Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Beginning my journey after Ecoli and IBS

Hello all! I am starting my weight loss journey today after a hard year of medical challenges. About a year ago I contracted EColi (ETEC) and proceeded to have sever complications for about 8 months. I started at 110Lbs dropped to 85Lbs and have WAY overshot on the rebound to 119.4 Lbs. I was basically living on Mac and cheese, applesauce, and Dino chicken nuggets because it was all that by body would hold down for months... not an ideal diet to say the least.

I am excited to say that I can eat a full normal diet again and I am hoping to reach a goal weight of 95lbs for a 24yo 5’0” female. Any encouragement or advice would be great. I struggle mostly with not overeating at social gatherings and not buying crap food for lunch at the hospital where I work but do not have access to a fridge.

I am currently attempting to stick to a 1200 calorie a day diet plan. It is hard though because if I don’t eat enough at night I still get nausous and vomit. I have also recently purchased a new indoor exercise bike and Pilates equiptment. I burn about 230 calories in 30 mins on the bike per day for two days and do some strength training with the Pilates bar after.

I would greatly appreciate your guidance on getting started/ sticking to it! Have a great day!

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6 Sneaky Ways You’re Ruining Your Veggies

You know you should eat more vegetables… and you’re working on it. Study after study shows these low-calorie foods may help protect you from the killer diseases—cardiovascular disease and cancer—and chronic ailments, such as type 2 diabetes.

But it’s easy to undo the health benefits of vegetables. Think “blob of cheese sauce,” for one.

Here are six other ways you may be going wrong:

1. Overcooking. Mushy veggies aren’t just a culinary no-no, they’re a nutritional one, too. A little cooking—steaming, boiling or lightly sautéing—can help release important antioxidants such as carotenoids in carrots, zucchini and broccoli. But overcooking can rob you of important nutrients such as vitamin C and even fiber. One veggie you might want to eat raw at least sometimes: broccoli. A study in the journal Agricultural and Food Chemistry found that heat breaks down an enzyme that helps produce sulphorophane, a chemical in broccoli that may prevent cancer. However, another cancer fighter, indole, is increased when you cook cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, cauliflower and Brussels sprouts. Tomatoes are another story. Technically a fruit, their most healthful ingredient, a naturally occurring pigment called lycopene, which has been shown to promote heart health and fight cancer, is actually released when tomatoes are cooked. In one study, lycopene content rose by 35 percent when the tomatoes were cooked for 30 minutes. The reason: Heat breaks down the thick cells walls and helps allow those nutrients to be absorbed by the body.

Veg Out! 6 Simple Ways to Sneak in More Veggies

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2. Creamy sauces. Adding a cream or cheese sauce to your vegetables may add flavor, but it also adds calories—anywhere from 100 to 300 or more for just a quarter cup serving. You don’t have to forego “creamy” sauces. You can recreate your favorite ones using nonfat milk in place of cream or whole milk, low-fat cheese in place of full-fat varieties, or even start with a base of cooked, fork-tender cauliflower. Just blend it with veggie broth, sautéed garlic, salt, pepper and skim milk until it has a creamy consistency.

3. Too much salt. Salt doesn’t just add water weight. A study published in 2014 by researchers at Georgia Regents University found that people who had high levels of salt in their diets were likely to be fatter than those who ate less. The reason: The researchers say there is evidence that high sodium intake may increase the size of fat cells.

How to Build the Best. Salad. Ever.

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4. Overdoing the dip. A little low-fat ranch dip with your crudité? It’s a good thing. Finishing up the entire container? Really bad, even if it did make you eat more veggies. Make sure you measure out the exact amount of dip, whether it’s low-fat ranch or hummus, you plan to eat and don’t go back for seconds. One delicious idea: Make your dip salsa. It has fewer calories so you can eat more and it gives you a double dose of vegetables!

5. Loading salads with the wrong things. Public salad bars have given most of us the wrong idea about salads. Everything from pasta to ham can be called a salad when you add mayo, but a real salad should be mostly greens and veggies. Watch the high-fat plant foods like avocado, seeds and nuts. Yes, a little is healthy—they all contribute good fats and other nutrients to the mix—but they also can be calorie bombs in large quantity. Be generous if you’re dressing your salad with sweet grape-based balsamic vinegar, but use a light hand with oil and measure out low-fat salad dressings.

6. Your frozen vegetables aren’t alone. Contrary to what you may believe, frozen vegetables have just as many nutrients as fresh ones, sometimes even more. When University of Georgia researchers compared the nutrient content of eight fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables, they found that the amounts of vitamin A, vitamin C and folate were actually greater in the frozen produce than that stored in a refrigerator for five days (the average amount of time they spend in the fridge in many homes). But make sure the frozen veggies you serve are just vegetables, and not floating in a fatty sauce or loaded with sodium. One half cup serving of frozen broccoli with cheese sauce is 90 calories and contains 490 milligrams of sodium—about a third of the amount the American Heart Association recommends we consume daily. A half cup of spinach in cream sauce may top 110 calories with 560 mg of sodium. If you can’t eat fresh, at least eat clean.

The post 6 Sneaky Ways You’re Ruining Your Veggies appeared first on The Leaf.



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We are so focused on our physical diet that we seem to forget our mental diet also.

Physical diet helps us lose weight but we often don’t think about our mental diet. We need positive energy coming in, and going out.

I’ve been obese my entire life with a family that is also obese and my entire weight loss journey there will be toxic remarks of “you look like a skeleton, you have an eating disorder, you have lost enough weight you are bones” Or even when I was fat it was sugar coating bs like “you arent fat! just big boned and stocky!”

Remember, your success is a spotlight shining down on their missed opportunities. These things can really get to your head, even if you “ignore them.” Remember to replace this negative energy with positive energy, whether it’s motivational videos, progress pics, music whatever it may be.

They always ask why I always have my headphones in, this is the exact reason. I’m focusing on creating a better future for myself. Physically, mentally, etc. I don’t need to listen to bullshit judgements that aren’t true. Give me advice, give me honest criticism, but don’t call me a skeleton when I was still in the overweight category.

My older brother, who has always been slim told me days ago “lol, you only live once, eat all the food you want and just workout or whatever.” Really? Yeah that’s what led me to 220 lbs all my life, eating more, great advice..

People always encourage you to lose weight at first, but as you start getting in shape, their tone shifts and once you get in better shape than them...thats when the judging starts happening, because as I said, your success is just a spotlight, and they can’t handle the fact that they failed and didn’t get back up off their ass to keep going, but you did..and that’s why you’re successful, every single day, every single week.

Positive energy. Take in as much as you can, and give it back to the world. Give credit where it’s due. Clap to those who deserve it, because before you know it, you’ll be an inspiration to thousands of people and they’ll be clapping to you too.

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The truth about weight loss

Hi! just wanted to give you a few tips before you begin your journey. These are all tips I wish I knew before i began my weight loss journey.

I posted this as a comment in another post but thought it would be nice to post as a text.

  1. ⁠You may have heard about a bunch of diet plans and what not and how you should only eat veggies and carrots and what not. That’s completely bs. For weight loss all you need is a caloric deficit, which means you’re burning more calories than consuming. You can eat what you want just in proportion. I avoid pasta though, cause it’s a killer.

  2. ⁠Lift weights and you probably will be since you’re at the gym lol. The thing with treadmill is that it’s a good warmup but it’s cardio and cardio only burns fat while you’re doing the exercise. With weights, you’re putting a strain on your muscles and they’ll need time to recharge. They’ll recharge during your sleep and you’ll be burning calories while they recharge so weights really boost weight loss.

  3. ⁠Don’t trust the scale more than your clothes. The scale is very inaccurate. It could show water retention, sodium levels being high, fecal matter being stuck. Most commonly, the machine doesn’t differentiate between fat and muscle weight. So maybe the scale isn’t moving, but you’re losing fat and gaining muscle. Your clothes will however tell you what you need to know. If you’re losing fat, you’ll fit your clothes better.

  4. ⁠Absolutely do NOT compare yourself to others. Genetics plays a huge role in weight loss and we all have different genetics so just be patient with the journey. It’s a marathon not a sprint.

  5. ⁠There will be days you want to give up, but remember, pain is temporary, regret is not. Eyes on the target. Remember your pain you’ve endured in life due to obesity during your workouts. It’ll give you the boost you need.

  6. ⁠Your first 2 months-ish, you’ll lose weight really quickly and that’s your body losing water weight but if you work your muscles, you’ll also be losing fat too.

  7. ⁠Sometimes you’ll hit a weight loss plateau and that means you’re not losing weight. As I said, the machine doesn’t take into account all the factors and the wins come from caloric deficit.

That’s all from me. I may have missed a few thing but I wish I knew all this before I began and now I’m glad I get to guide others. Feel free to add anything below :)

I hope you all the best!

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Tuesday, September 8, 2020

After a very long journey, I've hit 24.7 BMI. I am now a healthy weight for the first time in my entire life. Serious question, though -- When do I stop (and switch to maintenance)?

http://imgur.com/a/BSxgsTr

Started out officially at 364.8, was likely heavier a few months before that. Began to count calories in a deficit using MFP while focusing on high protein and fiber intake. After starting at 2300, I gradually declined my caloric intake to maintain extremely fast weight loss. Once I hit 1200-1300, I determined that would be the lower limit after a brief test at 800 made me feel awful and was strongly advised against. At 235 lbs, I came down with a UTI and visited a doctor and told her all about my dietary everything and she signed off on it wholeheartedly, expressing to me that I'd effectively done a well as anyone she has ever seen. She did tell me that 1200 was geeat given the quality of food I was intaking, but did advise me to begin adjusting for exercise so I did. I didn't exercise a ton, just continued working my retail job and going out for occasional walks or Fitness Boxing sessions.

When I started this journey, I truly hated myself and my body. However, after coming this far, I can't say that's true anymore. And that might be one of the strangest feelings. I've done something hard to do. I look and feel a lot better about myself. I won't lie and say I'm content, the sort of hunger for self-improvement is still pretty strong. And loose skin sucks -- it's an unpleasant reminder and kills my self-confidence. That being said, I don't have the most egregious case I've seen, and with clothes on it's mostly a non-issue.

The other primary goal was to increase my attractiveness. I've never even so much as kissed someone. For a long time that didn't bother me, but after sort of falling in love with someone online and then them cutting me off after a year, it kind of caused an enormous hole in my heart along with a tear in my psyche. For a year or two it really depressed and upset me, but now I appreciate the fact it happened and don't harbor any resentment at all. If it weren't for that I probably would have died without ever really living or endeavoring to be healthy. It was an awakening of sorts... I realized I want to experience more things like that, even better ones. Now at 27, the sort of biological clock is ticking and now it's my biggest desire.

Going from so heavy to where I am now was odd. For the first 125 lbs, I genuinely felt like nothing but decrease in clothing size hapened. But once I hit 235 I really began to notice things. Being able to fit into seats. Even smaller clothes. More energy. Smaller shoes. Less pain. Easier breathing. At 210, I stared to lose a lot of neck fat and it caused me want to express myself more. It was this odd thing -- that after 27 years of looking in the mirror -- I finally started to look like me. And that me wasn't so bad after all. And that I could now do things to make me look even more me. At 190, I started to notice bones, veins, body parts... And it made me feel human. I'm not sure how to explain it but, after spending a third of my life watching life pass me by, I now feel human enough to join in instead.

Ya'know, most my life, weight was not a struggle. It was something I avoided and ran away from. Ignored. And when my parents would insult me, peers mock me, strangers classify me, things wouldn't fit, places too small, it felt like it never really hurt. It was something I'd grown to accept and desensitized to. I realize that wasn't the case. Now my weight is no longer a defining characteristic of who I am. My parents beam with pride when they get to talk about my weight loss. Insults are way more creative and funny. Strangers see my face, what I'm wearing and what my personality is, rather than predetermining my person from my size. And everything designed to accommodate a normal human accommodates me wonderfully.

Sorry to delve into the more mental part of it. My last post here, at 235, was far more inclusive of the how's and what's, the process, the physical. But as I was writing this I had to really hold a lot of tears back. I never really realized how much life was affected and lost from mindlessly binging thousands of calories. And for what? To ease boredom, for a little taste-induced dopamine, to cycle through the depression-eating loop once more? And for heaven's sake, I still love food. If anything I appreciate and understand it more now. I've tried things I'd never consider before. If anything, learning moderation allowed me to enjoy things even more, to slowly savor and appreciate treats instead of gunning them down in seconds.

I don't know how to be super inspirational but if you were like me and drowning in a cesspool of negativity, there is simply no reason to not try your best for yourself and succeed, lest you dive ever deeper into it. Because when you do finally surface from it, you won't be able to fathom how bright the sky above really was. Don't make excuses, I've made them all for you already. They don't work. Willpower does. And willpower sucks to cultivate and realize. But if you do, you'll see its myriad applications were well worth it and extend far further than anticipated.

The only question for me now is where to begin maintenance. The concept of eating 2100 calories per day is really exciting. I'll be able to keep what I've worked so hard for and extend my diet to include a fun or spontaneous indulgence every so often. I'm not really sure what the stopping point will be. If it's happiness, well I suppose I'm mostly there already. But I am a bit of a perfectionist. And after hating this journey for so long I've grown to kind of like it. I suppose 170 might be the endpoint. Roughly estimating excess skin and unreachable fat to weigh around 12lbs, that'd put me smack center of the BMI charts and well into the fitness level of body fat. Seems like a happy middle ground. What do you guys think?

Side note: I very much appreciate seat cushions and things that make me warm. Hard things feel a lot harder and cold things feels a lot colder, these days. Haha.

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Finally made it below 250lbs but I feel stuck

I started my weight loss journey as high as 290 pounds. I’ve lost over 40 pounds so far, from changing my diet and working out more too.

It feels like I workout as much as I can, 5-6 times a week. My diet consists of basically chicken and veggies with the occasional cheat day here and there. I am proud of my weight loss so far, but I feel like I’m stuck in the mid 240s for the past couple of weeks. My goal is to get under 200 pounds..just wanted to share and maybe see if there’s any advice out there can get me over this plateau I’m facing. I believe I’m usually under my calories as well most of the days, so I don’t know what I’m doing wrong to maintain the weight instead of losing it.

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Fasting between meals. How did it work for you?

Hi guys,

when i went to my vacation in Kazkhstan i naturally lost about 20 pounds. The only difference was that i had never the opportunity to eat i was literally walking 8 hours a day. From a logical standpoint it makes sense because the less often you eat, less opportunity to overeat. Now i just wanted to know if any of you guys that fasts long between meals have noticed the same thing. That fasting kind of speeds up or really aids in weight loss more than constantly eating but staying below a caloric range. Also did you find it easier than sticking to a specific diet like keto or veganism? For me i feel like it works really well because im usually not that hungry i just have a issue with controlling my portionsizes.

Would love to hear your answers

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