Saturday, August 15, 2020

Is there a natural limit???

So I'm a 20 year old female, I'm 5'5" and in the past my weight has mostly fluctuated between 128 lbs and 118 lbs. I'm currently around 120 lbs but my goal weight is sub-110. However in the last few years I just CANNOT seem to get past 118 lbs, 117 lbs. I know that where I'm at now is not unhealthy but I personally don't feel my best and I do think I can get down there but like I just feel like no matter what I do I can't get my weight down past 118 again! Help! Is there something I need to do to jump start the weight loss again? Is it possible for my body to just ~refuse~ to lose some more weight?

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advice for an emotional eater??

19F 5’7 SW: 190 CW: 185 GW:145

hi everyone!! i just started my weight loss journey, i am trying CICO for the first time and am hopeful :) i have always been overweight since i could remember and have finally decided to do something about it.

i was hesitant about CICO because i have have issues in the past with obsessing over food and thought it would just lead to more unhealthy thinking.

i am eating approx. 1500 calories a day and burning 2000 a day. at least that’s my goal haha and it was actually seemingly easy for the few days but now the annoyance has set in of having to watch everything i eat. i suffer from depression and anxiety and food has always been a crutch. it’s so hard not to stuff my face with ice cream/pizza/any sort of goodies at any feelings of emotional turmoil. so any advice? thanks :)

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Looking for an accountability partner or two for the next couple months, maybe more.

I've been off the weight loss wagon for a few months now and I'm going to be starting to really focus on it once again in the coming weeks and months. I'm looking for a buddy or two, male or female, that are also just starting up their own journey. I've done this before with some rather noticeable success, I found it's nice to have someone who can relate and whom you can confide/vent with as well as celebrate the big and small victories.

A little about me: 36, male, 6foot, 250ish(we'll see when I venture on the scale Monday.)

Short Term Goal: Right now its just to start seeing the weight go down.

Long Term Goal: 220s, fit into XL shirts comfortably again.

I'm open to any form of communication, ideally a chat app or texting of some kind. Shoot me a PM if this sounds like something you'd be interested in.

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What finally “clicked” for you?

Hey everyone! I’m (28F) starting my weight loss journey yet again. I’ve read through a lot of the awesome success stories and wondered if there was something that finally “clicked” for you to begin losing weight? I’ve got about 30 pounds to lose and I’ve tried over and over again to eat properly, but I always seem to fail after two or three days. If I eat one piece of junk food, then I wind up binging the whole day and onto the next. It’s always, “oh, I’ll start tomorrow or I’ll start on Monday.” I met with a healthy living coach via my doctors office and she recommended the Full Plate Diet which is essentially three meals each day with 75% of the meal being vegetables, fruit, and/or beans, and the other 25% being whatever you’d like, but it should only be one serving. Like a cup of apple juice would make up the 25% of a meal. This seemed okay at first since I am a vegetarian but really limited eating other foods.

Any advice would be appreciated on how you got started and stuck with it! Should I have a detailed plan of action for every waking moment?! It’s so hard! TIA!

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Success from increasing micronutrient intake rather than suffering through decreasing macros.

Greetings all. I want to state upfront that I’m not an expert on this, just a middle aged guy who’s spent a lot of his life battling weight issues, and perhaps my experiences will be of benefit.

Tldr: eat more vegetables, especially greens

I’m 44, and I’ve considered myself fat since I was a kid, even though like a lot of you I look back on photographs and wonder how I thought that. As an adult, I became genuinely fat by any standards. I participated in weight loss competitions at work. Counted calories. Tried all kinds of exercise routines. Learned about macros, counted those.

I’ve lost weight several times, only to regain it. Up, down, up, down.

The trouble I ran into is that the process of losing weight was unpleasant. Either I was hungry all the time, or I had to force myself to work out when I really didn’t want to. It was a chore.

And like most unpleasant things, I’d only keep it up for so long. I’d hit some predetermined target, then celebrate with pizza and beer. Just tonight. It’s fine.

But then of course my old habits took back over, and there I was right back where I started, if not a bit heavier. That led to a whole lot of self-doubt, frustration, disappointment. What’s the matter with me?

At some point, it dawned on me that it might be worth my time to study my fit friends’ habits, do some comparisons. I know these people. They’re not freakishly diligent. They don’t have shocking willpower. No, they just eat and move the way they eat and move, and it works for them.

One of my friends mentioned in passing last summer that he has a simple habit of eating a salad every day. Interesting, I thought. I tried that, and it made a difference straight away.

I find that if I make a conscious effort to include fresh vegetables in my daily routine, in particular leafy greens, I eat less. I don’t spend any of my day hungry, unless it’s just time to eat again. There’s no suffering, no willpower needed. I eat just as much pizza and beer as I’m in the mood for. I just am not in the mood for that as often.

I wonder if I’ve spent my whole life on a micronutrient deficit. That the reason I felt hungry all the time is that I was eating garbage that didn’t actually do the work for my body that food is meant to do. So perhaps my brain was continuing to send out ‘eat more’ signals in the hopes of getting those nutrients.

I’ve taken up gardening during the pandemic, and as a result I have a variety of fresh greens available at all times just outside. The way I usually get my greens for the day is to pick a few leaves off of each plant that I happen to be in the mood for, chop them up with a clove or two of garlic, and pile it all on top of whatever I happen to be eating. Delicious, fresh, full of nutrients.

The weight has fallen off with no additional effort on my part, and for once I really don’t think it’ll all come rushing back.

I imagine it’s not a cure-all answer for every situation, but I wish I’d tried it earlier. Best wishes.

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New goals and big huge thank you to all of the people on this sub!

Two years ago I started a journey to be healthier. I [F] was 25 newly wed and weighed 250 pounds. Depression had me beaten since I’d already lost 70 pounds before and I gained it back right before my wedding. My marriage was falling apart I had no boundaries with family and I ate to feel better. Then I joined Reddit and this sub. I read the start here post and followed the instructions. Small changes. CICO. Moving my body because I want to not because I’m punishing myself for eating. Slowly I got better I went to therapy. I had energy. My marriage got better all along I was making the changes. Then I started positing I was 17 pounds from my first goal weight. The I started cutting back on social media but everyday I would give myself time to come here and read your stories that helped keep me inspired. Now suddenly I’m 189 pounds. 60 pounds down from the weight I stared at two years ago. And I wanted to share that I could not have made any of the changes I did without the support and rallying of this community. I lost the weight (still have some to go) but I got my life back. Did losing weight automatically make everything better? No. But choosing to better myself my taking care of my body lead to weight loss and better mental health. So thanks Reddit ❤️

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Is anyone else going SUPER slowly and totally fine with it?

F44, 5'7.5 SW: 190, CW: 177, GW: 160

I am on a bunch of meds for a hormonal disorder that basically have me in early chemical menopause. I also have a history of ED (long since recovered, thankfully!). I find that my deficit has to be quite small to be tolerable - usually I average about a -250 cal deficit per day, with occasional weeks where I can get the average more like -500. A lot of days I eat 1900-2000 calories and get a chunk of my deficit from walking 5 miles. At least once day per week I find I need to eat at or slightly above maintenance. For some reason, maybe because of my meds/hormonal disorder/age/history of ED, I find if I implement a deficit closer to 500 cals per day, I get symptoms like headaches, insomnia, and anxiety.

On my current plan/approach, the result has been a consistent weight loss of about a pound per month for about a year. At first this slow pace really bothered me, but lately I see that I would rather lose this slowly and be building habits that I can comfortably maintain for the rest of my life than be losing a half pound a week, as I used to when I was younger and my health was different, only to yo yo regain it.

Any other oldies or chronic health condition sufferers who feel the same? Fine with me if it takes a couple years to drop 30 lbs if it means I tolerate the restriction better and hopefully am better able to keep the weight off...

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