Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Happy Cake (Mango Pudding Pie) Day!!

Hey guys! Since it’s my cake day, I (17, F, 5’4) thought I’d share some progress as I came to reddit to find help with my weight loss journey, but I’ve managed to find beautiful and funny communities in other places as well that really brighten up my gloomy days.

I started out my weight loss journey at 228.0 lbs. and am currently getting back to my 140s. I was struggling with my eating habits and have finally gotten a control over it in the last month. What finally worked for me is realizing that I didn’t have to be strict all the time. I started out with eating 1200-1400 calories every day. And although that worked for me weight loss wise, I did feel a sense of restriction that led to binges as well as multiple plateaus. I recently started doing “cycles” in my calories, where some days I’d have 1200, but others I could have up to 1900. Combined with my workouts, it would average out to 1500 calories every day.

This has allowed me to lose about 1-2 pounds a week (I’m hoping to hit 128). This was a big realization for me as I always believed that I wouldn’t lose weight unless I stayed at 1200. Allowing myself to have days where I didn’t necessarily cheat, but had bigger calorie allowances made me feel refreshed and ready to take on the challenge again. If I was starting to break and was feeling a binge coming on, then I would bring my calories up to maintenance for as long as I felt I needed to. I would remind myself that there was no rush and that I could take a big breath.

... And that big breath today is in the form of mango pudding pie which I will pretend to be having in celebration of my Reddit Cake Day!

So to end this note, please be kind to yourselves and remember: Just pretend that you’re a superhero that needs to save your people. Superheroes need those strong muscles (well, except for Thor that one time. Ignore that...).

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NSV: Looser fitting clothing

30/F/5’4 SW:240 CW: 236 GW: 160. I’m new to the reddit community in general. I took a job nearly two years ago which took me off my feet (averaged 7k steps daily) to a sedentary (but stressful) desk job. I’m back up around my highest weight. Seeing this community has given me the motivation I have needed to make it stick.

My thinnest in high school was around 150lbs, and I used to play a lot of DDR. After graduating college, I attended a specialty program and had a second floor apartment. Lots of stress from studying and less active time lead me to gain. Having a kid has added a lot more difficulty in finding time to work on myself.

My weight has always fluctuated but I’m taking control of it finally. I purchased a treadmill (issues there).. so in the meantime I’m going back to DDR, walking, and swimming.

In 10 days I’ve lost 4 lbs and feel better and my clothes are fitting better. It’s an amazing feeling and I can’t wait to see the progress continue. I’m not even struggling with will power. So unbelievable to me. Weight loss for me is all about the mentality. I honestly have not ‘cheated’ yet.

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Question about minimum calories

Hello! I'm on day 24 of CICO and have already been seeing consistent weight loss results! My question is this - I've been using My Fitness Pal to track all of my calories and the minimum it says I'm required to eat is 2020 calories per day with my current activity level. (For reference I'm a woman, 5'6, currently 305 pounds) Most of my days I never meet that and am staying at a semi-consistent 1500-1700. Is this healthy in the longterm if I physically feel fine? Should I restrict even further? My doctor has said she wanted me on an 800-1200 calorie diet but to me that was not sustainable in the long run - I knew I'd get frustrated and start going back to old habits.

Where I am now though, I could feasibly see going to 1200 eventually. Before I started this journey I would easily hit 2500-3500 a day (just estimating) so I know the main reason I'm losing is because I've created this big deficit from the normal amount I would consume.

Is it sustainable to keep at the rate I'm going, about 1500-1700 calories a day, or should I be taking in the minimum amount my Fitness Pal states?

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Is working out for 2+ hrs hurting my weight loss?

Hi all,

So I'm on my own fitness journey and I've lost so far 31 lbs (woo!). I have another 35 I wish to drop but I'm starting to hit small plateaus. I've restricted my calories further for few days to help nudge the scale and have been doing well but my goal has shifted a bit as my body changes.

Brief background: I started with heavy weight training and then moved into intense cardio. I actually did the first month of insanity. I'm now doing more of a freestyle and do what feels right to my body. I've gotten into yoga and have reintroduced some strength training.

Now, my goal has shifted from building muscle and shedding fat to leaning and shedding fat. I want to continue building muscle, but not bulky muscle (I stretch a lot), and continue dropping my fat mass. I'd appreciate some advice and tips.

Currently my regimen is about 5 days a week in a row of working out for about 2 and a half hrs (I have a lot of energy haha). I start with a light warmup, then do strength HIIT, then abs, then cardio, then yoga/deep stretching.

I was wondering if I'm decreasing my chances of progress or if I'm on the right track. I don't know if I'm doing enough, maybe I need to up the cardio? Is it possible for me to shed fat and lean out/tone at the same time? Should I be including more rest days for more progress to happen? I'm worried I might be doing all this work for nothing.

Sorry if this post is all over the place, I appreciate any feedback. :)

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In praise of fitness trackers

Like many people here, I have an on-again off-again relationship with weight loss. I was very fit in my 30s but a motorcycle crash (and 2 year recovery) caused me to gain 50 lbs. I lost 20 lbs once I could walk again but the rest has been difficult. I go through (year-longish) phases of hopelessness and then equally long phases of keeping at it. Then Covid19 hit, I was out of work, and I didn't get off the couch for 2 months. I ate and ate and ate and I didn't do a bit of exercise. Not good. I was worried about my health but was simply too scared to weigh myself. Then something magical happened.

In late April my 12 yr old said she wanted to start jogging. WHAT? WOW! OK! She's a couch potato so this was a VERY welcome surprise. And it was all I needed to break me out of my funk. We started the Couch to 5K (C25K) program the very next week. We are now 9 weeks into the Under Armor 16 week program and it's been great. Now, I HAAAAATE jogging, but this program increases the jogs and decreases the walks so gently that we never feel overwhelmed. And I can't let my daughter down, so even when I don't feel like it, we do it.

At this point you might be wondering, "Why is this post titled 'In praise of fitness trackers'?" In order to even do C25K, we needed a timer (you walk then jog every few minutes so you're constantly checking the time). So I bought a fitness tracker. At first I just used it as a timer. But a few days later I started looking at my steps and became obsessed with getting 10,000 every day. Sometimes I go out at 11pm and walk around the neighborhood if I'm short for the day (it resets at midnight). A couple weeks later I started logging my food with the app. This was HUGE. The app makes it really easy to track calories. The cool thing is, the app tells you exactly how many calories under or over you are at that instant. So you can adjust your habits real time. At the end of the day, if I've been good (I kept my eating in check and/or exercised a lot that day) I reward myself with desert. If I haven't been good, then I feel like I didn't earn it and I better try harder the next day.

And I finally got on the scale this morning and I was 5 lbs LIGHTER than I was in March. Woo-hoo!

A lot of this is common knowledge and many of you are probably rolling your eyes. But I hope at least ONE person reads this and starts tracking steps / exercise / calories.

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It was so much easier to lose weight when my scale wasn’t working

January 1st of this year, I decided to start tracking my calories, eating healthier, and trying to lose weight. I set my calorie limit to 1200 and stuck to it, weighing myself every morning for accountability.

For a month, nothing happened. I just couldn’t figure out why it wasn’t working. I figured I must be doing something wrong. Underestimating my calories (I don’t have a food scale), not logging something, sodium intake, etc. I made myself crazy trying to figure out why it wasn’t working. I tracked everything, overestimated portion sizes, stopped eating out, cut down on carbs, cut out everything except black coffee/tea and water, ate more vegetables, started walking a certain number of steps every day...

Nothing worked.

It was so frustrating. I was on Reddit every day, looking at people’s success stories, scouring every post and comment for tips and following all of them, doing research on nutrition and healthy weight loss the entire time. I even made sure to do it healthily because I read that unhealthy weight loss is less likely to work and can make you gain! If it was a weight loss strategy I was doing it, and I followed every instruction to the letter. I didn’t cheat, I didn’t eat anything “secretly” without logging it, even when it put me over. I just could not for the life of me figure out. I figured I just wasn’t the kind of person who could lose weight. Maybe I had a health condition. Maybe I was just even lazier than I thought. But I figured, hey, I wasn’t gaining weight. And with my new diet, I felt way better than I ever had. I had more energy, better focus, and my skin was clearing up. Even my period cramps got milder. Might as well stick to it.

So I gave up.

I didn’t even bother weighing myself every day for the next month. I still weighed myself about once a week, with a glimmer of hope for the elusive “whoosh” effect that I kept hearing about. But one week passed, them two, then three, and I never saw the magic drop.

I just kept tracking my calories and did my best to stay under 1200, even though I was secretly pretty sure I wasn’t, because I wasn’t losing anything, and that’s scientifically just not possible. And I figured if I was already tracking so consistently and still not losing, if I stopped tracking I’d probably balloon back out way past what I even thought was possible.

Anyways, then one day my friend came over and wanted to weigh herself, and that’s when I learned that scales don’t work on carpet.

She brought it into the bathroom and we both weighed ourselves and I had lost a THIRD of my goal!!

I can’t describe the feeling, you guys.

It was better than sex. Better than drugs. Better than every piece of junk food I did not eat. When I saw the number on that scale, I was flying. Cloud Nine. Pure heaven.

But even better, by then my weight loss didn’t even feel like a diet anymore. It was just a habit. The next third of my goal weight loss practically melted off over the next few months.

But then, I don’t know what happened.

Maybe I got too confident. Maybe it’s just that the last ten pounds are notoriously sticky. But it’s been about six months since I started “dieting”, and I’m more than two thirds of the way there and NOTHING. The scale has just stopped moving. (And I know it works this time!) Except now that I’ve gotten used to seeing the numbers drop, it’s SO much harder to stick to it without that motivation. And since I’ve undone most of the health problems I had, the motivation of feeling better isn’t really there either, since I consistently feel good now and it’s hard to remember how bad I used to feel. Even when I have junk food days now, my body is so much better equipped to handle it that I just bounce back and don’t really feel the after effects of it enough to keep me from snacking anymore. Especially since now that I’m so close to my goal weight, it’s easier to justify a late-night snack or bit of junk food that I wouldn’t have allowed myself back when my scale wasn’t working and I was just desperate to get unstuck from my state of perma-fat.

Anyways, I don’t really know what this post is. Could be a cry for help, or just a vent of frustration. I’ve heard of plateaus before and I know they’re a thing that happens, but I didn’t realize just how hard they are mentally.

Without the quick, constant changes in the direction I like (lol), it is SO hard to be happy with myself or focus on anything else except for where I can cut more calories or what I’m doing wrong this time. Except that this time, I’ve already made all the changes I can make- anything I cut out now just tips me into “unhealthy” dieting strategies, which inevitably leads me to binge later. Either way, I’m frustrated, unhappy, and the scale still isn’t moving.

I wish I could go back to when I was still naive and thought I could use my scale on the carpet. It took so much of the numbers game out of the equation and made it easier for my weight loss to stay in the background as more of a lifestyle change, rather than the sole focus of my life. But I can’t take my weight out of the equation anymore. Now that I know that I can lose weight, I’m just not, it’s making me hate myself and dieting altogether.

I’m also a little worried that if I’m this unhappy now, how am I gonna feel when I do actually hit my goal weight? (If I ever even do get there at this point, lmao.) I’ve gotten hooked on the feeling of losing.

I love dieting. I love the process of losing weight. This whole journey has given me focus, and confidence. I posted on here a couple days ago about losing motivation and the advice I got was mostly to just eat at maintenance for a while and reset.

And while I do think that’s good advice, I HATED doing it. I hated how much it felt like I was eating. I hated the lack of self-discipline, how it felt like I was giving up rather than pushing myself to just get through this last little bit and finish something for once in my life. I hate how indulgent it feels. And I hate the pressure of it - if I go a little bit over my calorie limit while it’s set to losing, I know that it’s not enough to gain weight, or most of the time to even maintain so I would still be losing, just slightly less. But when it’s set to maintenance, I know that that’s a hard limit. If I go over, I’m not still losing or maintaining - I’m gaining. So when I do get close or occasionally go over, it’s so much easier to get discouraged and completely give up, and binge. Which leads to me hating myself even more, and the spiral starts again. And all of this has made me realize... I never want to maintain. And I don’t really know how that’s gonna work out in the long run, because I also don’t want to end up as a skeleton. That’s not a good look for me. So... yeah, there’s that.

So now I’m trying to lose again but it’s just not working. And maintaining also isn’t working. And I really don’t want to gain. And overall I’m just frustrated and don’t know what to do and long story short I HATE PLATEAUS. I thought losing weight would make me feel better, and that when I hit my goal I would be more confident with myself and the way I look. But the closer I get, the less happy I am. (Especially now that I’ve stopped getting closer, lmao.) Everyone talks about how much better they feel once they’ve lost the weight. No one told me this would happen.

If you’ve read this far, thanks for bearing with me. Also, wtf should I do? How do I get back on track in a healthy, sustainable way, like it was before I figured out how to use the stupid scale?

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NSV i now enjoy food in a completely different way.

So before i went onto weight loss, the only enjoyment i got out of food was the amount and the taste. The more and tastier it was, the better the food was.

Now i realize that there is so much more to enjoy with food. I dont enjoy eating an entire 150g back of chips anymore, or taking big scoops of icecream. I enjoy eating food, knowing that the food im eating is helping me get healthy, there is another part to it now. A psychological part to it. When i eat and i realize this food is helping me the entire experience of that food becomes 100x better.

Today i bought a 40g bag of chips, around 210kcal. Thats not alot for a snack and wont push me over my daily calories. Just knowing that i ate that, and ill still lose weight made the entire experience of eating those chips better. Now its so that i might even enjoy eating less amount of food than i would if i had more, because i know its helping me. I think about this everytime i eat a snack or anything, and i realize that when i weigh myself at the end of the week all the food ive eaten and enjoyed is what has helped me lose weight that week.

This means i dont see eating snacks as cheating at all, i honestly dont like calling it cheating because i guess it kind of carries the connotation that what im doing is wrong. What i am doing is satiating a need i have for sweets or whatever while still losing weight. Im helping myself, not destroying for myself.

Now this is just how i see it ofcourse, feel free to share your own thoughts!

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