Sunday, February 14, 2021

Lost 40lbs, finally beat binge eating after moving out of my family home

Before vs after: https://imgur.com/a/afohIEy

My main weakness in weight loss was 2 things - my family and my studies.

This resulted in binge eating which was honestly a nightmare - one of my biggest struggles I wasted my teens on. Although the method I used may not be possible for everyone, I'd like to share my story anyway in the hopes it might give some people ideas in their own journey.

I'm a 5ft5 20 year old female from the UK, 40lbs down over 5 years of losing, maintaining and gaining. I was an average sized child but gained a lot of weight in my teens weighing 158lbs (72kg - and a bit shorter than I am now, so overweight BMI of 27-28) at my highest when I was 15 ish, and now around 118-120lbs - 54ish kg at 20 years old. The pic is of me at my highest 15-16 and the after is me now.

I'm actually from an Asian family (Chinese) that takes food and exams very seriously. I was under constant pressure to perform well in exams from my parents and to an extent myself, and when I studied I needed to eat or I couldn't think straight. On top of that, my family always talked about food and encouraged me to eat more despite my weight and lack of self confidence as a result. I wanted to lose weight by eating less, more healthy options and exercising more, but my family didn't think I needed to. We had a lot of arguments over food as I didn't want to eat with them or I couldn't watch my calorie intake, and after a lot of frustration and crying they finally let me make my own meals.

But even then I couldn't stop myself eating the food in the house and every night was a constant internal battle, trying to convince myself to fall asleep before I could eat way too much. Every time my dad came back from the supermarket on the weekly grocery shop, I prayed there wouldn't be too many high calorie foods like cakes, crisps, chinese dumplings and spring rolls etc but he would always buy them and I couldn't stop him. I would throw away food and flush it down the toilet in secret to minimize the chance of me bingeing on it just because I knew it was sitting there. It was so unhealthy. Getting back home from school was like entering a minefield - as soon as I stepped in the door I would rush up to my room and spend the rest of the evening trying not to binge until school started the next day. Also my parents are the type to stop eating when they feel full but I am clearly not.

I felt disgusted at myself that I didn't have the self control to just not eat that stuff and on top of that they made me feel guilty about it (oh I thought you were being healthy? etc) while putting unhealthy food out in the open. It was just endless self hatred I couldn't escape, as incessantly overfeeding your kids was considered to be love in my family and they made me feel like I wasn't being appreciative or some crap. The constant studying (especially in a culture which isn't as hyper-focused on education like the UK so everyone else is allowed to enjoy themselves) and terrible relationship with food killed my social life and literally made me depressed.

I have broad shoulders for my height and also tend to carry more weight in my stomach and upper arms and thighs, wide ribcage with skinny lower arms and lower legs and a flat chest, like a man. If I'm thin I look more athletic but if I'm heavy I just look buff and disproportionate, as you can see from the pic. This wasn't great for my self esteem and I felt left out at school. Some of the conversations I had with myself in my head late at night after bingeing and my family commenting about it were bordering on suicidal, and I felt dumb for wanting to kill myself over something as ridiculous as food, which I was aware many people didn't even have enough of. But the mental games were just that intense.

Then I finally got into med school at uni, and saved up enough from a side job to pay for most of the living expenses while taking out a student loan. I had wanted to lose weight in the summer before I started uni but that failed as always because of my family. I was terrified the bingeing habit would stick with me after I moved out, especially hearing about the freshman 15 etc. To my surprise, things worked out a lot better than I expected. I developed all the habits I needed. I gradually began losing weight while keeping up with my uni studies because I kept absolutely no food in my room or dorm kitchen and only ate when the uni servery was open at mealtimes. I began doing sports like badminton and taking gym classes too (on pause bc lockdown), as well as lifting to improve my tone but the main change was the eating. When I felt hungry, I would simply buy a choc bar or packet of crisps, eat it and go about my day - I couldn't binge, as there was no food around! Only what I allowed myself at mealtimes. And I didn't eat too little at mealtimes or count calories exactly, just enough to lose some fat, similar portions to what others were eating. Overall, I just took a much more relaxed approach to my weight and body image.

I began losing weight rapidly and not yoyo dieting or being super mentally stressed for the first time in my life. As I approached my goal weight it became more difficult so I started calorie tracking and I did get the urge to binge a few times - a few times I went to the store, got some ramen and a box of chocolates and called it a 'cheat day' but I would always feel full and bloated the next day. The difference was when I felt like this back home I would somehow still eat the next day, just because the food was there and I couldn't stop myself, but now it wasn't I'd just relax and eat less. I wouldn't have called those times 'binge eating' either - just overeating a bit because I was hungry. I developed a natural sense of how much I needed to eat and continued losing weight.

It's been 3 years and I haven't really binge eaten since moving out. I don't keep any food in my room or anywhere near me and only buy it when I'm supposed to eat. Funny thing is, I can hang out with friends with food everywhere and easily only have a few bites without feeling the need to eat everything - after eating normally for a while, my body actually knows when to stop! But I know that if I was back in a place with food available all the time I'd probably start bingeing and go back to the dark place I was in before, so I just don't keep food around anymore. When I move out and get my own place after graduating I know I will only keep minimal and healthy food around my house.

I hope this story helps some people realise that it might not be your own self control lacking but if there's constantly unhealthy food available, it's natural human instinct to want to eat it, and when that's combined with failed dieting and lack of self esteem, that causes binge eating and starving cycles. It's not necessarily that you're weak willed - just that what's in front of you really makes a difference. To an extent, I believe that if everyone was surrounded by unhealthy food all the time, 75%+ people would probably be overweight.

Although I know some people might not have the luxury of moving out of an unhealthy household, even just putting unhealthy food out of sight can help. Maybe consider sorting out your financial situation and moving out before beginning a serious weight loss regimen and work on making small changes in the meantime. Also, moving out isn't going to solve binge eating for everyone (I'm not naturally a 'foodie' by any means, I just have a tendency to self sabotauge and play mental games with myself) but even then the binges will probably be better than when having a crap ton of food around.

tl;dr - haven't binge eaten since I moved out of my family home 3 years ago, after struggling with it for most of my teen years, and finally got the body I wanted.

Love you all and good luck on your weight loss and health/fitness journeys, just stick with it and there will be a light at the end of the tunnel. Don't let anybody drag you down, not even those closest to you - often with family it may simply be a cultural or ideological difference you can't change apart from distancing yourself. Feel free to ama xx

edit: happy valentines!

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Mindset shift showing scale and non-scale victories!

You guys! I can’t begin to explain how changing my mindset around food and weight loss is having such an impact on my progress. I started in mid-January after being wheelchair bound for 3 months and learning to walk again. I didn’t have my mindset shift until about two weeks ago but OMG the difference.

As I mentioned in a previous post, something about actually weighing and tracking my food and comparing my current diet to that of one if I had wls has been making a big difference. I have decided that I refuse to give myself any food restrictions, but just make sure everything fits in my calories. For instance. My twins had their birthday Friday. Did I eat cake and pizza. Hell yes I did! Did I go overboard? No! I kept it within my caloric deficit for the day. Hello non-scale victory!!!

I lost 4 lbs last week AND 4 more lbs this week. My total down since mid January is 11lbs! Not too shabby! Can’t wait to see my progress is six months and a year!

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A cake day update on reclaiming my life

This is going to be long. TL;DR at the bottom.

I made an account 8 years ago just to post in this sub. At the time, I was starting ANOTHER attempt at weight loss. Everyone here was super helpful and supportive (and still are!) but, like the myriad attempts before that one failed and I gained all the weight back and then some. And again. And again. I tried Keto, South Beach, IF, CICO, IIFYM, you name it. They all worked, initially. But then the hunger takes over. It always takes over. After careful logging and studying my past attempts, it seems that whenever I hit a certain scale weight, the inevitable rebound would begin. it was like stretching a rubber band - you hit a certain tension point and it just snaps back the other way. At a certain weight, food would be all I thought about from the time I woke up to the time I went to sleep. My brain was sending every panic signal it could telling me I was starving and needed to constantly eat or I would die. I knew I wouldn't literally die, but nothing turned the cravings off. I had two settings: Hungry and Not-so-but-still-a-little-Hungry. Weight comes off, The Hunger surges, weight goes on. Rinse and repeat for 5 more years.

Wasn't this supposed to be a "reclaim" post? Yes, yes, I'm getting to that.

I made the decision 2 years ago to see specialists and get help. Took nutrition classes, therapy, did sleep studies, hormone levels, tried prescription weight loss meds, avoidance diets, all with moderate but never long lasting success. 8 months ago a co-worker around my age and close to my weight (then) hit me up on a private zoom and laid out his admission to having recently had a gastric sleeve procedure. He talked to me for 30 minutes and it might as well have been a conversation with my own brain. The highs, the lows, the attempts, the fads, the pills, the depression, the specialists, everything. At the end of all of it, he turned his camera on and asked me if I could notice a difference after 3 months (back in June 2020) post surgery and I was FLOORED. He looked great! He referred me to his doc and told me to at least have the conversation (I had mentioned in the past that I wanted to avoid WLS if possible) if not for me, then for my 2 kids (age 3 and 1). That he had made the decision to give himself a shot at a longer life than his dad and grandpa had (both died in their 50s from obesity related issues) and that hit me hard. I was on that path. I thought of my kids' future and I called my primary and was surprised to find she was enthusiastically supportive and wrote the referral right over the phone and sent it to my email.

I made the appt back in October, met with the team at the hospital once in person and once online, and joined the program. I have been following all the steps since. Counseling (again), Nutrition Classes (again), Sleep Study (again), hormone panels (again), Support Group, and exercise plan. I had done most of these things before, but this time was at an actual bariatric center and not a strip mall weight loss management place (nothing against them, they were lovely people, all of them). I completed my last online nutrition class yesterday. I have been attending a support group that hosts both pre and post-op bariatric surgery patients for months now. I have one last zoom session with the clinical psychologist left and then I'm ready for scheduling the pre-op physicals and such. It's real. I'm going through with it. I'll be 44 in a month and have 2 kids under 4. I want to be around for their graduations and if I'm lucky enough, weddings and grandkids and such. I am taking my life back from obesity, come hell or high water.

At first I felt great shame. I felt that even meeting with the bariatric surgeon was a failure in itself and that I was a failure for not being able to succeed where so many others before me had. But I'm not other people. I'm me. I'm responsible for me (and my kids, duh) and comparison is the enemy of progress. The psych counseling and support groups have done wonders for my mental health and the nutrition classes are helping me make preparations and better overall choices. I'm down 30 lbs from my heaviest weight of 386 and hope to be another 5-10lbs more down before I schedule my surgery. I am lucky to have 3 co-workers in my department that have all had this same surgery in the last 18 months, all with great success, who are all very supportive and answer all my questions and concerns, and even reach out to check in on me! I can't stress how important support is in ANY plan.

Anyone considering it should know up front, it's not easy. It's not a quick fix. It is a life altering decision that will change the way you eat/drink/live for the rest of your life and you need to know those things up front. What I used to consider shameful, what I thought was a ''cop out" or a "quick fix" turned out to be anything but. It's a serious decision that takes effort and lifetime of change and hard work, both physically and mentally. Thankfully, I've never been afraid of the work and now I'm looking forward to the future with optimism.

It's been a long 8 years from creating this account to here and I genuinely appreciate all of you who extend your seemingly inexhaustible support to others on this site.

TL;DR, yo-yoed for 20 years, got therapy, got counseling, saw a bariatric surgeon, am having surgery.

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38, never worked out before, 247 lbs. So far 10 lb loss on keto. Bought rowing machine last week, weight loss stopped. Need help on what to expect.

I'm ashamed to admit I've never in my life owned any sort of home equipment. We decided to purchase a rowing machine (which we love) and am about 4 days in to exercise (3 weeks tomorrow following a keto WOE).

I currently have been doing 20-25 minutes on a higher resistance right away in the morning. My goal this week is to make it to 30 minutes. Today was supposed to be a rest day (I was very sore yesterday), but I feel good today so I did a light row while watching a favorite show to get some movement in. I would like to add that in and create a nightly light workout as well.

I have not changed anything with the keto, the only change is the addition of the exercise. I'm assuming the slight gain/holding steady is due to the introduction of the exercise but I'm not sure how long the stall lasts before you start seeing loss again? I appreciate the scale to help keep me on track. When I stop using the scale is when I let the weight climb back on so I'd like to keep the scale around if possible. My wardrobe consists of pretty much all leggings so it's hard to go by how clothes feel.

What can I expect in the next couple of weeks? Or will it take longer to balance everything out? I guess I just need help adjusting my expectations to make realistic goals and not be discouraged when the scale doesn't move.

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Reminder to those who feel like their clothes size is the same after weight loss: Sweats are different than dress clothes

I mostly have been wearing the same clothes since my weight loss. I clearly have lost weight, but I didn't really change my wardrobe at all, and sometimes in the back of my head I think, my clothes should be looser by now.

But remember, for a lot of us, our "quarantine clothes" haven't exactly been the same as our pre-pandemic wardrobes. I wear a lot of sweatpants and t-shirts now that I work from home and don't go out as much.

Today, I was looking in my closet, and saw all my old suits/dress pants from when I used to work in an office. Out of curiosity, I grabbed some nice dress pants that I know I haven't fit in in years. Turns out they fit! My work clothes are much more "fitted" than my day to day clothes (especially my pandemic day to day clothes), and I forgot how much size actually mattered for those clothes.

So if you have some work clothes you haven't worn since March, they might be looser than the clothes you're wearing every day now.

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Love Your Body: 5 Tips for a Healthy Valentine’s Day

With so much emphasis on love around Valentine’s Day, we’d like to suggest that you turn your love inward and think about some ways that you can love yourself and your body. Whether you are just starting out with a healthier lifestyle or you’ve been at it for a while now, you likely know that the journey has its ups and downs.

But no matter what life throws your way, you deserve to treat yourself well. Oftentimes, that means not being so hard on yourself. When you make a mistake, accept it, learn from it and move on. Don’t dwell or allow yourself to spiral out of control. You can always get back on track.

It’s time to give yourself some credit and show a little love to the body that has gotten you this far in your journey. To help you shift your focus toward loving your body and doing good for you, we’ve rounded up some fun tips for a healthy Valentine’s Day.

19 Delicious Desserts to Add to Your Valentine’s Day Menu

Read More

Show yourself some love this Valentine’s Day with these five healthy tips:

1. Crush your chocolate cravings.

chocolate cravings

While chocolates might be the quintessential Valentine’s Day treat, there is a way to get your chocolate fix without totally derailing your diet with a heart-shaped box of sugar-packed sweets. The Leaf Weight Loss Blog is filled with nutritious and delicious chocolate recipes, such as our Flourless Chocolate Raspberry Cake. You could also satisfy your sweet tooth in a healthful way with one of these seven healthy chocolate snack hacks! >

Nutrisystem offers a variety of chocolate treats that are both tasty and weight loss-friendly. We’re totally crushing on our Cream Filled Chocolate Cupcake. However, some of the other delicious possibilities include our Chocolaty Fudge Bar, Chocolate Flavored Pretzels or Chocolate Brownie Sundae.

2. Cook dinner at home.

valentine's

Instead of making a reservation with your V-day date, why don’t you consider cooking a meal together at home? It can be romantic and fun to prepare an entrée and share it cozily at the dinner table. You can still light candles and even dress up if you want. Take a look at the recipe section on The Leaf for a wide range of meals that fit into your Nutrisystem program.

By cooking at home, you’ll save money, fat and calories. Many restaurants tend to use more oils, sugar and salt in their food preparation. This can cause a single meal to provide most or all of your total recommended daily calories. The fact is that you could make a much healthier version of the same meal at home.

5 Creative Valentine’s Day Gifts That Don’t Involve Food

Read More

3. Make wise choices.

valentine's

Of course, if dining out is one of your favorite things about the holiday, there are ways to do it that won’t totally set you off track. For instance, you can plan ahead by researching restaurant menus online so that you’ll be able to make a smart choice. Look for veggie-based dishes or lean meats that are grilled or baked. Avoid fried foods and meals with creamy sauces.

Keep your portion sizes in check by splitting an entrée with your date or immediately boxing up half of it before you even start eating. You can find many other smart tips for dining out right here on The Leaf! Take a look at our Dining Out Guide so that a dinner out doesn’t derail your healthy eating plan.

4. Get your heart pumping.

valentine's

If you want to show your heart some love this Valentine’s Day, then you should get it pumping with a fun activity that you enjoy. Whether it’s cycling, going for a jog, doing yoga or walking with a friend, choose something that you love to do so that it’s fun and rewarding.

If you’re paired up this holiday, you might consider trying out a partner exercise. Just do a quick internet search for a “couple’s workout” and you’ll discover many great ideas to strengthen both your body and relationship. Of course, if you’re rocking it single this V-day, you can still love yourself and your body by getting that heart rate up and improving your cardiovascular health.

10 Ten-Minute Workouts

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5. Spread the love.

valentine's

Taking care of your mind and spirit is incredibly important and something that you might be thinking about this Valentine’s Day. Why not share the love this February by making a date with a local volunteer organization? Donating your time and effort to serve those in need is the perfect way to give back to others. Whether it’s handing out meals at a soup kitchen, organizing shelves at a local food pantry or even taking shelter dogs for a walk, you’ll feel good about spreading love to others in the community—and you’ll make a difference in their lives, too.

The post Love Your Body: 5 Tips for a Healthy Valentine’s Day appeared first on The Leaf.



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Saturday, February 13, 2021

Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Sunday, 14 February 2021? Start here!

Today is your Day 1?

Welcome to r/Loseit!

So you aren’t sure of how to start? Don’t worry! “How do I get started?” is our most asked question. r/Loseit has helped our users lose over 1,000,000 recorded pounds and these are the steps that we’ve found most useful for getting started.

Why you’re overweight

Our bodies are amazing (yes, yours too!). In order to survive before supermarkets, we had to be able to store energy to get us through lean times, we store this energy as adipose fat tissue. If you put more energy into your body than it needs, it stores it, for (potential) later use. When you put in less than it needs, it uses the stored energy. The more energy you have stored, the more overweight you are. The trick is to get your body to use the stored energy, which can only be done if you give it less energy than it needs, consistently.

Before You Start

The very first step is calculating your calorie needs. You can do that HERE. This will give you an approximation of your calorie needs for the day. The next step is to figure how quickly you want to lose the fat. One pound of fat is equal to 3500 calories. So to lose 1 pound of fat per week you will need to consume 500 calories less than your TDEE (daily calorie needs from the link above). 750 calories less will result in 1.5 pounds and 1000 calories is an aggressive 2 pounds per week.

Tracking

Here is where it begins to resemble work. The most efficient way to lose the weight you desire is to track your calorie intake. This has gotten much simpler over the years and today it can be done right from your smartphone or computer. r/loseit recommends an app like MyFitnessPal, Loseit! (unaffiliated), or Cronometer. Create an account and be honest with it about your current stats, activities, and goals. This is your tracker and no one else needs to see it so don’t cheat the numbers. You’ll find large user created databases that make logging and tracking your food and drinks easy with just the tap of the screen or the push of a button. We also highly recommend the use of a digital kitchen scale for accuracy. Knowing how much of what you're eating is more important than what you're eating. Why? This may explain it.

Creating Your Deficit

How do you create a deficit? This is up to you. r/loseit has a few recommendations but ultimately that decision is yours. There is no perfect diet for everyone. There is a perfect diet for you and you can create it. You can eat less of exactly what you eat now. If you like pizza you can have pizza. Have 2 slices instead of 4. You can try lower calorie replacements for calorie dense foods. Some of the communities favorites are cauliflower rice, zucchini noodles, spaghetti squash in place of their more calorie rich cousins. If it appeals to you an entire dietary change like Keto, Paleo, Vegetarian.

The most important thing to remember is that this selection of foods works for you. Sustainability is the key to long term weight management success. If you hate what you’re eating you won’t stick to it.

Exercise

Is NOT mandatory. You can lose fat and create a deficit through diet alone. There is no requirement of exercise to lose weight.

It has it’s own benefits though. You will burn extra calories. Exercise is shown to be beneficial to mental health and creates an endorphin rush as well. It makes people feel *awesome* and has been linked to higher rates of long term success when physical activity is included in lifestyle changes.

Crawl, Walk, Run

It can seem like one needs to make a 180 degree course correction to find success. That isn’t necessarily true. Many of our users find that creating small initial changes that build a foundation allows them to progress forward in even, sustained, increments.

Acceptance

You will struggle. We have all struggled. This is natural. There is no tip or trick to get through this though. We encourage you to recognize why you are struggling and forgive yourself for whatever reason that may be. If you overindulged at your last meal that is ok. You can resolve to make the next meal better.

Do not let the pursuit of perfect get in the way of progress. We don’t need perfect. We just want better.

Additional resources

Now you’re ready to do this. Here are more details, that may help you refine your plan.

* Lose It Compendium - Frame it out!

* FAQ - Answers to our most Frequently Asked Questions!

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