with my first kid. I wasn't even stepping on a scale much at that point, so I could have (and probably did) pass that point before I ever got pregnant with #1. And to be fair, I didn't have huge changes to make in my lifestyle. I was putting on 10 pounds a year since I had an injury in college that impacted my mobility. I'm past that now, so I have no excuses. But still 10 pounds a year is the insidious levels of overeating and inactivity. It's not major/massive. I see some people's stories on here who have made crazy lifestyle overhauls and I am in complete awe. And I have wondered how I can continue to not make the changes I need to make when people who I read about all the time have taken control of their bodies in epic ways.

Once you get pregnant, you step on a scale regularly, at the Dr, but bless them for putting it in Kg, so that I could intentionally ignore it and be blissfully ignorant. So I'm not really sure where I was with my weight before I started weight loss. It was over 240.

And depression has been a factor.
I went in for an ADHD diagnosis, which is also a thing, and agreed that I was probably depressed. And my job didn't help anything. Insane levels of stress. Insane productivity pressure and reporting. Started wellbutrin. Started adderall low levels. Wellbutrin stopped.
Before getting pregnant with #2 I had been losing weight and had just hit 207. Then pregnancy, again. And I got a new job. New job=new health insurance provider. And my psychiatrist was no longer in network, not that it mattered since I wasn't gong to take adderall through my pregnancy. And at my new job everyone eats organic and healthy and is super fit. (OK, not everyone, but damn. There's a lot of girls and women in yoga pants, and the pants aren't doing the supporting - you know?) And even though there isn't judgement here (I know there isn't.) You feel the judgement. You're judging yourself. So I started eating salads when I was at work. Or I'd get a package of Romaine lettuce and a package of humus, and dip the lettuce and munch on that all day long while I was at my desk. High protein, satisfying, routine, low cal.
And at the end of my pregnancy, if I'm honest, I probably leveled out at close to 260. But I was really avoiding the scale. Like you do when you hate what you weigh and you hate the way you look.
But I'm still working at healthy eating place. So I'm making substitutions in my diet. And there's a hot bar and salad bar here that sells by the pound. You know what's cheap by the pound? salad greens. Cooked bacon. a sprinkling of cheese. a hard boiled egg. Maybe a small portion of some kind of pasta salad to mix into my greens salad.
I remember getting to 225 and realizing I had lost over 15 pounds, and at that point I started tracking it and stepping on the scale more often.
Between last summer and the holidays, I continued to drop weight, very slowly. I was standing firm at around 214 when we started the holidays. And I was at 214 3 weeks ago.

Then I had my first "Take myself to the doctor because I'm worth getting a checkup even though I'm not pregnant" doctor visit back in early December.

And I'd like to pause here to say that this is a common thread amongst so very many of these stories. We ignore ourselves. Our overeating, our avoiding the scale, our avoiding the mental health issues, so much of our situation is something we put ourselves in as a sort of malicious neglect. We hate ourselves so we treat ourselves badly. Almost intentionally. Yes, the calorie rush is enjoyable. But I think we all know that for many of us there's a self-loathing at work. So please, take that first step onto the scale, and schedule that first Dr's visit. You are worth taking care of. You are worth being healthy. You want your kid and your partner to go to the Dr. and be healthy. And you are not worth any less than them.

Back to the visit. I was talking to my Dr about weight loss and how I want to get fit because being active is fun. I remember being a kid and teenager and climbing trees and running for the sheer exhilaration of it. We talked about my mental health and we're trying wellbutrin again, for the combo of ADHD and depression, higher dose. And y'all, it's helping! We talked about my food substitutions. (At the time I was on a cabbage and beans kick as low cal inclusions in my meals.) And my eating habits, which often involves skipping breakfast and just having a good bit of whole milk in my coffee. And she asked if I could skip breakfast and not put milk in my coffee. And, like you do, like we all do, I had a reason why I couldn't. I need my morning coffee and without the milk, my stomach gets upset.

And y'all, I knew, we all know, she was going to suggest intermittent fasting. And I cut her off at the knees because self-sabotage is something we all love to indulge in. We always have a reason that we can't make the better choice.
But I rolled it around in my head for a few days/weeks. Did some research on intermittent fasting and the benefits and how it works. Got past Christmas and new years. Started the wellbutrin after Christmas. Got kettlebells and have started some strength training. Still no weight loss.

And I got some good sleep. Which is another thing - you are worth a full night's sleep. So many people don't get a full night's sleep. It makes a big difference. Anyway, it's been major Cedar season up in hurr, so breathing at night has been difficult, and between the wellbutrin and the zyrtec and allegra, my mouth was like the sahara dessert and the sleep has been awful. But we somehow got a break in the cedar, and I got like 12 hours' sleep one weekend. Woke up, and decided I didn't need the coffee. No coffee = no milk in the coffee. So I started the intermittent fasting.

I started slow, with no committment, because I wanted it to work and once you break that commitment we all love to just give up. Or I do, anyway. So I said to myself: I'll start with a 14:10. then move on along to a 15:11, and get to a 16:8 eventually. And I said: Also, I'm a Mom, so I'm not going to stick to any hard and fast rules about what my eating hours are. This is going to be a "best effort". If it doesn't work out one day, it doesn't work out, and that's OK.
I gave myself permission to not "win". Like your kids. You want them to try. The trying is the important thing, not the winning. And I just gave myself the same grace that I would give them.
And the first day I did a 14:10. and somehow, 3 or 4 days later, I did an 18:6.

Have I been perfect? Nope. Not even. So Why am I singing the praises of intermittent fasting? Because, y'all, your stomach shrinks! Like right away. You MIGHT go to bed a little hungry. But you don't wake up hungry. You get to 10 or 11 am and have your first meal of the day and everything is normal. It's like so much more normal than you even know. Because even when you go out drinking (which I did one night, for the first time in ever) and wake up hung over and go get a greasy burger and fries for breakfast, you DON'T EAT AS MUCH!
I got TWO greasy burgers and fries to help manage my hangover that morning. Because Habits. I didn't even finish the first burger.

The other night I had ordered pizza for my kids and the babysitter. I grabbed a piece on the way out the door, and I was satisfied. One piece of pizza. This is how skinny people eat!

And then last night I had frozen lasagna with my kids. And some salad with ranch. It was later than I should have been eating and I had a little bit more lasagna than I thought I should. So I was, like we all do, mentally beating myself up for it. But then I checked the lasagna package. I had stayed inside the recommended serving size - even with my second serving. 330 calories of lasagna and a salad with a little ranch. And I was satisfied. In fact I was feeling guilty until I realized that this is a WIN!

And not only that, but unlike keto diets and such, screwing up your hours still is likely to land you solidly inside your CICO goals and not screw you up for a few days or a week. Unlike slowcarb your food choices aren't restricted so you don't need to feel guilty about eating a piece of pizza. Even if you do binge one day, you can still count it as a win if you stay inside your hours. And the impact isn't going to be as bad because your stomach will fill up sooner.
This approach to eating makes it harder for me to be upset at myself or to think of myself as a failure. I can still say "yes, I'm on track. I'm doing a good job. I'm proud of myself."

And also, since I started intermittent fasting about 2.5 weeks ago, I'm down 8 pounds.

TL;DR: Intermittent fasting - shrunk stomach, more food options, less failure, improved attitude, weight loss resumed!

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Does weight loss speed up once you get into a routine?

I'm finally losing weight after I took some people's advice on here and bought a food scale (thanks btw, I was really frustrated before that). I'm also doing the challenge, and I'm at about 1 pound a week loss. Not complaining at all!

I'm sticking really rigidly to my TDEE calorie intake numbers and working out and walking a lot, and so my output puts me at a bigger deficit. On paper (with my fitbit numbers), it looks like I should be losing 1.5-2 pounds a week. I know there's obviously room for error in there and whatnot. I'm just curious, as I keep going, is there a chance my weight loss will speed up to reflect that?

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Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Friday, 31 January 2020? 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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