Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Want to Shrink Your Belly? Stop Doing These 6 Things

Losing weight can change your whole self-image, helping you feel better about yourself and your appearance. But even when you stick to your weight loss plan and steadily shed excess pounds, belly bloat can spoil your results. How can you get the flat belly you want? Battle the bloat and shrink that belly by avoiding these common causes:

1. Eating Fast

When you’re feeling very hungry, you may be so eager to satisfy your appetite that you wolf down your food. But when you eat fast, you tend to swallow a lot of air along with the food. Air in your stomach can noticeably bloat your belly. The excess air will pass or dissipate eventually, but for a few hours it can leave you with a swollen gut.

Bonus: Taking time to chew your food thoroughly and eat slowly lets you enjoy the food more and, studies show, discourages overeating.

Count your bites, lose weight?

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2. Chewing Gum
There are lots of reasons for chewing gum. It can refresh your breath, relieve dry mouth and even help stave off hunger. But when you chew gum—or suck on hard candy—you swallow more often than you would otherwise. And because there is no food to swallow, you take in even more air than when you eat.

3. Drinking Soda
Carbonation makes fizzy drinks fun, but the bubbles can cause belly bloating. Even diet soda or low-calorie flavored seltzer can produce a paunch. Try drinking peppermint tea—hot or cold—because it aids digestion, further reducing the risk of bloat. Want some help cutting back on soda? We can help!

10 Reasons to Battle Belly Fat — and How to Do It!

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4. Consuming Artificial Sweeteners
Sorbitol, xylitol and other sweeteners found in sugar-free foods are carbohydrates that some complain can generate gas in your digestive tract, leaving you with a bloated belly. If sweets are what you’re after but you want to lose weight, opt for foods that are naturally sweet, like fruit. If you’re looking to add a little sweetness to your morning cup of joe, sprinkle in some Stevia, a natural sweetener with no calories.

5. Eating Wheat and Dairy
Even people who don’t have allergies or food intolerances can experience excess gas and belly bloat from consuming common foods containing flour or milk. As your body ages, its capacity to digest wheat and dairy products can change significantly, so food you have enjoyed in the past may cause you discomfort now. If you find that your belly blows up a bit after consuming either of these foods, try minimizing their role in your diet to see if doing so has a positive impact on your midsection.

The Show-Down of the Sugars: Added vs. Natural

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6. Over-salting
Salt is essential to your health, but too much can cause your body to retain water and make your belly look bigger. The salt shaker on your table isn’t the only source of sodium in your diet—processed foods can contribute lots of sodium to your diet as well. When grocery shopping, check product labels to be sure that they are, like the Nutrisystem program, aligned with the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) recommendation for the general adult population—2,300 milligrams or less of sodium daily. Get the skinny on the sodium content in Nutrisystem diet foods right here.

Craving more belly-blasting tips? Read this article to find out six foods that will help you battle belly fat, get some belly-friendly recipes here, or try these five yoga moves for a whittled middle. Still not enough? Enter the word “belly” into the search bar in the top right-hand corner of this page, and get a full arsenal of flat belly and weight loss tips!

The post Want to Shrink Your Belly? Stop Doing These 6 Things appeared first on The Leaf.



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[Progress] 2 Weeks in 1st down!

I am currently doing the Keto diet at 10-15g carbs per day and taking multivitamins daily to ensure I get everything I need.

I have had 2 “cheat days”, in order to shake up my metabolism, and I have stayed in ketosis in both instances.

I haven’t been noting my caloric intake as much as my carbs as I tend to fall short of the goal most days, with my daily intake coming to about 1500-1800. The app I am using says that my daily fat goal is 200g and my daily protein goal is 300g.

Overall I have now lost 1st (14lbs) in just 2 weeks.

As for exercise, we own horses and so I’ve been looking after them on weekends and on weekdays I walk my dog twice daily.

I know this is fast weight loss, and my goal was a healthy 1-2lbs per week, but my weight loss has been involuntarily fast. I am feeling fantastic and can do way more than before.

I am so happy to be committed to this journey. I have even lost 2.6 from my B.M.I

I have a long way to go. I plan on loosing another 10st at least to reach my goal weight, but in doing this safely and will be consulting my doctor at every step!

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The Final Yo-Yo

I'm a chronic yo-yo-er. I originally lost 80 lbs. in high school, but never the last 15 I wanted to lose. In the past 14 years since, I've lost and gained the same 10/20/30/40 pound (depending on how long my diet lasted and how terrible the regain was) over and over with the goal of losing that "last 15." I'm done. I'm 32 and finally committed to losing the weight forever and making it a lifestyle.

I've done some research on stopping the yo-yo cycle and it seems like I need to focus on (1) ensuring all my weight loss methods are sustainable and I'm able to keep them up forever and (2) avoiding depriving myself so much that I binge for a full year after I give up and indulge. I'm finally doing that! I've identified what's felt really unsustainable in the past (weighing everything, extremely strict calorie counts with wildly indulgent cheat meals, daily weigh ins, meal prepping and eating mushy, watery, vegetable-based meals that I despise, and cutting out food groups) and identified what has felt great (exercise and strength training, weekly weigh ins, focusing on counting calories, but not being overly restrictive or precise, finding healthy foods I love and making sure they're always available to me).

The problem is, the unsustainable things were what made me lose weight. I've been doing this more sustainable method for a month and a half now and I've lost very little weight and have no idea if I should "trust the process" or realize that the process can't be perfectly sustainable. So I have a few questions:

  • Has anyone beat yo-yo-ing? How did you do it "sustainably"
  • How can I make my process both sustainable and effective?
  • Any other general thoughts?
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Eating back calories burned while exercising?

Hi! First time poster, long time lurker.

I am 18F, 5'7 and 156 pounds. Therefore, my TDEE is about 1800-1850. My goal on MFP is 1400, though I give myself a little leeway and aim for between 1300-1600. Most days I do a C25K run (currently on Week 4), a 3-4 mile bike ride, and a Sydney Cummings workout (I'm following her Summertime Fine program). On Monday, my Apple Watch said I burned 2,650 calories. I know that it definitely overestimates my calorie burning from my workouts, but if I ate 1400 calories, then that would be over a 1000 calorie deficit, which definitely isn't good.

I know fitness trackers are notorious for overestimating calories during workouts (though mine seems to be accurate for my TDEE when I don't do any exercise), so how many calories should I be eating back, if any?

Little more info: In January, I was 175. Dropped 25 pounds and was around 150 at Spring Break, and a combination of spring break and quarantine got me off track so I gained about 8 pounds. I'm getting back on track to reach my goal of 130, but just want to make sure I am sustainable in my weight loss!

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

Repeat after me: Your journey is your own.

WARNING: this is a whole lot to read

I’m new on this app, so forgive me if I don’t follow the correct posting protocol or whatever.

I’m an 18F 5’5 SW: 84kg/185lbs CW:74kg/164lbs GW:60kg/130lbs.

I started my journey in February , it was exactly what I needed at the time. I had a borderline food addiction and BED, sad, anxiety ridden, failing and barely going to my classes at school.

I was at a reallll low; with little self esteem & confidence - I had nothing to lose by getting a damn gym membership and dragging my ass to achieve at least one thing so I could feel good about myself, even temporarily.

Growing up I’d always been weight conscious and remember being maybe 7 and looking down at my stomach wondering why I was so fat (I wasn’t), this carried onto my early teenage years, I didn’t think I was beautiful or enough so I looked for other factors to validate myself. I excelled in school and tried my hardest to ‘keep my weight in check’. This worked for a long while until the issues about myself that I hadn’t dealt with started to creep up on me again in other forms of life struggles and with that came the emotional eating and my worst fear - being fat.

So I’m 7 months in at this point, having lost (what it seems like to me) ‘only’ a little over 20lbs. I did it in silence, and shall continue to.I feel different, but I’m not entirely sure I look any different. My self esteem and anxiety is a lot better now FOR SURE. But I just can’t help but feel like it’s not enough. I guess a small part of me is worried that perhaps I’ll never reach my goal and that I’m wasting my time.

I have a sister who has been on her own weight loss journey for on and off 2 years l and is now approaching her GW with pretty much no exercise and eating really low calories hence the rate of her weight loss is therefore faster. She also (consciously or not) requires a lot of outside affirmation and validation to feel good about herself i.e telling me about every pound lost for a cheer , which I’m fine with from time to time but everytime? I’m exhausted.

She’s also the same person who made slick comments from time to time about the weight I had gained or even now just general weight related comparisons between me and her.

On the plus side, this has led me to be someone who tries to be mindful of the things I say to people and how it could make them feel.

It’s exhausting really, especially whilst experiencing your own struggles.

I say all this to say (mainly to myself) that this your life now, being active, productive, healthy, in constant improvement. This IS you now, you’re undoing years negative self talk and growing into the person you want to be. Run your own race and stop looking into others. Exceed in your own life and know that this can only be done in the absence of comparison.

It’s hard though and one can only try.

Sorry if I sound crazy, but these are just some thoughts blurted onto a page.

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Confidence From Unexpected Sources... Warren Buffett Edition

Anyone who has seen my comments over the past month knows that I have an affinity for quotes. I find that certain ones resonate with me in a way that builds my resolve and improves my outlook. One issue that many deal with is self confidence, so I wanted to share my perspectives on a couple of quotes from an unlikely source, Warren Buffett. Buffett isn’t a weight loss guru, he’s a value focused investing phenom, but for whatever reason some of his quotes really work for me. TLDR at the end.

“I don’t look to jump over 7-foot bars; I look around for 1-foot bars that I can step over.”

This quote helps to reinforce that I need to create realistic and achievable goals for myself. There isn’t one goal in my journey, there are many little ones that add up to my overall objective.

“Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”

From this I’ve realized that I’m planting seeds right now from which I will reap benefits for the remainder of my life. This is a powerful motivation that puts into perspective the day to day challenges of dieting and lifestyle change.

“Chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken.”

Looking back, there were certain habits that I’d developed that resulted in my obesity. Those habits were and are incredibly hard to break. Moving forward I reflect on this quote often to remind myself that the new habits I’m creating need to be changeable as I evolve.

“When you combine ignorance and leverage, you get some pretty interesting results.”

I realize that this one is a reach, but my interpretation of this quote is that I need to educate myself on healthy lifestyles. By doing so, I believe I’m improving my chances of achieving one and sustaining it.

“It’s only when the tide goes out that you learn who has been swimming naked.”

This is a personal favorite of mine because it applies to a wide range of concepts. To me it means that you can only see weakness through vulnerability. Applying this to my weight loss journey I’ve realized that being vulnerable is a necessary and empowering aspect. I didn’t realize it was time for a change until I was in a vulnerable state; from that point I’ve accomplished a great deal and I’m proud of myself.

Late 40s Male, 5’10”, SW 275, CW 200, GW 180

TLDR; my interpretation of a bunch of quotes that help my self confidence.

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And so we begin again...

About 8 years ago, I hit my high weight, 285. A few things happened, creating the 'perfect storm' for weight loss. My mom had triple bypass that year, I had a neurological event that closely resembled a small stroke (from which I recovered 98%), I was facing my 40th birthday, and my oldest child was getting married. It took a while, but over time, I lost 133 pounds. I stayed at 152 for a while, was running every day and felt fabulous. Technically, I was 7 pounds over the top for my height, but it was ok. I felt good,and I felt like I looked good!

Then the divorce.....

I injured myself (broke my butt bone when I fell in my kitchen), and couldn't run. Then through the emotions of my divorce after a 24 year marriage, I ate my feelings, so to speak. I'm now in a much better place, happily re-married to someone who treats me with kindness rather than emotional abuse. However, I have regained almost 100 pounds of the 133 I lost. (Yes, I know-- Please don't judge me. God knows I judge myself enough.)

I'm trying hard to find that girl I was when I was losing all that weight, but try as I might, I'm having a tough time. I've tried cutting out sugar again, and I do great all day until my husband gets home and then all bets are off. (He is a serious sugar-fiend! He is not responsible for what I eat, but I have a hard time not joining him when he's drinking soda and eating poorly. ) This morning, I weigh 249 pounds at 5'4". I feel embarrassed and ashamed. I feel like I deserve to feel better, like my new husband deserves a healthy me, and like if I don't shed this weight, I won't live long enough to grow old with him. FWIW, I don't have any known medical issues, and I'm not on any daily meds.

I guess this is my restart post, a way of publicly stating my intention. Any advice on finding that motivation again?

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