Tuesday, June 30, 2020

6 Month Weight Loss Progress: Hit my target weight and then some after losing 40 lbs

33/M/5'8" SW: 190 GW: 155 CW: 149

MyFitnessPal Progress Chart

In December 2019, I was the heaviest I've ever weighed in my life. For my height and body type, my BMI was pushing close to obesity levels. I exercised infrequently and I coped with stress from my job by justifying to myself that I could eat whatever I wanted. Both my health and my self-esteem were at all time lows.

On a Christmas holiday with my family, my Dad challenged us all to a 6 month bet to hit a target weight of our choosing. For those that hit their target weight by the end of June, their plane ticket would be paid for on our next family vacation by the rest who didn't reach their target weight. Financial motivation is a strong motivator for me, so I set an aggressive goal of 155lbs, when I was 190lbs at the time. There've been many times where I've challenged myself to lose weight and fail over the past few years, but having my family joining on the ride gave me an extra bit of motivation to follow through.

In 5 months time, I'm happy to report that I hit my target weight of 155 and I continued to lose weight at a more gradual pace until I reached my current weight of 149 lbs on the last day of June. Here's how I did it:

1) Using a calorie-tracking app

  • Using an app to track calories for the first three months was key. It created a mentality for me that kept me from picking up a particularly unhealthy snack knowing that I would have to input into my diary for the day. I used MyFitnessPal and it took me about 2 weeks until it became a habit to track everything that I ate.

2) Eating at a Calorie Deficit: That's it!

  • I've gone through multiple periods in my life where I went on a drastic, short-term weight loss sprints, but the weight never stayed off. In the past, I always maintained an overly strict diet, restricting carbs, sugar, fat and all other yummy types of food to the point where it was torture. It works (for a while) but it's never sustainable. I treated food like it was a drug, and I was prone to relapses when I didn't have ice cream or pizza for 3 months and had just one bite as a cheat meal.
  • This time around, I only cared about Calorie Deficit. Didn't care about macros, didn't have a special day for "cheat meals". My focus was to eat in a way that I enjoyed and not punish myself into weight loss like I had in the past. My calorie net goal was 1820 per day which came from MyFitnessPal's calculation of my goal to lose 2 lbs per week. So if I worked out and burnt 400 calories, I let myself eat an additional 400 to compensate. However, I typically tried to stay at 1820 calories in total, regardless if I worked out that day or not. You'll find that if you only care about calorie deficit, you'll naturally find yourself passing on unhealthy snacks mainly because of the proportion that it takes from your daily calories. But the best part is that you STILL get to have pizza and hamburgers and burritos! And I have a big sweet tooth so I would always treat myself to a dessert every single day. In the end, all you need to do is adjust the rest of your eating day accordingly to ensure that your remaining meals/snacks will stay under that calorie limit.

3) Intermittent Fasting and changing my eating schedule

  • I decided to try intermittent fasting and skipped breakfast each morning, with the exception of days where I would do 10+ mile runs. I would refrain from eating from 9:00pm - 12:00pm next day. Skipping breakfast was hard at first, but I found that having water with lemon juice throughout the morning hours curbed my hunger until lunch time. This also allowed me to have tastier meals in the afternoon since I would have plenty of calories left, especially if I included a workout that day.
  • I moved from a three big meals a day, to 4-5 moderately sized meals a day ending with a larger dinner. This change of pace kept me from overeating and gorging myself which I tended to do during lunch. I also read that smaller meals might help metabolism. All I know is that it worked for me.
  • Here is a typical meal day for me:
    • Breakfast: Lemon Water
    • Meal 1, 12:00pm: Toasted Bagel with 1/2 banana slices and peanut butter
    • Meal 2, 2:00pm: 3 cups popcorn, 1 cup watermelon
    • Meal 3, 4:00pm: Peanut Butter and Banana Protein Shake
    • Meal 4, 6:00pm: Toast with scrambled egg
    • Meal 5, 8:00pm: Whatever is for dinner that night with my wife and it remains under my calorie limit. Usually my unhealthier meal of the day but always aim to have a good serving of vegetables.
    • Dessert, 8:50-9:00pm: 2/3 cup ice cream

4) Cutting all liquid calories (including alcohol)

  • Water, water and more water. This remained consistent every single time I've lost weight in my life. Drinking lots of water to keep me full and hydrated, while passing on empty calories in sodas and sports drinks (I love gatorade).
  • Cutting alcohol is drastic and I'm sure people stopped reading after the headline. My wife got pregnant during the past 6 months and I decided to cut alcohol in solidarity. This was a HUGE lift to my weight loss since I was prone to have 8-10 drinks through the week.

5) Consistent Cardio Schedule

  • The Calorie Deficit approach works, but it works even better if you are doing consistent cardio throughout the week. This way, you'll expedite your weight loss AND you'll get to eat more meals that might be considered "cheat meals"
  • Running is my choice of cardio and I aimed to run at least 3x per week. I also would do calisthenics on off days and typically give myself about 1-2 rest days per week. Through 6 months, I gradually increased distances each week to the point where I am now averaging 100+ miles per month.

6) Creating systems of accountability

  • Lastly, what really worked for me was creating accountability for myself in any way I can.
    • I started a private instagram account that I only shared with close friends and family that documented my weight loss journey.
    • I also joined a fitness text group with my co-workers where we would commit to sending at least 3 workout selfies per week to prove we worked out.
    • The Strava app has also been great to post runs and get feedback from your friends also on the app. All of these forums to document my progress made sure that I didn't drop the ball, because I would have an audience there to fitness my failure if I didn't push on.

It's been an incredible journey that was focused on losing weight in an enjoyable way. I've felt better than I have in years and I'm possibly in the best shape of my life at the age of 33. I hope this information will be useful for anyone else who's looking for motivation to lose weight.

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30 Day Accountability Challenge - July Sign Ups

Hello lovely losers & fluffy monsters,

A new month & new Daily Accountability Challenge!

For the newbies to the sub reddit, please start here, so much good info!

https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/wiki/quick_start_guide

https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/wiki/faq

And hey, maybe it’s not a bad idea to review them anyway to you returning conquerors. I do occasionally to remind myself of the basics.

Here’s what we do in the DAC my friends!

This is the sign up post to outline your goals, weight loss, self care, creative, whatever keeps your motor going my friends.

There will be a daily update post for you to chime in about how day whatever is going!

At the end of the month, there is a wrap up post to reflect on the progress you made or didn’t make & what you learned. Learning is progress my friends!

We try to foster a supportive, caring place to discuss the actual day to day of deficits & counting & caring so much about how we fuel our bodies & lives. So be kind, interact if you like & hopefully you feel supported by the internet version of a push up bra!

Leading by example, here I go!

Weight by end of month (199 lbs, preferably trend weight): Maintenance practice. Just want to reliably see a weigh in starting with 1. I'll spare you the longer explanation but after 185 pounds lost, my body, brain & soul need a little slack. I hope you don't mind your fearless leader taking some time to practice maintenance.

Stay within calorie range (1700 ish): Maintenance practice. There are many reasons for this but just trust me when I say everyone needs a little slack sometimes & if a more attainable goal means a continuation of progress, fucking do it.

Exercise 5 days a week: I’m pretty good at this but I always want higher intensity & more strength. X/X days.

Self-care time (journaling, working on love journals, beauty treatments, drawing X/X days): I’m okay at this. I want to be journaling more in the month ahead & making sure I get the alone/recovery time I need.

Try a new recipe once a week: Always looking for new stuff to try! X/5 weeks.

50 pages of The Body Keeps the Score: Mental health is super important kids. 0/50 pages.

No fast food or candy from the work dish: Nuff said. My personal slippery slope for bad choices lives here.

Listen to my effing body: Trying to reconnect with kinesthetic awareness is a tough gig but very important.

Be more mindful & express gratitude, avoid the hedonic treadmill: Important for keeping my head on right.

Now your turn! Here's to a rocking July!

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Road to losing 25lbs and body fat.

Hey guys, I'm new to this subreddit and I'm looking for advice. Here's some basic information about me: I'm 21 years old, my height is 5'6 inches, I weigh 177lbs, my BMI is 28.8, my BMR is 1823 and finally my body fat percentage is 16.2%. My "ideal" body that I want to get to is slim but muscular and toned. I started working out 6 days a week while maintaining a decent low calorie diet (I cheat on weekends though). However I'm still a little overwhelmed by all the information provided on the internet and YouTube videos relating to excercise/weight loss. So I'm looking for direct advice on how to get my ideal body. I want to start off by asking a couple questions: What exactly is my body type? Endomorph? Mesomorph? Ectomorph? Is there a specific excercise I should be doing to tone my body type? What excercise is it? What foods you'd recommend me to eat? http://imgur.com/a/pFtx092

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41kg (90lbs) Down in 6 Months

[93.9kg 1.78 M 40]

Hi all!

Back at the turn of the year I posted this: https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/comments/egqtvd/starting_and_this_time_its_for_real/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf)

My initial goal was to get from 135kg to under 100kg. I achieved this a few weeks ago and now I’m onto the next goal, right now I’m looking at 83kg.... let’s see.

So, how did I get where I am now and did I stick to my initial plan?

When I started I planned to use CICO plus exercise. That is exactly what I’ve done and it works. It just works. If you’re honest with your tracking, maintain a deficit and add in a little exercise you can do it!

Key points:

  1. Count. Be accurate, use whatever app works for you (My Fitness Pal for me). Don’t deny yourself anything, but count everything. This is more about triggering a change in mentality and attitude to food than it is about limiting calorie intake. One will follow the other.

  2. Eat well. Don’t just hit the calorie deficit, eat good stuff. In the last 6 months I’ve had very little processed food and cooked almost everything from scratch with fresh ingredients. I know that may not be easy or affordable for everyone, but I really think it helps. Diet is IT. Exercise will help, but good diet is really what will help you lose.

  3. Deficit. Aim for a deficit you are comfortable with and hit it or go under it, every day you can. It’s a marathon not a sprint though, so when you go over one day, be careful the next. Try to even things out over time. I aimed for 1550 a day, more often than not I finish under, especially net deficit (after exercise).

  4. Regular weigh ins. But not too regular... I go for every Sunday, but I’m thinking about reducing further to maybe once every two weeks. I find this encourages two things; first a healthy attitude to weight loss, I’m not obsessing about it all the time, secondly it encourages me to stick with it. Even after a bad day I know I have time to adjust and hit my overall deficit goal before the next weigh in.

  5. OMAD can help some days. If I know I’m eating take out or cooking a fancy meal at home (it’s lockdown... no eating out) I often do one meal that day to help maintain my deficit. It means when it comes to dinner time I can really get stuck in and enjoy it!

  6. Exercise. a.) I started running, from absolutely nothing. I couldn’t run for 60 seconds back in December. I followed the Couch to 5k programme which I massively recommend! I now regularly run 7km and can run for over an hour... it’s one of the most amazing parts of this for me!! Run for an HOUR! Crazy 😝 b.) I mix it up by doing HIIT workouts and other stuff like cycling, squash (before lockdown... I miss it a lot!) and plenty of other stuff.

A big run means I’m happier tucking into a big or carby meal that day. It also helps you start to think about food as fuel... which also helps with maintaining a deficit.

Those are the big things that have contributed to my weight loss this far.

——

Here’s just some more notes:

It’s not ‘hard’ per se, it just takes control. You need to really want to lose. You need to want to lose more than you want that extra burger or that glass of wine. In my experience, losing weight is all about a change in attitude to food. If you really, really want it, just try to keep that front of mind at all times. That desire can drive you to maintain the deficit.

Lockdown helped a lot. I am able to spend time on exercise and cooking healthily. I will make more time for these things from now on, even after the pandemic restrictions are over.

Things go up and down from a mental health point of view. At times I’ve been really proud of myself, at times disgusted. Starting from a big weight means you can lose consistently and heavily for 6 months and still be a fatty.... that’s a hard pill to swallow. Whilst it’s lovely hearing friends and family comment on your weight loss, objectively I’m still overweight and have plenty still to lose and that’s tough. This is why I adjusted my goal as soon as I was approaching the 100kg. I refuse to let up and will continue down to my next goal weight and then focus on getting fitter, without losing or maybe even gaining some weight back in muscle.

So that’s it!

I love the supportive nature of this sub. Everyone posting on here is making a difference to folks they will never meet, and it’s glorious! You all helped me and I hope this helps someone out there!

Any questions, please ask!

TLDR - 6 months in, 41kg down, more to go. YOU CAN DO IT!!

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First post here! So back about 4 years ago I started my weight loss journey, 308=> 150 (lost 158) 5’7” male goal weight in about 2 years; creeped back up to 180 and am back to 175; working to get back to about 160~ (where I felt healthiest) here are my takeaways

So back when I started I was diagnosed with an obesity induced hernia. I was told by my doctor that at my BMI/weight I was probably unlikely to live another 25 years (age at time). I was so heavy I had to lose about 18 pounds to have the surgery because of anesthesia risks. Real wake up call! I did a crash diet to lose the weight for surgery and put back on 10lbs in recovery (6 weeks). I turned it around and spent about 2 years losing weight. Not super slow but steady helped! I came to get and give some advice

1st how I did it Diet: - No secrets here! Basically ate 1400-1600 calories (with doctor approval) a day and diaried what I ate, even weighing food
- tried to only eat things I made and less ingredients the better (spices are a must, sauced were limited to mustard, some soy, and lots of hot sauce) - learned to go out with friends but eat before we went to the restaurants so that I could control calories - avoided soda but would have a Diet Coke, Coke Zero, or unsweetened iced tea when I was out - cut out beer but would occasionally have a glass of wine or a few shots/vodka sodas - favorite dessert was frozen berries, splenda and coco powder; also frozen grapes and lime juice - avoided high sugar and high carb foods, mostly

Biggest lessons - changing habits is a process, choose one every 3 weeks and focus on making a new habit (I.e. no more soda, exercise 3 times a week etc); trying to change too much can be overwhelming and it’s better to completely fix one then temporarily change 10! - if you are doing calorie counting you can use however you want, so if you want cake, eat it, but then eat other meals based around that splurge, rather than having cheat days - try and plan those splurges on exercise days!! - there is always a “reason” to splurge, a birthday, a party, a dinner, you honestly don’t miss much of you plan ahead, eat before and go for the company instead of eating a bunch when you are there, you may even get more out of it because you get to focus on the activities!

Exercise: - for me this was the biggest variable: When I started I did couch to 5k and 2 days of light weights/calisthenics/bodyweight stuff. When I got down to about 250 I started adding in more. I Started weight lifting 3 times per week and cardio (basketball for me!) 2-3 times per week about 1 hour per session; just get out there and don’t be embarrassed no matter how bad you are (for me I am specifically talking about my atrocious basketball skills) people appreciate effort and you will improve. Working out is progressive, don’t get discouraged if this week you could only do 30 minutes of walking, next week shoot for 31

Weird things I didn’t expect: After -60 pounds I was cold like all the time because of insulation loss Having childhood friends and family not recognizing you is strange, still to this day I’ll talk to people and it will take them a few to realize who I am When all the weight was gone I felt like a puppy who wasn’t used to my body all the time, I’d overrun things, my center of balance was off etc... it was kinda hilarious!

Ask me anything and I’ll help; one thing I still work on is hunger! When I was losing weight it went away after a few weeks mostly but when I went back to a normal diet it piqued back up again; My biggest weakness is: ice cream and maybe alcohol, both are great but moderation and as a treat help. Anything I forgot please ask about!!

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Weight loss journey - Week 4. Finding motivation

Description Weight Date
Starting weight 127.5kg 2020-06-03
Week 1 121.8kg 2020-06-10
Week 2 119.6kg 2020-06-17
Week 3 118.9kg 2020-06-24
Week 4 118.4kg 2020-07-01
Soft target 90kg
Happy target 80-85kg
Goal weight 75kg

Yesterday I had a moment of weakness. I ate a block of chocolate because I felt that my efforts were in vain. My weight had not made any movement from last week, or at least that is how I felt since I did not remember what my weight was last week.

When I started recording my weight loss journey here 5 weeks ago it was intended to keep me honest. To hold me to account. This morning when I awoke I realised a second, and more important purpose of recording my weight each week. Motivation.

I realised that by the time the weekly recording of my weight happens, I cannot remember what I weighed the previous week. All I know is that sometime during the week my weight has been lower (lowest was 117.2kg this week) and that is what I measure myself on. So when I see it increase all I see is my progress slipping away. Yet the truth is that I am still losing weight and this diary proves it.

Whilst I only lost 500g this week it is still progress.

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Anyone else have a dent above their belly button after heavy weight loss?

I have maybe a half of an inch deep and half of an inch wide dent or concave dip in my stomach right above my belly button. It’s particularly evident when I bend in certain ways, and I want to know what it is. I’ve never been pregnant, and and not pregnant now, so I do not believe it has any association with diastasis recti. I’ve lost almost 80 lbs in the past couple of years if that contributes anything and I frequently work out my abdomen muscles. I wish I could show a picture for effect, but am not allowed to upload one on here.

Has anyone experienced this? It almost makes the very top of my “innie” belly button seem saggy LOL

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