Friday, January 1, 2021

I want you to get results but enjoy the process too

Hating your body, eating food you find gross, and doing workouts you dread are an option. It may lead to faster results but it wouldn't be sustainable. However, another option exists:

You can choose to feel great during this weight loss process. Make workout time fun - by pumping up the music, doing it with a friend, and selecting activities that you truly enjoy. Eat nourishing foods that you personally find delicious, and don't be so restrictive. Lastly, learn positive self-talk- you can still be kind to your body even if you are trying to lose weight.

Here are some personal examples to illustrate this:

1) Exercise - I used to go on walks while calling a friend, this would make the time go by quickly and was also a great way to catch up with her.

2) Nutrition- Rice is a staple food in my culture, so instead of cutting it out completely (and restricting myself) I try to eat it every other day. And when I do have it, I load it up with veges and protein so that I can eat less of it and still feel full.

3) Mindset- I actively try not to compare myself to others, and instead compare myself to where I was last year, year before, etc. I appreciate and celebrate non scale victories - such as having a better mood and greater self-esteem.

Wishing you all the fun and happiness! Best of luck in your journey :)

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10 Healthy New Year’s Resolutions You’ll Actually Keep

Work out an hour a day! Lose 20 pounds! Stop eating cookies! These may sound like some of the overly-ambitious promises you make at the start of every year, only to break a few weeks later. Get-healthy goals are good, but only if you can actually keep them.

Here at Nutrisystem, our mission is to make healthy living easier. We want you to succeed at this. (Just look at all those smiling faces below, eager to help you make this your best year yet!). And this year, to help you get off to a successful start, we’re dishing out 10 New Year’s resolutions to consider making in 2021. They’re realistic and achievable, so you won’t abandon them in a month. Plus, they’ll help jumpstart your journey toward a happier, healthier you.

Here’s to the very best year yet! Check out these 10 New Year’s resolutions for a healthy 2021:

1. Aim to drop one to two pounds a week.

Evidence shows you’re more likely to keep the weight off when you lose it slowly and steadily, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). And as you work toward your ultimate goal, your effort along the way does your body good: Even a modest weight loss, such as five percent of your total body weight, can help improve blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels. [If you weigh 200 pounds, a five-percent weight loss equals 10 pounds.] A weight loss program like Nutrisystem can help you achieve this healthy rate of weight loss.

2. Walk more.

You’ve heard it a million times, and for good reason: It’s safe for most people, low-impact and requires nothing more than a pair of supportive shoes. Walking helps manage your weight, strengthen your body, and boost your mood; do it regularly and research suggests you’re likely to live longer. Begin with a slow stroll, for just a few minutes a day; then gradually build up your time and pace to the recommended 150 weekly minutes at a moderate-intensity. Break that up into small chunks if that’s more doable for you: Three, 10-minute brisk walks a day, five days a week.

10 Reasons You Need to Eat More Fruits & Veggies

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3. Do body weight exercises.

Lunges, push-ups, crunches and squats: These equipment-free moves are a great way to add strength training to your routine; in fact, “back to basics” body weight training is predicted to be a top fitness trend of 2017, according to a survey by the American College of Sports Medicine. Regular strength training helps build lean muscle mass so you burn calories more efficiently; it also helps strengthen bones, manage your weight and sharpen thinking skills.

4. Add veggies to every meal.

That’s one way to help meet your “eat healthier” goal. Vegetables are low in calories, high in filling fiber and loaded with nutrients that may help reduce your risk of disease. And while you’re pretty good about getting some greens on your dinner plate, don’t skimp on other meals: In the morning, add spinach to an omelet or try smashed avocado on whole wheat toast; pile a lunch sandwich high with extra fixings (tomatoes, cucumbers, avocado) or use lettuce as a wrap (instead of bread); and during snack time, munch on carrots dipped in hummus or blend frozen broccoli or cauliflower into a fruit smoothie.

10 Reasons You Need to Eat More Fruits & Veggies

Read More

5. Practice deep breathing.

It’s one of the simplest and most effective ways to start meditating. Find a quiet spot, get in a comfortable position and focus all your attention on feeling and listening as you slowly inhale through your nostrils for a count of three, then exhale. Try placing your hand right below you navel so you can feel your belly rise and fall. Spending even a few minutes a day in meditation can help reduce stress and ease anxiety.

6. Sip water throughout the day.

Research has shown even mild dehydration can sap energy, reduce your ability to concentrate and negatively affect your mood. Plus, scientists from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign found people who drank one, two or three more cups of water a day cut calories and reduced their consumption of saturated fat, sugar, sodium and cholesterol. One guideline we like at Nutrisystem is to drink a half ounce of water for every pound of weight you weigh (so divide your weight in half and drink that many ounces of water per day).

How to Know if You’re Dehydrated

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7. Schedule a physical.

Regular health exams can help find problems before they start, or earlier when your chances for treatment and cure are better, says the CDC. Talk to your doctor about what screenings or exams you may need, and when you need them. To make the most of your visit, compile your medical history, bring along any medications (including vitamins and supplements), prep a list of questions ahead of time, be specific with any symptoms you may be experiencing, and be honest so your doctor can better assess you.

8. Make time to volunteer.

When people contribute to their community or an organization they are passionate about, they lead happier lives, have lower rates of depression, and may even live a little longer than those who do not volunteer, according to a research review of more than 50 studies. Think about causes that are important to you, and research groups that deal with those issues. Also consider what you have to offer: if you love building or outdoor work, or have a knack for teaching kids, look for opportunities where you can use your skills.

10 Things Healthy People Do Every. Single. Day.

Read More

9. Pace your drinks.

Especially around the holidays, all that toasting and cheersing could lead to one too many cocktails. One drink a day for women, two for men is considered light to moderate, and may even help protect against heart disease. But heavy drinking (more than three drinks on any day or more than seven per week; for men, more than four on any day or more than 14 per week) can actually hurt your heart and your liver, as well as raise your risk of depression and certain cancers, according to research. To help keep consumption under control at a party, pace yourself to no more than one alcoholic beverage per hour. Sip slowly, and space them out by making every other a non-alcoholic drink, such as water, soda or juice. Also, don’t drink on an empty stomach—alcohol is absorbed more slowly with food in your belly. And throughout the year, keep a drink diary: Note each drink before you drink it—on a card in your wallet, in a note on your smart phone, on your kitchen calendar, or wherever works for you. It may help you slow down, and shed light on any potential problem.

10. Set a bed-time alarm.

As odd as that may sound, the most important sleep strategy is to stick to a schedule—go to bed at the time every night, get up at the same time every morning. So set an alert to ring about a half hour before you plan to hit the sack to give you time to wind down, power off the laptop, put down the smart phone and get ready for bed. When you get into a regular sleep rhythm, you get better quality and more sound rest.

The post 10 Healthy New Year’s Resolutions You’ll Actually Keep appeared first on The Leaf.



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okay yeah, i can do this!

its officially 2021, and ive been on my weight loss journey since december 14th, 2020. im a 5'7' f, SW: 140, CW: 135.5, GW: 126. so far ive dropped approximately 4-5 lbs, and my resolution is to drop (and keep off) the remaining 11 i want to lose. i've been trying for 3 years now, since i gained 15 pounds after leaving home, and for the first time on my journey, i have actual faith i can do this. this will happen!!! im going vegan all of january to help hold me accountable for healthier choices, and actually believe in myself. posting here to hold me accountable and will post updates soon!! WE ALL GOT THIS!!

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Welcome to the Sub, for I was once like you...

I know you've heard it was before, but yes, I was once like you too. But here's the thing. I was probably worse than the majority of you looking for inspiration here.

On December 31st, 2019, I was running around trying my best to find a shirt that actually fit for a "Roaring Twenties" themed NYE party.

Turns out, I could only find one that fit at all at the XL Casual Male store. And I wasn't in their smallest size either, not by a long shot. Literally nothing in Target, Kohl's, Scheels, the Nike outlet, or anywhere else except for Duluth would fit.

At 6'2", I weighed in at 385 lbs.

I saw that number and was shocked. I had been lying to myself for so long, that I truly believed I was 340, maybe 350 lbs at the very most. I mean, everybody has back pain when they lay in bed too long, right? And my feet hurting when I got out of bed was just because I'm getting older, clearly. Clothes were getting too small because they were shrinking in the dryer. Besides, i could still move around pretty decently. Who cares if I could barely pick something up off the floor, or if I choked myself out when I tied my shoes. I'll just wear slip ons!

That number woke me up. I was only 15 lbs away from being 400 lbs. That's not just being a big guy, that's HUGE.

I needed to change.

I'd tried diets before. HCG just made me hungrier than regular. I tried cutting out unhealthy things. I thought I could just eat plenty of healthy stuff and be fine. Turns out that's not how it works. 3000 calories of carrots and broccoli is still 3000 calories.

I knew nothing about calories except that food contained them and they were energy. And if you burned more than you consumed, you worried lose weight. Calories In, Calories Out. CICO. I had no clue how many I was eating, or what Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) was, or what Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) was. I only knew that the average person needs about 2000 calories per day. So I decided I would start eating 1500 calories per day.

On January 13th, I started my weight loss journey.

Please don't be like me and go into this blind. Ask questions. This is probably THE most welcoming sub on Reddit. Use us. We've been where you are. Find yourself an online calculator for your BMR and TDEE to see how many calories you need to maintain your size or lose it. Ask, pick our brains, utilize the resources we've collated and sorted through. If you don't know what an acronym is, ask. We've all been there.

Later on when I learned more about all of this, I sat down and calculated out that I would consume an average of 6-9,000 calories in an average day. My BMR was around 2,700, and my TDEE was around 3,500. So I was easily eating twice what I needed to maintain my weight. No wonder I got so big. Especially considering that a pound of fat is around 3,500 calories.

So I started eating 1,500 calories per day. It was torture. But I stuck to it. I drank more water in those first few weeks than a fish does in its entire lifetime just to try to keep my stomach full. One of the keys for me was switching my thinking to food=fuel. That's all it is. It's gas in our tanks. It's what charges our batteries. That's it.

But it worked. Holy crap did it work. I had a surgery on my arm on Valentine's Day, and by then I had already dropped 20 lbs. Holy crap.

Personally, I ate whatever the hell I wanted, as long as it fit into my calorie limits for that day. Over the past year, I've had brownies, cookies, bread, pasta, steak, loaded baked and mashed potatoes, everything I wanted, just less of it.

I also couldn't do cheat days. My first cheat day was my ex's birthday weekend at the end of June. I gained 10 lbs that weekend from indulging and swimming in a lake. But take heart, I lost it again by the end of that week! It was just temporary.

I lost a phenomenal amount of weight at first. But it slowed significantly as I lost more and more. I've just broken through a plateau that lasted a month. You can too.

I also want to tell you that weight loss is NOT linear. Some days you'll get on the scale and gain 5 lbs and wonder how. You'll get demoralized, you'll want to say screw it. Don't. Maintain your program. You'll lose it again, I swear to you. And if you screw up one day? Oh well. Enjoy yourself that day. It's one day. Get back on the wagon tomorrow. It's a new day and a new opportunity.

I'm now 245 lbs. I've lost 140 lbs. In under a year. It can be done. You can do it too.

I'm not done, but damn if I'm not proud to have people legitimately not recognize me. Damn if I'm not proud to have people wonder what happened to me. Damn if I'm not proud to have inspired multiple friends to get on their own journey.

I've gone from wearing 4XL shirts and 46 pants that fit tightly to carrying a concealed Glock 19 in 38s with XL shirts. Check out the pictures, the last one is an Eddie Bauer XLT and the pants are Duluth Trading Company 38x32s (short legs). And it's still loose enough that you can't see the Glock 19 I'm wearing appendix.

You can do this. One day at a time. One meal at a time. One step at a time.

I believe in you. I'm proud of you for getting started. You got this.

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Reminder for those who overate on NYE

17F 5’2 SW: 160lbs CW: 137lbs GW: 120lbs

So... I definitely ate above maintenance today, there were many sweets on my family’s buffet and I decided to get it out of my system and eat all of the ones I wanted. Was it the best idea? No. Was it worth it? Kinda. I definitely feel stuffed and a little sickly which I haven’t felt in a long time. Right after eating that I felt really guilty and started beating myself up over it. This morning I also woke up at my lowest weight of the year so I felt even worse about it. Tomorrow I will probably be 2-3 lbs heavier and feel bloated.

As I sat there wallowing in self pity I took a step back and reminded myself that one day won’t hurt. Even if it was above my maintenance calories, there isn’t anything I can do about it now. It was a mistake and I’m not perfect. Most of it is water weight and will disappear in a few days. All my hard work hasn’t disappeared and I won’t suddenly gain back all that I lost in one day. Instead, tomorrow is a fresh start, a new day and a new year. I will eat at my normal deficit and not starve myself. I will maybe take a longer walk and get back on track.

If you overate tonight or throughout any of the recent holidays, please don’t be negative towards your body. Treat it with kindness and remember what it does for you everyday. You progress won’t be completely ruined and it’s not worth dwelling on. What’s done is done, there is a new day waiting for you to do better than yesterday. Anyways happy New Years! My heart goes out to all of those continuing or starting their weight loss in 2021. I hope you reach your goals and become the best version of yourself❤️

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I’ve come so far.

https://imgur.com/a/yIRaJ4Y

Unfortunately the photo on the left is the only photo I really have of me at that weight because I hated pictures and avoided cameras like the plague. But just from seeing my arm and how massive it was...

I’ve come so far. I battle PCOS and I am winning. I lost weight despite how hard this condition makes it. I got my menstrual cycle to come every single month this year after having an absent cycle for most of my life. I’m healthy and fertile now and I can start a family. I was prediabetic and I no longer am at risk for getting diabetes. Every time I go to the doctor, my blood pressure is always normal after being told for so many years it was too high and I’d need to be on medication for the rest of my life. I can run a 10k without absolutely dying. I can go to the gym and hit up to an hour on the stair master, which is so cool because when I first started I couldn’t last five minutes.

But as great as 2020 was for my weight loss journey, it also created a lot problems with food. The pandemic made me stress eat. I got scared and now I find myself insanely obsessed with what goes into my mouth, I find myself in cycles of severe restricting and hating myself if I fail at restricting. And don’t even get me started on when I overeat or eat things I’m really not supposed to. (White carbs are bad for PCOS so those are the foods I only really restrict for the sake of my reproductive health.)

I start therapy next week with someone who specializes in eating disorders. I’m so eager to get started because I’ve come so far, and I don’t want my poor relationship with food to take me down. I can’t let it take me down.

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Losing due to exercise instead of diet

Hi all, happy new year!

I have been on this sub for a while and I thought I was doing well but I haven't lost any weight. I get into deficit for a while and certainly lose water weight but something will happen and I'll eat or drink too much and so I have maintained but not lost. Some of the times my deficit was unhealthy due to stress and so I noticed that I had lost muscle mass, which was a bit alarming. I'm keen to maintain as much muscle as I can since I'm in my early 30s.

I am a bit disheartened by my lack of weight loss, because of how much effort I have put in. I'm trying to console myself by making smaller changes - drinking less and eating more fruit and veg etc. I have a bit of stress in my mind and that is causing some difficulty too, but I always seem to.have stress in my life.

In order to keep my stress levels in check and maintain muscle I have started some resistance training. I quite enjoy it. I know that you can't out run a bad diet and that ultimately my calories in are still too high.

I did realise this morning though that in the past I have lost weight through exercise. I lived in two cities that were flatter and I walked and cycled way more and lost quite a few kilos.

Just wondering if this has happened to anyone else? That it was the exercise rather than diet changes that pushed the needle in terms of helping the weight loss kick off?

I do eat relatively healthily so I'm trying not to get disheartened.

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