Sunday, May 31, 2020

June Running Calendar free printable workout

Hello! The June Running and Strength Workout Calendar is ready to go – are you? Get the free printable calendar, running log and menu planner below. Follow along to stay motivated this month! Plus there are 2 days a week of strength exercises for runners – no weights or equipment required. These are moves that ... Read More about June Running Calendar free printable workout

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1 Stone 10 Pounds down in lockdown so far

I recall the first day of lockdown, I ate a full tub of Pringles, whilst they were delicious, I had a thought that I am going to put on a lot of weight working from home for the next few months if I keep eating like that.

So that was it - the next day I started eating better. I've kept a log of everything I've eaten since then. Not had any soda, chocolate (though did allow myself an Easter egg at Easter), fried foods, take outs, and so on. Instead I've been having things like chicken and eggs in wheat bread, meat with vegetables for dinner and then just one snack in between, usually a yoghurt or a low fat jelly.

Anyway, I've gone from 16 stone 11 pounds (106Kg, 225 lbs) down to 15 stone 1 pound (96ish kg, 211 lbs) in 6 weeks, 3 days and counting. Can't wait to be in the 14 stone region, I have not been that light for a long time. I'm 25 now, have not been as light as I currently am since probably 15.

Whilst it's not the quickest or the greatest, at least it's working! I ran for the first few weeks before busting my ankle so have not been able to do that in a 3 weeks or so. Still walking, but won't be running again until the swelling as gone as I don't want to hurt myself more.

I'm not sure how much of the weight loss one can see which must be a psychological thing as my clothes are baggy and people keep telling me I'm looking much better, but before and up to now are here: https://imgur.com/a/48gwJip - hoping my incredibly wide hips are the next to shrink, things make me look awful I think. Going on holiday in November (Covid pending) so hoping I'm confident enough to go swimming in the hotel pool!

Good luck to everyone on their own journey. I'm rooting for you and will hopefully continue my own weight loss.

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Anyone have success getting to a healthy weight without calorie counting?

I am 22F, I weigh 175lbs and I'm 5'2. I used to have an eating disorder as a teenager which involved heavy restricting. In ""recovery"", I basically switched over to binging instead. Now I am obese and it is very hard for me to cope with, so obviously I would like to lose weight (40lbs specifically).

I have made huge changes in my life - I no longer binge eat (Brain Over Binge changed my life) and I have cut down on take out/delivery by 95%. I still eat my favourite snacks when I get stoned but in small amounts and I walk about 1-2 hours per day, at least six days a week. I am trying to add some workout videos in for strength 3ish times a week but I am not as consistent with that right now.

I have tried calorie counting since becoming overweight and I immediately went back to restricting heavily. I am too obsessive and competitive with myself. I am just starting to be comfortable with losing weight slowly and healthily. I am starting to feel discouraged because I feel like I cannot be successful if I don't accurately measure CICO, but I am scared to calorie count and get on a path to killing myself again, I value my life now.

I would love to hear whether people have lost weight without calorie counting and what changes they made that they felt made the biggest difference. I guess I'm in search of reassurance I am on the right track, my perception of weight loss is extremely skewed.

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Weight Loss MOTIVATION; Personal Story

Hey all! I lost a few pounds this week and wanted to share a bit about what I feel might help others in a similar position.

Background:

*Female, 5'7

*I have struggled with overeating/binge eating for about 5 years now. The worst of my overeating habits/issues started when I was about 18 (although I've had unhealthy eating habits since I was a young adolescent), and I am now 23. Multiple factors contributed to this weight gain, but a major factor was a lot of stress from school and using food to cope with that stress/bring me "happiness." For about a year, I felt truly helpless and like my binge eating consumed me. There were points in time when I felt like I was never going to be able to lose weight because I was just so out of control and felt so addicted to food. I will say that the binge eating hasn't been as much of an issue for the past year or two, but the overeating definitely has been.

*When I was 18 (before the major binge eating began), I weighed around 135 pounds. At my highest (probably when I was 19-20) when I was binge eating all the time, I got up to 168 pounds. In a period of about 4-5 months, I had gained around 30 pounds. From ages 22-23, I have hovered between 153-158 (probably no longer in the 160's because I don't really binge anymore/as much--more so just overeat--and, before corona hit, was quite active).

*My issue has never really been with working out. I am fine with exercising if I need to. My major issue has always been with overeating. Ever since I put on around 30 pounds several years ago, I have often thought about how if I just got control over my eating, I WOULD be able to lose the weight. It has been very frustrating because I have known, logically, that if I just made the necessary dietary changes and got CONTROL over my eating, I would be able to, over time, get back to where I used to be (130's). It's not that I feel super overweight being in the 150's, but I don't want to settle and just accept my shitty eating habits and a weight that is the result of them.

*I'm tired of feeling like I have lost all control. I am determined to master my MIND (in the words of David Goggins, and I'm sure many others).

Current Approach:

*During the second week of April, I decided to create a pact with myself to stop eating ALL fast food for two months (but, honestly, I'm very likely just going to continue on with staying away from fast food indefinitely). I had pretty much developed an almost addiction to fast food, which was an issue in and of itself, independent from but still connected to my problem with overeating. I haven't eaten fast food since I started the pact. I feel liberated, on this front, specifically. I will elaborate more on the benefits below. The fast food pact, however, did not solve my overeating issues.

*About a week ago, I decided to create a new pact with myself (will call this pact 2). The approach this time would be different. Instead of focusing on working out AND "trying" to eat less/healthier, I would simply focus on eating 1800 calories a day for ONE week. Like, literally strictly counting and making sure to eat no more than 1800 calories a day for one week. My goal was to specifically work towards addressing the problem I've had all along, which is to overeat/always want more food than I need. No worrying about working out 5 times a week and then feeling like a failure when I don't follow through with that. I can come back to the working out aspect of things. I didn't want to do anything too extreme. I decided that a small caloric deficit would be sustainable and serve as a good starting goal. As many people in the weight loss community say, weight loss is 80% diet, 20% exercise. I wanted to see what would happen if I focused solely on my eating issues for one week.

*On May 23 (Saturday morning), I weighed 157.8 pounds. This (Sunday) morning, on May 31, I weighed 152.8 pounds.

Benefits/Thoughts/Notes to Self from Pact 1 & 2:

  • I feel a greater sense of calm in general, which stems from me feeling in control
  • I feel like I am making REAL progress towards mastering my mind (I am in control of my life)
  • I am learning what it is like to eat a normal amount of food
  • I’m learning to limit myself and realizing that this doesn’t have to make me feel deprived...do not validate feelings of deprivation...1800 calories a day is not deprivation
  • I am learning that I can still feel good without relying on food
  • Overeating just ends up making me feel worse, it only provides INSTANT gratification (this is obvious but can actually be a very powerful thought if you consistently remind yourself of this)
  • I am learning to remind myself of what I NEED versus what I WANT when I want to eat unhealthy food
  • I am learning that food shouldn’t be the thing that I look forward to
  • I feel better about myself overall
  • I am realizing just how important getting my eating under control is to my weight loss journey...I will NOT be able to work off the shit that I ate earlier in the day and actually lose weight in a sustainable way...I also don't want to deal with that hanging over my shoulder, regardless...I shouldn't always be working out to MAKE UP for my previous dietary f*** ups
  • Make good food choices THROUGHOUT the day...Getting out of the eat-bad-now-work-it-off-later mindset...this will f*** you up!!!
  • Eating 1800 calories a day has, in a way, forced me to make HEALTHIER food choices...only have 1800 calories, need to make good choices that will nourish and satiate me
  • Doing this is motivating me to pursue other goals in my life/is making me feel more motivated overall
  • As David Goggins said, in order to grow, you NEED to face the things that make you UNCOMFORTABLE
  • 145 pounds is beginning to feel within reach (my goal weight is 130 pounds)

Closing Thoughts:

*I am not actually going to do this for only a week. I just told myself that. Instead of having to wait a month in order to feel like I achieved my first goal, I only had to wait a week. Now, I will be setting my second goal, which I will achieve a week from now on the 7th of June. And so on and so forth.

*MyFitnessPal works great.

*Don't give up. You can achieve your goals.

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I'm super excited and just had to share!

I started my weight loss journey last month. I had originally tried with my boyfriend, starting with our diet, but that failed. Then, last month, I decided that I've had enough, and needed to do something about it. This morning, I weighed myself, and since April 20th, I've lost 8.6lbs! I didn't expect to see these results so soon, and it just makes me so happy, and gives me the motivation to keep going. I've never been one to work out, and often would keep making excuses for myself. My biggest downfall was expecting someone else to motivate me to do it. But I realised that the only person who could motivate me was myself. That, along with some lifestyle changes, like a better diet and instead of drinking 8+ beers a night in the weekend to limiting it to 2 max, I am even starting to FEEL the results!

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Boyfriend & I are both losing weight - is he eating too little?

Hi! My boyfriend and I are both currently on our weight loss journey. We started on May 9th. As of today, I'm (F, 23, 5'3") down to 192.8lbs from 200.2lbs. My boyfriend (M, 23, 6') is down to 191.2lbs from 202lbs. I obviously have a much longer way to go, but that's okay. I'm tracking my calories daily with MFP and am currently eating ~1,400 calories per day. My boyfriend, however, isn't tracking his calories and has a much higher TDEE than I do. He is a lot more active than I am on a daily basis (20+ mile bike rides and 5 mile walks through the city at least 5x a week).

The reason I'm worrying is not because he's losing weight faster. I make all of our meals daily and he eats roughly the same amount as me, if not just a tad more (like one extra low calorie sandwich or a snack of carrots & hummus). I've offered to track his calories with MFP too but he declined. I'm a bit paranoid that he isn't getting enough calories and I've tried making adjustments to meals so he eats a little more. All the calorie calculators say he should be eating ~2,000 calories to have a safe/sustainable weight loss and I can guarantee he isn't reaching that. While I may not be tracking his calories with MFP, I am mindful of how many are in what he eats (weighing out/measuring servings). I've spoken to him about this and he isn't concerned because he doesn't feel hungry or ill. He does acknowledge that he's eating pretty much the same as me with little difference. I've tried giving him bigger portions but he fills up fast on whatever he eats (but eats more often). So that doesn't really work. Because I have more to lose to reach my goal, I worry that if I can't find ways to bump up his calories that he'll continue to have a high deficit when he should be switching to maintenance. Or that I'll start eating more so that he will.

I know it's hard to say without completely tracking his calories, but am I right to be a bit worried? What would you guys recommend? I really just want to make sure that we're BOTH having a safe and sustainable journey. Thanks for your help.

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How do you get past your plateau and keep from getting discouraged?

I have struggled to lose weight for years. Through college I gained over 125 lbs. I used to try diet and exercise. Tracking every little thing and I would be great for like a month and a half, see some results, and then I would mess up once and it would all fall apart. Cue rinse and repeat. Being discouraged is my biggest obstacle. At the start of this year I went whole food plant based and recently started intermittent fasting. Since the start of the year i have dropped 30 lbs in a much healthier (at least mentally) way, without tracking, and I’ve been able to overcome the discouragement of if I break from my regimen. It’s been so much better mentally. This had been working for me but now I’ve plateaued and I don’t know why and I don’t know how to fix it. I’m super proud of what I’ve done so far and I’m trying to keep it in perspective while fighting my biggest discouragement « boss » yet. Do I need to change things up? That’s often how I’ve had to address work out plateaus but for weight loss plateaus Im not sure if that’s the way to go. I would love any help or words of encouragement to get through this. I’m determined NOT to backtrack but I’m finding this prolonged period extra hard to do.

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