Friday, October 29, 2021

First week down and I feel… good?

Hello! So, just to preface: I started a fairly sedentary job as an analyst in May 2021 and have since then slowly packed on a little extra weight (gyms being closed for sometime didn’t help, but I did try some at-home workouts. My brain separates locations and what I do there. Like, work is solely work. Home is solely hobbies and chilling, etc. so it was extremely difficult to trick my brain into do consistent workouts at home).

I went to the doctor last Thursday, had some blood work, and checked my weight (routine stuff for a heart issue I was born with). I was sitting at 211 after fasting. For the record, I am a 24 5’11” male. So, I decided that it’s time to actually take my health seriously.

I cooked every meal this week (or thrown stuff together lol) and have been counting my macros and calories on top of going to the gym daily. Granted, next week will be the test of my commitment. I eat breakfast (Greek yogurt/boiled egg) at 8 am, snack 10 am, lunch 12 pm, snack 2 pm, then wait for dinner at 6-7 pm. Surprisingly, I haven’t been hungry like I thought I would be? My daily caloric intake has been between 1200-1400 the entire week (I did one of those fancy calorie calculators and I was allotted ~1900-2000).

I weighed myself for the first time in a week this morning and sat at 208.6. So, in a week, I am down ~2-2.5 lbs. Is this actual weight loss or just normal fluctuations?

Here’s my question: is this sustainable weight loss? I have been watching carbs and counting calories. I’ve cut out added sugars. I have been exercising everyday (primarily cardio with 20 minutes strength)

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Weight Loss Journey - Doing it for myself this time.

I had been overweight my whole life. Got teased a lot as a kid for it.

When I was in my mid-twenties I decided to finally lose weight. I was out of my abusive family house and on my own. Worked with some friends to stay motivated. Went from 315 to 290.

Around that time my boyfriend moved in. I was super happy. He was my first love/boyfriend and I really thought he was my soulmate :)

He had gone away on a trip and got injured. When he came back he told me he was really thinking of proposing to me when he returned... But then said he wanted to wait because he always pictured marrying a thin bride.

I was pretty upset but stuck with it.

My first time losing weight now got twisted. I was losing weight for someone else.

Kept on exercising, mostly watching what I ate (still liked sweets).

It felt that the more weight I lose, the less intimate we became. It really started to mess with my head. When I would ask him about it, he would tell me that it is natural that the "passion" dies down a little when people become comfortable with each other and it wasn't me.

But, my self-loathing was already in high gear.

I got down to 150lbs.

And I kept telling myself, Okay. So I still have hanging skin, but I can look into surgery to remove it. Now was the time right? He was going to propose?

Things happened... and he told me that being an Atheist, I shouldn't want to get married, because that is all based on religion and stuff. And then after some time of that, admitted that he never wanted to get married to anyone.

Well. That + lots of other hard life events caused me to stop exercising. I stopped watching what I ate too.

I watched my weight go up. Told me; "Okay. I'll get back into it when I hit 200lbs again" ...hit it and it kept going up. I gave up.

In the midst of all this... I had a heart attack. It was a pretty scary moment. Took a long time to get back to "normal".

And even then, I didn't care enough to lose weight. Even though the doctors told me I should for my heart.

Years went by. Covid hit. Got more depressed. Gained more weight.

At the peak of Covid, I was at 350 lbs (..first time I'm admitting that).

I'm single. new great job, living in my own place. This is the time. This time I'm doing it for me and going to keep doing it for me.

At 330 now.

Have gone two weeks straight exercising 30 minutes almost every day (taking some breaks in between days).

Starting to eat healthier (Eating has always been a challenge for me).

Sorry for the long rant. I needed to get things out so that I can focus on myself. I'm done living on the sidelines of my own life. Despite how much I've hated myself most of my life... I really do want to live.

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Kids and weight loss?

I'm posting here hoping someone else who has struggled with weight can help or has gone through this as well.

I was overweight all growing up. Then as an adult I began really gaining weight and became obese and struggled a lot with losing weight.

Finally I got it together and lost the weight and hit my goal! I've been doing great since then.

When I was obese I was engaged and we had a daughter. After having her is when I began really trying but it took awhile. When I hit my goal weight we got married and had my two other daughters.

My daughters are now 13, 8, and 3.

The issue is my 13 year old.

My eldest is a bit on the chunky side. I completely think it's fine for kids to have some "baby fat" and she is still growing. The doctor says she can stand to lose some weight but that it's not worrisome.

I cook healthy yummy meals. We have healthy snacks. For example for breakfast on school days we usually have heated up egg and veggie frittatas, toast and fruit. Or oatmeal with fruit. I pack their lunches and they will have a sandwich, fruit, carrots, cucumber, a pudding cup, cheese stick. After school snack of turkey slices, cracker, cheese and an orange. Dinner last night we had spaghetti, french bread, veggies. And after dinner had frozen yogurt and fruit.

I believe in everything in moderation for the most part. They can eat as much fruit and veggies as they want. I don't normally buy junk food though. But we bake cookies, cupcakes, etc .. on occasion. I don't let them have soda unless we eat out which isn't often. They don't get juice but can drink water or milk.

I think I'm fairly normal and eat healthy without being super weird, strict or overdoing it.

We stay very active. We do daily walks to the park, we skate and bike ride. We are outside a ton. The kids are in ballet and sports.

The issue is that she is food obsessed. You would think I'm starving her. I'm really not! But all she thinks about is food and what she can eat next.

My sister babysits 3 days a week and we have had issues with her stealing and hiding food and lying about it. Like an entire package of cookies and saying it wasn't her! Or eating my sister's leftovers that she was going to have for dinner. My sister is getting upset because she is constantly having to replace the food and it sucks when you are expecting a meal and it's gone. I'm also having to pay her back and it is definitely getting expensive.

We are all getting frustrated to say the least. We talked to her over and over. My sister told her if she is hungry she just needs to ask.

None of us understand what is going on here.

I'm super doubting myself and it's bringing up bad emotions. I struggled with food and weight and don't want that for my daughter. But I also don't want to give her food issues.

But stealing and lying is not ok.

I'm totally lost on what to do here.

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How does (non-chronic) illness affect weight loss?

I am incredibly lucky to say that I just fell ill for the first time in over 2 years. I have a severe cold (not COVID or flu) and have had it for about 2 weeks now. I've gained 5lbs in the two weeks I've been ill. I am 100% sure I accurately tracked calories and cannot have gained non-water weight. But I'm not even worried about the "gain" per se since I know it's not real...I'm just really curious!

I'm trying to find if there is any consensus (scientific or hivemind) on how something like a cold/acute illness affects weight loss. Some places say you might lose weight due to reduced appetite, but others say your body might retain more water to help fight the illness.

Can anyone point me in the direction of solid data? Or, perhaps chime in with your own anecdotes?

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11 Diet Tricks and Treats for a Healthy Halloween

In some ways, Halloween is the toughest holiday to navigate when you’re dieting. While most seasonal festivities involve food, this one involves candy, one of the most irresistible sugar delivery systems ever invented. It’s sweet, delicious and almost addicting. With so much candy around, you need diet tricks and treats to stay on plan.

You can avoid candy the rest of the year (if you exert willpower in the supermarket checkout line) but on Halloween, you bring tons of it into your house to give away. Then your kids bring more. You may try to limit yourself to “just one,” but that gives way to “just one of each” and before you know it, those bite-sized morsels turn into unwanted pounds.

If you don’t have trick-or-treaters at home, you could skip the holiday altogether. Keep the porch light off and hide in the dark. Better yet, leave it off and go out to dinner until the ghosts and goblins are back home in bed. If there’s no way out, you can use these creative diet tricks to help you get through the week safely. You’ll see that we’ve paired each trick with a Nutrisystem treat.  The first trick will tell you why!

Your Ultimate Halloween Survival Guide

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Here are 11 diet tricks and treats to keep you on track this Halloween:

1. Don’t deprive yourself.

diet tricks

Trick: One of the worst things you can do is avoid your favorite treats. When dieting is all about “no,” you’re more likely to fail, says a 2016 study by researchers at Baylor University. Their research found that successful dieters are the ones who focus on the healthy foods they can eat, not the ones they think they need to avoid. Check out recipe section on The Leaf for smart candy swaps. You’ll love these Chocolate Pumpkin Truffle Balls! >

Treat: No need to purchase store-bought candy. Nutrisystem’s Chocolate Caramel Bar is the perfect replacement. It’s a crispy combination of milk chocolate and sweet caramel that you can enjoy for just 150 calories.

 2. Buy candy the day of Halloween.

halloween candy

Trick: Tell the truth— Have you bought Halloween candy weeks in advance and then had to buy it all over again because you and the entire family wiped it out? Try to keep candy in the house for the shortest amount of time possible. In fact, if you can, buy it on Halloween. It’s likely to be on sale then, too.

Treat: Now that you’ve saved calories and money, indulge in Nutrisystem’s deliciously crunchy Dark Chocolaty Sea Salt Nut Square. It’s filled with a medley of sea salt-dusted nuts and covered in a drizzle of dark chocolate flavor. Best of all, it’s only 190 calories and has ZERO grams of added sugar. No candy can say that!

3. Pick candy you don’t like.

diet tricks

Trick: When you’re candy shopping, be sure to stay away from your favorites. Choose candies that the kids love but you don’t. If you love chocolate, choose fruity and sour gummy candies. Are you a sucker for hard candy? Buy sticky taffy or toffee.  Purchase the sweets that you don’t like (but they do) and you’ve kept yourself away from temptation.

Treat: If you’re a chocolate lover, you can feel free to indulge in Nutrisystem’s NutriChocolaty Wafers! They’re a fun treat that can replace any unhealthy chocolate bar. You can even melt them to create chocolate covered fruit and nuts.

Printable Recipe Book: 12 Healthy Halloween Recipes

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4. Don’t let yourself get hungry.

diet tricks

Trick: Candy may always be tempting. However, you may be less likely to give in if you’ve eaten plenty of healthy, fiber-rich meals all day before you’re faced with bowls and bags of sweet treats. Don’t save any calories for Halloween candy. Make sure you feel too full to eat another thing.

Treat: If you do have a little room left, Nutrisystem’s Walnut Chocolate Chip Cookies are bite-sized treats that go great with a glass of skim milk. At only 150 calories, they’re packed with seven grams of protein and three grams of fiber to satisfy your sweet tooth.

5. Be the parent (or grandparent) who goes trick or treating.

trick or treating

Trick: Turn your kids’ trick-or-treating into a little exercise for yourself. Walk the neighborhood with them and while they’re at the door getting treated, do a little jogging in place.

Treat: For a great post-workout recovery treat, grab a Nutrisystem Lemon Cooler Cookie. These zesty, sugar-dusted cookies are only 140 calories and can squash any lemony candy craving you may have.

6. Stash the stash.

halloween candy

Trick: Have someone else in the household hide the Halloween candy so temptation is out of sight and out of mind. Just don’t ask the kids to hide it because you may never see it again. And don’t go looking for it!

Treat: You won’t care where the candy is when you know exactly where you’re keeping your Nutrisystem Chocolate Flavored Pretzels. They have the sweet and salty taste you love with only 140 calories. The five grams of protein and three grams of fiber make them ultra-satisfying.

5 Healthy Halloween Swaps for Every Kind of Candy Craving

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7. Chew gum.

chew gum

Trick: Chewing gum is a great way to fight temptation. A study, published in the journal Appetite, found that chewing gum is a simple way to modestly control appetite. In their research, people that chewed gum ate 68 fewer calories at lunch. Sugar free gum is a Free Food on Nutrisystem, so feel free to chew away those cravings!

Treat: Toss your gum away for a few minutes to enjoy Nutrisystem’s Snickerdoodle Cookie. It’s a soft-baked, whole grain cookie dusted with cinnamon, the spice of the season. With only 130 calories, it’s sure to spice up your Halloween.

8. Freeze your kids’ candy.

diet tricks

Trick: Keep both you and your youngsters from eating all the candy in one sitting by freezing their Halloween hauls. Parse out a few pieces they can eat each day. Not only are you eliminating temptation for you, you’re also giving your kids a great message about not overeating sweets.

Treat: Something you can eat frozen is our Vanilla Ice Cream Sandwich. With vanilla flavored ice cream between two chocolate cookies, it clocks in at only 130 calories. You can even throw it in the blender to make this Ice Cream Sandwich Shake! >

 9. Don’t hand out candy.

diet tricks

Trick: You can buy pencils and stickers or a bulk pack of Halloween toys from your local party or dollar store. You can also try online shopping for fun Halloween trinkets. Zero fat, zero sugar and zero calories!

Treat: While you’re rocking your new Halloween spider ring, dig into a Nutrisystem Chocolate Brownie Sundae. You’ll be scooping up decadent fudge ribbons and brownie chunks throughout creamy, chocolate ice cream. Bye, bye chocolate cravings!

Candy Craving? 7 Delicious Bars for a Healthier Halloween

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10. Craving candy? Brush your teeth.

diet tricks

Trick: Diet tricks can seem difficult. However, some are as easy as brushing your teeth (literally)! Have you ever tried to eat or drink something sweet after brushing? If you have a candy craving, the magazine Popular Science recommends brushing those fangs. They explain that one of the chemicals in toothpaste, sodium laureth sulfate, temporarily squashes sweet taste bud receptors so candy doesn’t taste so yummy after you’ve brushed.

Treat: Don’t brush before you’ve treated yourself to our Chocolate Cupcake! At just 140 calories, it’s full of luscious, chocolatey goodness that you can feel good about enjoying.

11. Keep giving out candy after Halloween.

diet tricks

Trick: The last but certainly not the least of our diet tricks involves giving. Many organizations have started accepting donations and buying leftover Halloween candy to send to American troops. They put the candy in care packages and send them to troops all over the world. You can even create your own care packages and hand them out to those who are in need.

Treat: You’ve done a good deed. Treat yourself with a Nutrisystem Lemon Zest Cake. Drizzled with icing, this sweet treat contains only 140 calories.

How to Have a Healthy Halloween Party

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The post 11 Diet Tricks and Treats for a Healthy Halloween appeared first on The Leaf.



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Thursday, October 28, 2021

Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Friday, 29 October 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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Anyone here trying to lose weight for aesthetic and lifestyle reasons?

This is a bit of a confessional I suppose, but I have no where else to write this.

I have about 45 lbs of weight loss as a 24 yr old woman to go. I've realized at this point that losing weight isn't a matter of just getting healthy and feeling great, it's a matter of wether or not I have a decent lifestyle. Let me explain. I am dating a guy who once took his fit ex to all of these fun places like Disney World, took her out to eat all the time, went on vacations, etc. I have never had a bf and no man has ever treated or even propose we could do those things one day. That and I have found that at my heaviest, the men in my life treat me the absolute worst.

I am approaching 25 now and I eventually want a family, a loving man, and a lifestyle in which I do not need to want for a lot. From what I have seen (and I KNOW there are exceptions, don't come at me with "but...my husband is great and I'm 400 lbs!), women with a healthy BMI get better men and typically get those kinds of lifestyle s in which they have a man who loves and adores them. I know the prettier you are you'll attract not so great men, but its easier to weed them out and to have better options.

Now I am not saying all women those sizes get that, nor am I saying the guy im dating now doesn't treat me well, but I know for a fact if I do not lose the weight he will not stick around. I also know that if we don't make it, I want to be a in demand woman in the dating market. So, 100% of this weight loss is to look dainty and small and try to reach this life I want so much. I feel like I am a placeholder to him, unless I lose the weight so Id like to take this time to lose it and if he stays, cool.

For me, health is a side effect of the weight loss. Unless I lost the weight via drugs I will feel great regardless of how I lose it. So I felt it appropriate to post this as this is lose it and we are all trying to lose for different reasons. And my reasons are ok as are yours! Thanks for listening. Anyone here losing weight for a lifestyle, or for aesthetic reasons? Doesn't have to be the only reason! :)

I feel kind of bad for sharing my inter most thoughts, but there's not alot of places to do so.

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