Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Having Trouble Eating Healthfully in College

I found this community almost... three years ago? It helped me lose 40 pounds, and I still want to lose more weight, but it's become less of a focus for me because I'm happier with myself and have less time to think about weight loss than I used to. College is really busy, so I'm trying to not overeat and stay active, but it's hard to count calories like I used to.

That's a little bit of a background on me, but the main problem here is that I've been having trouble eating healthfully. I know my body much better than I used to, and I weigh myself daily, so I can adjust my eating habits accordingly. The problem is that now more of the food that I eat is junk food. I ate really well (albeit way too much) in high school because that's what my mom kept in the house. But now the easier options are the dining places on campus and snacks in the dorm room.

I know that it's on me to make good decisions. But it's hard to remember sometimes. My body does not feel good right now. I had ramen for lunch, and now my chest hurts. I'm so mad at myself for not making healthy decisions even though I've been working on myself for so long now. I feel like I've lost the mindset that I once held. Now that I hate myself less, I find myself making unhealthier choices. I suppose the best thing to do is to remove the temptations from my dorm room.

I think I'm going to start working on losing weight again along with increasing my physical fitness. I think if I make my body a focus again rather than just my grades, I'll start making better choices.

Do you have an advice on how to keep this a focus in life when school can be very overwhelming? Or, perhaps do you have advice on how to make healthy decisions and keep a healthy mindset when you are emotionally overwhelmed? I counted calories for almost a year, but I don't think I have the time or mental energy as a college student to do that. I want to make healthier food and lifestyle changes.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3nmA03O

Hey! I did a thing over a long period of time

TLDR: Pre-Weight loss story of a random internet stranger.

This is going to be my first and a really really long post. I will make sure to make it readable, add bullets and a TLDR.

I've been a sort of long time lurker here and have gained a lot of information, positivity and motivation from this community and decided to give back to it today. I wanted to honestly share my story (including history) and journey in hopes that someone out there feeling low today may be able to find something useful and relatable here and feel motivated to try again :)

A bit of history - I've always been a big girl all my life. Now that I think about it, I wasn't a fat kid but just above the average height and weight compared to other kids in school. I was however bullied for being fat, ugly both by my family and outsiders equally. So as far as I can think of, I was always in the "need to lose weight" mind space. Tried to starve myself, picked up various diets and activities, nothing seemed to stick or I usually gave up before trying enough.

Big leap to my early to mid 20s, I was in this mad rush to study, get good grades, get a job and clear my student loans. I kind of let myself go here and didn't see myself actually slip into dangerous waters with respect to obesity and unhealthy BMI. I would say around 2019 was when I was at my second heaviest weight at around 239 lbs. I had a lot of misconceptions and inhibitions about weight loss methods by then. I was scared to try anything or just didn't believe in it. My husband (then boyfriend) suggested that we try out Orange Theory. I really liked one of the trainers there, he encouraged me a lot. He used to say - "All you need to do is show up at the door everyday and I will take it from there." He always suggested modifications so that I can do what I am comfortable with and just keep coming back to class. My weight loss trajectory was slow but I was more or less consistent in showing up to class - if not for the love of exercise, for the fear of having to pay the late cancellation fee. I think I lost about 6 lbs. in 4-6 months. In the mean time, I didn't follow any diet - I was eating as I want. I was only focused on getting one routine established first. In parallel I was mysteriously (at that time) suffering from irregular menstruation - every six months or so my cycle would be off, I would go see a doctor and they would give me a 10 day medicine course to get my cycle regularized but the issue would be back again.

2020 - Got married. Then the pandemic happened, gyms were closed. Had to work from home for the first time. I fell off track - being a foodie, I cooked and ate to my heart's content, didn't exercise and gained about 20 lbs.

January 2021 - I was at my heaviest at around 254 lbs. Had two more rounds of irregular menstruation by this time. Randomly decided 2021 is going to be our year of health - I decided I'm not going to pay much attention to weight loss. Instead I was going to focus on various aspects of physical and mental well being and establishing small but achievable routines. For physical health - i got my annual wellness check, got multiple appointments scheduled - eyes, teeth, gynecology, dermatology for adult acne and some backne, weight loss specialist and such. Tried to exercise at home - motivation was very limited and was hardly exercising about once a week but tried to keep up. Made my husband my exercise buddy and we devised our own points system.

February 2021 - I was exercising one morning after a lot of effort and self motivation, I was doing well until I suddenly started experiencing intense pain in my right abdomen. Had to rush to the ER and turns out it might have been a gallstone attack.

March & April 2021 went in anxiety, multiple trips to doctors' appointments and finally surgery to get my gallbladder removed.

May 2021 - While I was recovering physically, decided to focus on my mental health and see a therapist. I was previously suggested by my primary care physician to get therapy as my depression and anxiety evaluations were consistently high.

June 2021 - I started regaining my physical and mental strength. I decided to try LoseIt app as it was once mentioned as their regularly used app in my initial appointment with the weight loss clinic. I started with a calorie budget of 1500 calories, but almost always ate much higher than this, i wasn't again following any diet. When I tried to limit myself to 1500 calories consciously, I kept feeling hungry and unfinished. This is a key pointer that I will discuss again below. I wasn't using any food scales but I established a logging routine and started feeling lighter but didn't really lose much weight.

July, August 2021 - Continued therapy, doctors' appointments. I was diagnosed with bipolar depression and PTSD. I was asked to get medication but I had inhibitions about side effects (weight gain, hair loss and such). I wanted to try talk therapy for some more time. In parallel, as we moved after the wedding and didn't have an Orange Theory close by, I was trying out some free classes at a local gym to see if they would work for me.

September 2021 - Had an irregular menstrual cycle yet again. At this point I've had multiple blood tests, scans which showed no signs of physical issues with my internal system. I was however pre-diabetic since 2019, cleared for PCOS clinically but had visible symptoms - stress, weight gain, difficulty losing weight or keeping it off, acne, facial hair and darkening neck crevices and such. The gynecologist decided there is a clear pattern even though the reports are coming back fine. He discussed an action plan which would be figuring out a combination of medications which can help my ovaries function normally. He mentioned that I should also try and pair diet and exercise with this. I also started prenatal vitamins at the advice of gynecologist - as my husband and I were thinking we worked on our mental health (and have a path forward) and are may be at a good place to start trying for a baby.

October 2021 - I'm a sucker for planning, lists and checking those lists. I bought a planner. Wrote down goals - clear, concise goals. I need to give a disclaimer here that I have been following some of these goals partially by this time already. So I kind of had a feel for them. October was when I actually wrote them down on paper to make it official for myself. Important to note that I didn't by any means overwhelm myself by writing down a huge list of new goals.

  1. Protein = 130 gms/day as advised by my personal trainer
  2. Hydration = 1 Gallon/ day
  3. Avoid rice. Saturday = Cheat day for rice (as rice is the majority of my diet and I previously made unsuccessful attempts at avoiding rice. I also felt I cannot live without rice :| )
  4. Replace 1 meal with fruits and veggies
  5. Exercise at least 10 mins/day
  6. Seed cycling + Tracking ovulation, calories & weight

In parallel,

  1. I started Metformin as prescribed by my gynecologist. He wanted to see if excess carbohydrates in my body were stressing my ovaries. He also said this would improve my metabolism and possibly help lose weight. Initially I was utterly depressed that I'm having to start on a diabetes medication in my late 20s. But after much deliberation and discussion, I started.
  2. I hired a personal trainer and started going to gym about 3-4 times a week. This local gym's theory is to focus on muscle gain to aid weight loss. So they have a combination of power lifting and exercises and specific days like leg days, core days and such. I like it so far. My husband of course is being an absolute champ and my beloved gym buddy again <3
  3. I started anti depressants as suggested by my therapist and prescribed by my primary care physician. Figured I'm already taking like 4 pills a day, an additional one wont hurt.

Honestly I kept up with my medicine routine, gym routine to some extent, water intake to about 50% of the times. Being a vegetarian, it was hard to keep up with protein goals but kept hovering around 80 gms-ish per day. Went without rice for 2 weeks but eventually went running back to it again. Couldn't start seed cycling. Was doing an ok job of ovulation, calorie and weight tracking. So all in all i would say kept up with my goals and routines about 70% of the time on an average.

November 2021 - As of today (11/16/2021), I hit my 10 pound milestone in weight loss. LoseIt says I lost the weight of a watermelon! Sweet :) Bringing back that one key pointer here, while I struggled with hunger and binge eating before, Metformin seems to be working for me in terms of keeping me full with lesser quantities of food. Now a days I'm almost always under 1500 calories per day effortlessly. A combination of medication, exercise and therapy seems to be working so far! I'm always excited to hop onto the scale in the morning and see a number I wasn't expecting.

December 2021 and beyond - Onward goes this ride. To many more milestones, setbacks and getting up to try again! I have a new goal now, I want to get fit for my future babies!

The reason I felt the need to explain all this is that -

  1. Figuring out what works for weight loss takes time. I think this is a long and important step. It could be a combination of medicine, therapy and physical training. I had a hard time with even taking help - felt I should be able to do these things naturally like a normal person - I was wrong. I got here not just with the help of my gynecologist, therapist and personal trainer but a huge support from my husband, my brother, my mother in her own weird and silly way, my aunt who suffered similar issues as me and guided me well, my sister-in-law, even my manager at work, friends, reddit communities like r/loseit, r/progresspics, r/gallbladders and so many others directly and indirectly. My favorite past time now is reading your stories here and seeing your progress and feeling truly inspired. Being open and vulnerable is not a weakness. You would be surprised by the help you can receive from unexpected sources and it is necessary to seek help.
  2. I might fail tomorrow but I have figured out so many little things that work for me and I might discover a new combination and try again. Importantly I am confident now that I wont stop.
  3. I do like having goal weights, getting down to numbers and such but in retrospect this journey has been much more meaningful and something I will cherish and share stories of. For me it is filled with emotions more than numbers. Self ACTUALIZATION for the win!

As a tradition, I apologize for the long post. I really wanted to get into details. I also tried avoiding acronyms as much as possible to help the broader community who may not be familiar with them. I'm incredibly thankful to all of you who post here, it is helpful in ways beyond your imagination. To all those in the same boat as me and trying: DON'T STOP, DON'T GIVE UP JUST YET!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3ozF30e

A reminder to drink more water!!

Background: I’ve (25f) been on my weight loss journey since May this year and have lost about 10 pounds (slow I know, but I have some past disordered eating habits that I didn’t want to trigger my losing too aggressively). The last month or so my losing has slowed even more, and I knew it was because I was eating over my deficit. Just cheating here and there, having bigger servings than I should’ve, snacking unnecessarily, etc..

This past week I decided something needed to change and decided to tackle something that felt doable for me: drink the recommended amount of water for my weight/height everyday. I used an online calculator that told me that would be about 80oz of water a day, and just went for it. The difference that it’s made in just a week is HUGE. Along with all the other benefits of not being chronically dehydrated (feeling less lethargic, better digestion, etc) I have been so much less “hungry” and have found that it’s so much easier to stick to my deficit and feel satisfied in between meals. Yesterday I actually struggled to eat my amount of allotted calories and made myself a little greek yogurt snack at the end of the day to “top up” to ensure I wouldn’t be setting myself up for a binge later/tomorrow.

I know it’s a bit of a no-brainer but drink your water everyone! Grab a bottle to refill, bring it with you everywhere and sip throughout the day (I find this a lot more accessible than the whole “chug 2L when you wake up” thing I see on a lot of youtube/insta fitness accounts).

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3qM3qui

Having some trouble figuring out my TDEE. 33/M, 5’10, 185 lbs. Not losing weight on 1,900 calories a day

So I’m 33, male, 185 lbs, about 22% body fat. 5’10.

I have an office job. I sit all day.

3 days a week i lift for 60-75 minutes, plus a 10 minute elliptical warmup. Two to three days I do 50 minutes elliptical, and maybe one or two days of CrossFit.

I’m trying to get down to 166ish by February 24th (a little more than three months from now).

I’ve been on this same diet for the past three weeks or so. About 190 grams of protein, and between 1850 and 2000 calories total. No sugar or junk aside from some sugar In my morning coffee. I don’t know what my other macros are precisely but it’s all clean food.

One day a week I allow myself to get to 2700 total calories as my “cheat” day. I don’t always eat that much on the cheat day, though.

Most TDEE calculators put me at about 2500-2700 total expenditure.

But I haven’t lost a single pound yet. I don’t understand. Has the weight loss not shown up yet? Or do I need to drop down to 1600-1700 to start losing weight? I think I need to start seeing 1.5 pounds lost per week to at least know I’m making progress.

Are my goals realistic?

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3kIzqMb

What's the most water weight you've held onto?

Background info on me for some context: I'm a NASM CPT, and have been lifting for 9 years or so. Far from a rookie, but haven't ever been in this low % of body fat before, wasn't as dedicated/serious before. Just asking for some personal experiences here.

Been dieting for a few months now, usually my water weight would vary 1-3lbs or so. My weight would fluctuate like this:

167, 166, 167, 165, 165, 164, 166, etc

I eat the same food daily, which helped the weight loss be even closer to it's actuality.

Then, I started drinking diet sodas. They have a decent amount of salt in them, plus the liquid weight itself. This threw the scales off a bit.

But lately, things seem way off. The day after a 10 mile ruck (heavy backpacking) I weighed around 167 (from 163). I had a 32oz diet soda, and a Gatorade on my trip and at home. I assumed there was a lot of inflammation as well because I was extremely sore, especially in my traps.

The day after my recovery day, a full day after the ruck, I weighed in at 156. I have been mostly 163ish since, but scaled in at 155 one other time since then. (a week or so) I've been teetering around 165-160.

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3kJM0ul

Is it possible to ?

Hello to anyone that can help me : ) I'm hoping to lose about 15-30 pounds , I know ZERO about weight loss. I've heard that your food intake is 80% of losing weight & 20% working out. I'd much rather to just workout at home and do cardio just to loose simple belly fat & hopefully face fat. I guess what I'm wondering is if it's possible to lose anything in just two months. I'm prepared for it to take longer but I plan on being consistent. At home cardio for an hour twice a day ( morning & night ) for 4-5 days a week.

Does working out more help you lose it faster ?

Can I eat what I want but just lessen the serving ?

Is this goal achievable ?

Should I cut out juice all together & snacks ? ( I only drink Arizona iced tea )

I'm sorry if this was all over the place 🥲 but any help or suggestions would be wonderful. ❤️

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3oDhxzd

Let's talk being big and how I got here...

338lbs. 5'5". On my way to a weight loss journey... Again. Don't stop believing~

Okay guys, gals, and the pals who are also beautiful-- it's time to see how I went from young and skinny-ish to the point that I hate my body.

Plot twist: my body also hates me!!

About me: 31yo, 5'5" and full of rage. Get off my lawn.

HOW DID THIS HAPPEN?!

2007: A long time ago, I was 175 lbs and not perfect but beautiful.

  • I was l prehypertension with asthma. I liked swimming, martial arts, hanging out with friends and being an overambitious little shithead.

  • This year I was misdiagnosed with lymphoma (my lymph nodes were being whack) and that sort of thing can wreck a bitch emotionally. More on the lymph nodes later.

2009: I hit 190 lbs this year without even trying.

  • I also got in a car wreck and broke my ankle.

  • Aw yeah, shit's about to hit the fan.

2011: I hit 200 lbs...

  • ... despite living on the third floor of an apartment and walking everywhere (because I was broke as hell and had no car).

2012-2014: Stayed around 200 lbs despite working out regularly and being food insecure.

  • These were the emotional eating years because of family abuse, my parents divorced, I almost killed myself twice... I was in a psych hospital for a while.

  • Started to put my life back together towards the beginning of 2015

2015: hi thanks for checking in I'm still a piece of garbage. I was 215 lbs this year.

  • Still had no car. I was cycling about 6 miles each day to and from work.

  • Started keto (because supposedly it worked). My weight didn't budge tho, so jot that down. Developed a slight aversion to food.

  • Got into a major cycling accident and that sucked.

2016-2018: I gradually ballooned up to 300 lbs in this timeframe.

  • diagnosed with PCOS, and got a depo provera shot.

  • I regret all of my life decisions up to this point.

  • Birth control and I didn't agree but they kinda helped keep the very painful cysts at bay.

  • Cue more health problems, and painful periods plus cysts with more PCOS symptoms.

  • Gyno told me at age 26 that I was "too young" for surgery to resolve my PCOS issues. Yeah, fuck that bitch.

  • I tried intermittent fasting but that led to me worshipping the th!nspo boards and that obviously became a problem.

  • Spent a LOT of time in therapy during these years.

2019: Discovered the magical powers of phentermine and topiramate! I dropped down from 300lbs to 245lbs.

  • I got back together with an old flame. Things went well.

  • Started seriously working on my body and working out. I was eating super clean.

  • Whoops, there goes my gallbladder. What the hell?

  • Whoops, here comes an incisional hernia repair surgery, too.

  • Also, why are my lymph nodes being so weird?

2020: kept on the phentermine and topiramate. Dropped down to 225lbs!

  • I got married. Life was getting better!

  • Oh shit the phentermine and topiramate stopped working. Let's change up my depression medication to see if that might help-- oh hello random seizures.

  • And then I had a 3cm cyst removed off of my right ovary. That didn't help with losing the weight.

  • Oops, hello pandemic, we've stopped going outside.

  • Oh hey on this year I was also diagnosed with lupus AND insulin resistance! That explains why my lymph nodes have always been dumb.

  • Also, fml my A1C is borderline diabetic now.

2021: 338 lbs. Holy hell. Am I dying?

  • Oh shit my PCOS is coming to give me a reckoning.

  • Time to lose an ovary! That'll teach my shitty body a lesson!

  • Spoiler alert: it did not.

  • The weight kept coming and it didn't stop coming-- whoops there goes my back. Herniated disc between L5-S1. Fun!

AND THAT'S HOW I GOT THIS BIG

So now I'm just having one nonstop lupus flare with all of the inflammation. My joints hurt constantly.

My PCOS is trying to wreck my only remaining ovary. My herniated back makes movement very difficult and painful.

Privatized American healthcare can go fuck itself because I basically can't get more than one or two injections a year in my spine to relieve my pain. Seeing my doctor regularly is expensive.

So take into account all of this hot mess... Now imagine my frustration going into the doctor and being told "just lose weight and your problems will go away".

Y'all...

Future Goals

My husband and I want kiddos (no more than two... we'll be lucky if I can even have one). I've seen an endocrinologist and I'm not ovulating AND my body is in no condition to carry a kid right now, period.

Do I like to exercise? Not gonna lie, getting started is hard. But once those endorphins kick in? Yeah, it's good shit.

But I'm so overwhelmed right now with all of my health problems. I have to manage my nutrition carefully and basically eliminate all foods that bring me joy so that I don't become diabetic.

Y'all I just wanna be smaller, healthier and maybe have a baby.

And if nothing else, I want to be hot enough that I can feel comfortable wearing a bikini because right now I look 9 months pregnant with surgery scars and stretch marks all over.

I walked two miles today. I started back on the phentermine and topiramate (my doctor gave me the okay).

My back hurts like hell.

Help?!?!

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