Thursday, September 9, 2021

I started biking and I'm using an app to track it. It tells me approximately how many calories I burn.

Anyone else feel like the work put in doesn't match the amount of calories burned? I'm not even discouraged. I started biking mainly to feel better with the added benefit of loosing weight because I also am still not to my weight loss goal.

I'm not going to focus on getting a large amount of calories burned and concentrate more on getting out on the daily and enjoying the ride because that's what will keep me going.

But dang, I got pretty sweaty and I only burned around 124 and 113 calories for my first recorded bike rides? Thats like a small snack.

Just something I'm thinking about and curious is others feel the same.

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New here, looking for a bit of support on a bad day

Hello, everyone!

I've been following this community since I started my weight loss journey back in January, but, as an introvert with severe self-esteem issues (that I'm working on), I was a tad too ashamed to share anything, myself. As they say, though, better late than never, so I thought I could share my story here and ask for a few tips and words of encouragement, as I'm feeling quite down today.

I've struggled with my weight since I was a little girl. I remember the first time they put me on a diet I was around nine years old. To make a long story short, I have never eaten too much junk food, but I was consistently overeating as a shorter female. I also did have some "sins" I'd overindulge in while hardly noticing it, such as cheese or nuts. I was (and still am) incredibly bad at eyeballing my portions, which is why weighing everything religiously and applying CICO to the best of my abilities has been the ultimate gamechanger for me.

While I had always been chubby, I had never actually been considered obese, barring a short period (around three months?) when my hormones went out of control as a teen. And then, as life will have it, the stars aligned wickedly and I ballooned up to almost 80 kilos (to be precise, 174 lbs for our imperial-system friends). First off, I had a really bad break-up that absolutely crushed me (and yes, I did eat quite a fraction of my anxiety away and stopped working out, and will forever be ashamed of it); then I adopted an almost completely sedentary lifestyle whilst completing a Ph. D. - it was in the humanities, so most of it consisted of reading books and writing my thesis off the top of my head, no real need to visit laboratories, do fieldwork or anything... I would hit the odd library or archive, but that's about it. And it was actually worse for my figure, as it implied international travel, leading to indulging in the local cuisines and meeting up with friends for beer/food/ice cream (whyever is socialising so tightly tied to food, anyway?). Of course, I really wanted to get back on track once I defended my dissertation... And then the pandemic hit. I shall now admit that I am an oversensitive person, so the constant flux of news about the ill and deceased hit my mental health hard. I was anxious, depressed, trapped in a not-so-big apartment with four more people in my family (oh, yeah, I also went back to live with my parents when I was struggling to find a job in academia, which was brilliant for my mental health /s), and the only thing I had to look forward to was Netflix and chill binge.

Everything began to improve once the harshest pandemic restrictions were over (didn't it for everyone?), but I was in denial about my weight by then. I was fat. I knew I was fat. But I refused to accept this fact of life and carried on miserably trying to squeeze into my pre-COVID clothes. I am not proud of having worn down the inner thighs of my then favourite jeans and even torn a couple of trousers :( Anyway, I started going to the gym again (which actually led to me overestimating my burnt calories and overeating, sadly), and found my first job in my field (!), which was almost as huge as I was by then. It was thanks to the job that I got my health back on track, though - I had to go through a medical check before I started and the nurse actually scolded me: "you have excellent health right now, but it won't be long until your weight starts destroying it". I was obese.

I immediately downloaded MyFitnessPal, which gave me a 1200-calory limit to follow, not much later I began weighing my food before setting it on my plate and playing with my macros in the app... And the rest is history. I also upped my game at the gym (which became easier and more satisfying by the day as I kept losing) thanks to the help of my younger brother, who has become a handsome, muscular man after being chubby up to the end of his adolescence, just like I have been. This activity actually strengthened our bond even more, and I associated the gym with one of my most dearly beloved people in the world, so it soon became one of the highlights of my days. In the meantime, I also found an SO, landed my absolute dream job at a different university abroad, and actually just moved to that country a couple of weeks before I actually start teaching. I actually love my new diet (even though I'm looking forward to maintenance when I'll up my calories up a tiny bit and indulge/splurge rarely) and my exercise routine, and I understand that, being in the healthy weight range with all of these good things going on for me, I must look pretty put together to many people. But I have my struggles.

Why am I feeling down if everything is going so well, you might ask? To be completely fair, just writing this out has made me feel a whole lot better, but I'd still like to share what actually "got" me today, and still ask for some kind words of encouragement and maybe a bit of advice. Thing is, I'm an "all or nothing" type of person in almost everything I do. I know this kind of categorical thinking can be cumbersome and downright impractical, and I try to be more flexible when I can, but I haven't been able to make many allowances with my diet. Since I started, I decided to exclude (added) sugar as much as I could, and try not to "cheat" much, since, let's be truthful, I was impatient to see some results. I can count my cheat meals on one hand - a slice of carrot cake on my birthday, one chocolate sweet from a box that my boyfriend brought me from abroad, one dinner out at a Greek restaurant (high school reunion), and a kebab from my favourite place that I ordered the day I moved out of my country. This has been it since January, and none of these things has put me out of my calory allowance, so I'd say I've done pretty well. I also like being in control of when I cheat, as it allows me to enjoy these meals and be on top of the possible slowing of my progress.

What happened today was a very small thing, and I guess it could be attributed to me being nervous before my job starts (it's a lot of responsibility as well), but it still has me a little worried: the boyfriend and I went out for a long walk (we actually did 16K steps according to my smartwatch thingy), then decided to sit down at a café for a drink. I ordered an iced tea (because I didn't want to drink calories), he asked for a coffee. Wanting to be a gentleman (lol), he asked me to sit down and he'd bring the drinks. We began drinking, and I took two sips of my tea before I realised that it had sugar. I didn't want to have any sugar, hadn't planned for it, and actually like my tea unsweetened (I drank it that way even at my heaviest when I wasn't dieting at all), and... I don't know, I panicked. It made me very upset. I realise I'm going to sound overly dramatic, but, in that moment, I felt like the universe was out to get me, like it *wants* me to get fat again and will give me sugar to drink even if I don't want it. I was there low-key freaking out, and my SO went and asked if my drink had sugar, to which the waitress said, "yes, of course! Is it too little? Should I bring some more?" Yeah, no, thank you. The weirdest thing is that he was asked if he wanted sugar in his drink, but mine was sweetened just because. I ended up ordering another drink (black tea, NO sugar, it was overdone and tasted like rubbish, actually), but have been sad all day after, somehow.

Now, I guess a spoonful (tops?) of sugar isn't going to make much of a difference at the end of the day (is it? Can I do anything to compensate? Should I?), but I feel tricked out of a good day and it's really bringing me down. Any tips?

P. S. Thank you so much to everyone who posts here, I come back constantly for inspiration and am exhilarated to be a new member now!

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Dressing well BEFORE I reached my weight loss goal has helped my weight loss journey more than any other weight loss tip

If you’re anything like me (or how I used to be at this point), you buy clothes that are several sizes too small- your “target clothes.” You tell yourself you’ll fit into them one day, which may very well be the truth, and in the meantime you’ll only wear your old baggy clothes or gym clothes and that’s it.

That was exactly my mentality. “I’m not gonna buy my size of clothes now because in a few months they’ll be too big” and then a few months come by and the clothes that I bought that are too small were still too small. It led to so many frustrated episodes of not being satisfied by my progress and going into violent cycles of binge-over restrict, of eat too little and see progress then eat too much and ruin it. I think in the past, I felt like I only deserved to dress well if I had the main accessory to go with it: my dream body. If I was in my same body trying to dress nice, it just felt like I was trying to squeeze myself into a costume that would only look good on people who were as fit as I wanted to be but wasn’t.

I’m 20 (F) now and I’ve been doing that since I was 13, buying clothes I would call my target clothes, taking starting pictures of pants that wouldn’t go above my knees and shirts that fit like a sports bra hoping they would gradually get looser until they fit. Except that time never came because I was just cycling through self-hate and over fixation on a specific result, subscribing myself to beauty standards that made me disgusted of my body. I hid behind baggy and mismatched clothes, never bothering because I felt like I didn’t deserve it until I reached my goal. It was toxic and ruthless.

Until I one day decided- eff it. It’s been 7 years and rarely have I worn an outfit I’ve loved and never have I fit into those target clothes that have been collecting dust, completely unworn. All I’ve done is gain weight or had inconsistent progress. I feel like crap because I look like crap, but not all of that has to do with my body weight. In fact, a lot of it has to do with the way I chose to present myself- reflecting the low self esteem I have.

So I went on a haul (disclaimer: I hate consumer overconsumption, but this was an investment)- bought all the clothes I’ve been wanting to wear in sizes that fit and forcing myself to wear them, even if I felt odd and like a fraud, even if it felt like a waste of money because eventually (hopefully) they’d be too big. I paired it with affirmations that my body is not an accessory, it is meant to keep me alive and it’s trying it’s damn hardest. I kept telling myself- I am taking care of my body, I am eating well and working out, the results will come eventually with patience, and in the meantime I should allow myself to be as confident as I would be if I was at my target body, including with clothes.

The result? I started carrying myself better and felt better- even when I felt bad about my body, at the very least I didn’t feel bad about my outfit. It kept me afloat and gave me the self confidence, love, and healthy body positivity I needed to give myself grace and be patient with my journey. I started to be so much more consistent with eating well and working out because I felt good AND looked good.

Now, the healthy habits are solidifying and the pounds are dropping. And yes, the clothes are getting looser and the target clothes are starting to fit. The starting clothes I have now can be tailored or donated when time time comes, but they’ve kept me afloat and I credit them for helping me build the self love I never had.

TL;DR: it’s okay to have target clothes and to make looking better a reason to lose weight, but it’s also okay to be happy with the way you look and dress in the meantime. All those things can coexist. In fact, you may find that dressing the way you’ve always wanted to now rather than later will help you build a healthy acceptance and mentality for weight loss based neither on hate nor complacency. You are NOT less worthy of looking good and feeling good because of your weight and you ARE worthy of getting to a healthy body. Be patient and loving towards yourself :)

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I need an accountabili-buddy who will swap daily stats with me. Anyone up for that?

I am 100% positive that no one in my life wants me to tell them about my daily struggles with weight loss and building a healthy lifestyle, but maybe a stranger who is also struggling would be willing to swap!

I'd love to have someone to shoot a quick message to when I've completed a hard work out, or did a weigh in, or stayed under calories, or ate like 3 Muffins because I'm sad and need someone to sternly encourage me to not do that anymore. I'd also love to be that for someone else! We can just use the reddit chat, so no numbers or social media exchanged.

I'm a 30yo woman, 5'11" and 225lbs, with around 50lbs to lose if that matters.

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How do you feel about people commenting on your weight loss?

Not sure if I’m being sensitive but I really don’t like when people comment on my weight loss. It doesn’t matter if they are saying it in a “good” way, it’s almost always backhanded. They’ll mention how I look “better” just because I lost weight.

I personally wouldn’t comment on anyone’s because I know how it feels. The only exception i have for it is my sister because she has mentioned before she likes it for validation.

I’ve currently lost 30 lbs and 2 people at work (one coworker and one customer) have commented on it and it makes me feel so uncomfortable. Particularly my coworker of mine, she has told me in 3 separate occasions about my weight. She pretty much asked me how I lost weight and congratulated me on it and told me I look so much better. And what makes it worse is she told me something in front of people. It only made me so uncomfortable because I hate drawing attention to myself. And my weight loss is not something I talk about with anyone. Am I overreacting to this?

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What I Got Out Of Nadja's Conquering Fat Logic (Not A Review)

I took Conquering Fat Logic from the library via an interlibrary loan.

I'm not a book reviewer so I'll just share the two points that resonated most with me.

For those who aren't familiar with the book, please click on the link. The book is easy to read. In a series of rapid-fire short chapters, the author shoots down every faulty piece of "fat logic" in existence, like a trained markswoman. It's breathtaking how deftly she punctures a lot of balloons. But onto my two key points.

One: I was always scared that dieting would destroy my muscle tone. (This part is related to "wrecking your metabolism by dieting".) Nadja demonstrates that muscle is dependent on two things: your protein intake and whether you use the muscles. (I would add genes are a huge factor, but that is outside the scope of her book.) If you create a caloric deficit and you lift during your period of deficit, you won't lose muscle. (Note: that is why, back in the Stone Age, they used to call high protein weight loss diets "Protein Sparing Fasts" - which is a stupid science-ese way of saying "muscle preserving.")

Two: she writes at some length about how the normalization of obesity has in turn normalized chunkiness and chubbiness. In her own journey, she went through a period where she reached a medically normal BMI but still felt overweight. People admonished her to stop, she'd become anorexic, but she didn't listen, and proceeded to go down to a healthy, quite elegant BMI of 21.

Both points resonated with me. All my life I've felt guilty about dieting because in the back of my mind, I thought I was wrecking my metabolism by dieting because muscle loss was inevitable. It's not true.

The second point flows from the first. I have a normal BMI - 24.2, but I'm overweight, trust me. I really should lose 15 pounds, and it's not the patriarchy or unrealistic beauty standards or any of that crap. It's my body telling me the facts.

Anyway, that's what I got from Nadja's book. I urge everyone to get it from the library or buy it.

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Skinny privilege

Anyone else not so much flattered by the new and more frequent kind gestures, but rather a little disheartened?

My stats are 280-138 lbs, lowest was 130 lbs but have been maintaining for a year. I am female and 5’2” from the US.

Before the weight loss I dated and I had people attracted to me, don’t get me wrong, but here’s some examples of just how drastically that has changed since:

-had never been cat called. Didn’t really get the big deal about it, honestly, because it rarely if ever happened to me. Lost the weight and have not only been catcalled, but hit on profusely by waiters as well. (who also boozed the heck out of my drinks I ordered because of it, not cool)

-people notice me, not just men. People are so kind to me now. They look me in the eyes and truly listen.

-people compliment me more often, especially men. I’d get compliments before but mostly from friends and family or other women.

-people buy me things. Never once had my order paid for before, has happened about 3 times now. Drinks at the bar ordered, etc.

-And most recently, which brings me to this vent, is this one very kind gesture: was shopping at a dispensary and it was POURING outside, finished up shopping and was just gonna GO for it full speed. The front door guy had an umbrella and INSISTED he walked me to my car so I wouldn’t get wet and mess up my make up and hair. Thoroughly appreciated the gesture, but I hate to think it likely wouldn’t have happened at 280 lbs.

To some degree, this is flattering. I love that people compliment and notice my hard work. Everyone loves a free meal or drink here or there. We all also love a good compliment or out of the ordinary kind gesture, but none of these happened to the girl in the bigger body. I think it hurts because that girl is still the same person. Still brilliant and full of potential and wit.. and yet none of it was recognized until now. Anyone else experience this?

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