Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Is it anyone else's business?

I was speaking to my friends tonight and the topic of my weight loss came up. One of my friends who has also lost weight asked me how many calories I had been eating, and I told them I've been eating 1500 calories with re feed days where I eat maintenance and cheat days thrown in there aswell.

They then implied that I was starving myself and that I wasn't doing it right, which really pissed me off.

I've lost 3 stone during my weight loss journey eating 1500 calories a day, and it has worked to a great effect.

If its not broke why should I fix it?

If it works for you then it works for you. Dont be like me and get worked up about other peoples opinions.

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Runners:

22F 5’7 CW: 179.6 SW: 185.6 GW: 165

Has this ever happened to you?

Hello, first time poster long time lurker. I posted this in the running subreddit but im not sure that i’ll get a response.

I took up running like 2 months ago to help with weight loss and its going well. I used to be able to only run a mile and just creeped up to 2 miles 4-5x a week at the same pace. I ran 2.5 miles straight the other day and I felt so good. Ill probably try a 5k soon.

Today at the gym I was so out of breath at 1 mile and a little nauseous. Have you ever been able to do a certain amount then one day you can barely reach your personal best?

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Cant lose weight

My stats: Gender: Male Height: 6'5" Weight: about 290 Caloric intake: 1300 - 1800 Activity leval: High Daily steps: 13,000-16,000

Background: I started a new job as a ware house associate at interstate battery around 9/22/2020 and quickly lost weight. I went from 312 lbs to 290 by oct 22. I decided to use this as a springboard to get in shape.

I started eating a high carb, high protein, low fat, no sugar diet, and recently started cal counting and have been working out almost 3 times a week fairly consistantly since then. I run about a 1.5 miles and do pushups and situps (i want to join the military).

My garmin watch claims i burn 5,000-6,000 calories a day paired with only 1300 - 1800 cal intake, i figure i should be losing pretty fast.

The only 2 things i can think of is one of 2 options:

  1. I sometimes slip on a weekend day and may eat 2,000 - 3,000 cal and i dont really excercise on the weekends, so my body may be using that to maintain its weight, although i have only done this twice.
  2. Im building muscle from working so hard at the same rate as fat loss so a net 0 weight loss (people have mentioned i look thinner).

My weight has been fluctuating between 284 and 295 for the past month and a half, and today it was 292.

What am i doing wrong?

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I am 17 years old, 5'6, 178 pounds. I need to lose weight and I need help

I don't know what to do. I want to lose 40-50 pounds by June. I have no idea what to do. I am poor and my mother is obese and doesn't buy healthy food. Despite being a lot bigger than me, she makes fun of my weight and my looks and it hurts very much. If I don't lose weight, I will never be happy with myself and comfortable in my skin. This is the highest I've reached but I've been overweight since 7th grade, I've attempted weight loss and failed many times because diets are "expensive." I am begging for guidance. I can't keep living like this. I'm currently crying while typing this. Just someone tell me what to do, how to exercise, what to eat, when to eat, whatever.

Edit: I'm also female if that matters

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Emotional eating - getting beyond "Just do it" and digging down deep

I keep starting and stopping IF, CICO and dieting. If I have to dig deep and ask myself why, it's because I self-soothe with food. I have mental health issues, and I use food to cope. While medication and therapy help, food is always there! I don't think I will ever become successful at weight loss and stick with it until I deal with my emotional eating.

I eat when I'm happy, sad, bored, stressed, anxious, angry, empty - it's a comfort and a release. I eat to celebrate! I binge after a fight with my boyfriend or a bad day at work. I genuinely LOVE food and probably have an unhealthy relationship with it. I can't get excited about KETO (lord knows I've tried), and salad doesn't do it for me. But I am at the heaviest I have EVER been and I know if I don't do something I'll keep ballooning up and up. I've gained 30 pounds since COVID began.

So other than a, "Try harder!" or "Swap this with that!" does anyone else have some really in-depth and out-of-the-box suggestions on overcoming this?

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6 Tips to Lose Fat for Pear-Shaped Bodies

It can seem like every fat-loss article is targeted at losing belly fat. However, if you have a pear-shaped body, there’s a lot less fat loss advice for you.

There’s a reason the info is so belly-heavy: Visceral fat, the rock-hard kind that makes up a “beer belly” and builds up close to your organs, is associated with increased risks of cancer, heart disease and stroke, says John Hopkins Medicine. According to ScienceDaily, research from the Society for Endocrinology found that when obese people carry more of their fat in their legs—known as “gluteofemoral fat”—they have lower disease risks and lower blood pressure than belly fat carriers. Thigh fat has also been shown to have a “protective role” by reducing “bad” LDL cholesterol and raising “good” HDL cholesterol, says Harvard Health Publishing.

According to the Journal of the American Heart Association, losing this lower body fat still improves heart health outcomes—including cholesterol levels—even when that protective effect is taken into account. It can help with mobility, too: Research from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center found that an increase in thigh fat is predictive of mobility loss and reduced walking speed in older adults, says ScienceDaily.

If you have a pear-shaped body, you may just want to lose the fat in your butt and legs because you want to. But here’s the problem with losing thigh fat: “Gluteofemoral” fat is the same type of fat—subcutaneous fat—that’s just under the skin throughout your body. And try as you might, you can’t spot-reduce this type of body fat from the exact spots where you’d like to. Scientists have tried: In one study, published in The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, scientists had participants perform 1,000 leg presses per workout for 12 weeks with just one of their legs. At the end of the three months, there was no significant difference in the fat composition of their two legs—even with thousands and thousands of exercises done with one leg.

So if you have a pear-shaped body and want to know how to lose leg fat, your best bet is to lose subcutaneous body fat all over—and the best way to do that is to be in a caloric deficit. Your personalized Nutrisystem plan will get you started with that. These six tips can help turbocharge all-over fat burning in your pear-shaped body even more.

What Does Your Body Type Mean?

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1. Snack on almonds.

Bowl of whole almonds set on a table.

Alt Text: Bowl of whole almonds set on a table.

In the past few paragraphs, you learned that you can’t target leg fat. And that’s usually true. However, almonds are a bit of an exception: According to the Journal of the American Heart Association, one study of 48 people with elevated “bad” cholesterol found that those who ate a daily snack of almonds lost fat in their bellies and legs, even if they didn’t otherwise lose weight. Almonds have monounsaturated fats, the kind eaten in the Mediterranean diet to burn belly fat and lower disease risk. But the nuts have this bonus effect on leg fat, so work a measured portion into your daily diet to target it: Two tablespoons of almonds is equal to one PowerFuel on Nutrisystem.

2. Do some “submaximal” exercise and start strength training.

woman in running gear and headphones checking her watch. pear shaped body fat loss

You’ve probably heard about high-intensity interval training (HIIT). This involves bursts of all-out effort that are alternated with easier bouts of exercise or rest. Research out of the University Of Guelph has found that interval training burns more body fat than slower, “steady state” cardio, says ScienceDaily.

But not everyone wants to go all out, and not everyone is physically ready to do so, either. Your doctor may not recommend you perform HIIT workouts, and your joints might argue with you about it, too. There’s good news: You can burn plenty of fat without HIIT. In fact, “submaximal” exercise, performed at about 60 percent of your maximum effort, can help you burn fat. In one study, published in the American Journal of Physiology – Endocrinology and Metabolism, researchers found that performing exercise at 60 percent of their max helped study participants reduce the amount of fat they added in their butt and legs, even when scientists were injecting estrogen into those body parts—which usually triggers fat gain.

Mixing strength training in with your “submaximal” cardio can help you burn even more fat. In one eight-month study, researchers from Duke University Medical Center divided 234 overweight people into three groups: One group performed aerobic exercise only, another did strength training with no aerobic exercise and a third group did both. At the end of the study, the aerobic-only group lost the most weight—but they gained fat. The aerobic-and-resistance group lost almost as much weight as the aerobic-only group and they lost fat, says ScienceDaily.

Get the benefits of both: Try some of these 10 workouts you can do right in your living room! >

3. Eat more protein.

Protein cuts of steak, chicken and salmon.

If you’re strength training, you’ll want more protein: It provides fuel that your muscles need to recover and it can also help you burn more body fat as you build new strength. In a 2018 study, published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, two groups of female lifters changed their protein intake: One group increased their protein intake from 0.7 grams to 1.1 grams per pound bodyweight—so, for a 150-pound woman, 165 daily grams of protein. The other group reduced their protein intake from 0.7 grams to 0.4 grams per day—for that same woman, only 60 grams of protein

Both groups gained muscle and lost fat over eight weeks, but the higher-protein group had better results for both: They gained 4.6 pounds of muscle and lost 2.4 pounds of fat, while the lower-protein group gained 1.3 pounds of muscle while losing 1.8 pounds of fat.

Gaining muscle won’t make you “bulky,” but it will help you burn even more: Muscle tissue burns more calories at rest than fat does, so you’ll be able to reach your weight loss goals even faster. And you don’t have to pile your plate high with meat. Try some of these 10 Nutrisystem-approved, meat-free options for more filling protein on your plate! >

Learn more about losing weight with a pear-shaped body at the link below:

Weight Loss & Body Type: All About the Pear Shape

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4. Have some nonfat, unsweetened Greek yogurt.

Woman eating Greek yogurt. pear shaped body fat loss tips.

It has protein, of course—17 grams of it for every 100 calories. However, Greek yogurt may also fight fat. When you’re dieting, increasing your calcium intake can mean more of the weight you lose comes from fat, according to research, published in the British Journal of Nutrition.

Greek yogurt can also be a satisfying treat, whether you’re snacking on veggies dipped in this spicy Greek yogurt dip, enjoying a chocolatey Chunky Monkey yogurt parfait, or this fruity, sweet, simple-to-make Strawberry Icebox Cake with Lemon.

5. Have some vitamin C before you hit the gym.

Whole pineapple and pineapple slices on a table. pear shaped body fat loss tips

If you want your workout to help you burn fat, make sure you’ve had your daily dose of C: When exercisers don’t have enough, they can burn 25 percent less fat during their gym session compared to people who had their full daily quotient of Vitamin C, says research published in Nutrition & Metabolism.

It’s in more than oranges, though: Pineapple and mango are loaded with Vitamin C. Get a taste of both—and some protein—with this delicious Flex recipe for Mahi Mahi with Pineapple Mango Salsa.

6. Sleep!

Older woman sleeping in bed. pear shaped body fat loss tips

It’s the ultimate tip for your health: Get enough sleep! When you don’t, you’re at a higher risk of obesity and diabetes. You exercise less. You have a harder time choosing healthy foods. Learn more about your body and sleep deprivation here! >

Not getting enough sleep also means you burn less fat. In one study of overweight subjects on a diet, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, those who slept 5.5 hours lost 55 percent less fat than those who slept 8.5 hours per night. Use these five tips to help you get better sleep! > Get your shuteye—you’ll be happier, healthier and lose fat faster!

How We Create Your Personalized Diet Plan

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Back on it again since August and this time for good

Hey everyone. I'm Lotta(F28) and I've been overweight/obese since I was a child. When I was 19-20 years old I weighed myself for the first time in a long time and I was 103kg(227lbs), shocked to have crossed the 100kg mark I decided it was finally time to get my weight under control.

I started eating healthy, or what I thought was healthy at the time. However I know now I was eating way too little and not getting enough nutrients. I only ate salad and fruit, and way too little at that. I wasn't counting calories because I was afraid I would get too obsessive over it but I really should have, I now estimate I was only eating around 700-900 calories a day. Maybe even less.

I ended up losing 20kg(44lbs) in a 2-6 month span. I was really active as well, walking and jogging. I kept the weight off for a couple of years, I weighed myself pretty regularly and had started counting calories as well but I wasn't "on a diet" anymore and obviously the weight wasn't going down any more than that. Although I felt good I remember thinking often that I need to lose more weight and I wasn't happy with my body.

Then I got depression, and started gaining again, didn't track my weight/calories/anything. Couple years from that, ups and downs, went to see a psychiatrist and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. I got medication for that, and one of the side effects was weight gain due to a bigger appetite. I remember weighing around this time and I was a little over 100kg again. I was focused on getting my mental health in check and didn't track my food/weight. 6-12 months later I weighed in at 118kg(260lbs) and realised I had to change something.

I was able to lose 10kg in 6-12 months, then I just stayed at 108 for some years. I think I wasn't ready to take it any further. Finally, this August I decided to get my weight down again. I had seen some old pictures of me when I was down to 80kg and I was amazed at how great and healthy I looked. Then I remembered how I had felt that time that I was so fat and had to lose more weight. But I looked so great, I was in the shape of my life so I knew that I had to change my mindset or it didn't matter how much weight I would lose.

This time I'm focusing on sustainable weight loss, nothing is really off limits as long as it fits into my calories. I'm eating around 1600 calories for weight loss. Starting at 107,2kg, now, 3 months in I'm at 92,8kg, which is a 14,5kg loss. (32lbs)

I don't feel like I'm depriving myself of anything, and this time I really feel like I can make it to my goal of being 80kg and keeping the weight off for life. I had heard time and time again that it is a lifestyle change but this time something inside me just clicked. I think I just wasn't ready for a lifestyle change before this.

Good luck to everyone else here beginning and continuing on with their journeys :)

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