Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Any tips for weight loss? (Kind of a rant)

Im 14, 5’2 Ish I think, and weigh like 207 pounds.

Which is absolutely crazy. I get told by family all the time “ well you don’t look it!! So it’s ok!” But I definitely feel it, I should have a bunch of energy and stuff but I’m always so tired and get exhausted so quickly, my lower back is always hurting, I’m always so sad about how I look. Everything just feels hopeless. I can’t go to the gym because my mom can’t afford it, I can’t go to this park by my house alone because of creeps (I’m too embarrassed to ask my friends), I have weights and stuff at home but I don’t know where to start or what videos to watch or what recipes are nice.

I’m very picky with how I do things which sucks, at some point I was doing so well, eating around 1900-1400 calories a day(ifk if that’s a lot for my age) but I was losing weight that’s all that mattered, I went from 218lbs to 208lbs within a few weeks, I was so happy. For a few months I stopped losing weight, stayed at 208. I started to slip, stop caring as much sense the number refused to go down. I was weighing myself three times a day, i would have breakdowns because I felt gross, and my breaking point was my nana and mama saying “ why are you even trying when all you eat is junk” so I gave up. “ I was like ur right, what am I doing” so I stopped. I haven’t gained too much but I’m back to so many bad habits.

I’m just looking for tips on how to stay motivated and what to do to help be active at home that is free. Anything helps.

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Determining caloric needs for weight loss plan

I'm a 27 year old guy, 5'8" and currently weigh 190lbs. I plan to achieve a target weight of 170 lbs by losing 1-2 lbs per week but I am having trouble determining how many calories I should eat. I am primarily having trouble determining what my BMR and TDEE are. Using online calculators, my BMR falls between 1750 and 1950. I am also VERY sedentary (working from home, no exercise) and when I plug that info in I get an even wider caloric range of roughly 2150-2600. Anyone know how I could narrow my TDEE range? And given my TDEE how can I then determine my daily caloric intake to reach my goals? My current understanding is that I want my daily caloric intake to be about 500 calories less than my TDEE if I want to lose one pound per week. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks

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Celebration Day!

Tomorrow I have family coming to stay for the holidays. To help me stay focused on my weight loss goals while they’re here, today I had my body fat and RMR measured. I’ve lost 8% of my body fat and am just 1% away from my goal; I have increased my RMR by more than 200 calories!

I’ve made so many small changes over the last year. I slowly increased my daily protein intake from 15% to 30%. I started working with a personal trainer (it took three tries to find someone I clicked with.) I started with body weight workouts and eventually invested in equipment for a little home gym. I phased in HIIT workouts. I’m taking courses to become a fitness instructor. I have so much more energy that most days I do a short evening workout to burn off the extra energy. I’ve never been as strong or healthy as I am now.

So today was about acknowledging my progress. I want to keep it fresh in my mind while my family is here so that I don’t fall into my old patterns while they’re here. I want to keep up my daily workouts and healthy food choices, to enjoy the holidays without sabotaging the hard work I’ve put in all year. Hopefully this day of recognizing my progress will help me do that!

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FIRST TIME IM UNDER 200 LBS IN 4 YEARS

I was always on the heavier side, but never to to point of becoming obese. That changed soon after I became depressed. I always used food as a copiong mechanism, always sneaking food in at night, always trying to sneak in a couple extra more snacks when I could, but it was never too bad, I always maintained a healthy weight probably since I was heavily invested in basketball at the time. But when the depression hit I just ate everything I could, I ordered uber eats multiple times a week, sometimes even twice a day on especially bad days. Constnaly went to the convenience store to buy more snakc,s chips, ice cream, soda, you name it. I gained a total of 60 lbs in only 5-6 months, I went from 200 lbs to a peak of 265 lbs.

That was 4 years ago, after being 265 lbs for years I was tired of it. I decided to take up biking since I love biking and its a great way to burn calories. I was capable of losing some weight using this, but everytime after I went biking I had a huge apetite, so it kinda worked and kinda didnt, at the end I did lose a little weight (maybe like 10 lbs) so it did work for me. Afterwards I started incorporating long 1-2 hour walks, I just listen to a podcast in the background while walking through a park, its really nice. That helped lose some weight as well, but what really helped me lose weight was as everyone else says CICO. What worked for me was tracking my calories on Cronometer for a month. After knowing how much my portions were, on average how much calories there are in the food I eat it became so much easier to lose the weight. I would just remove a spoon or 2 from what I used to original eat. Slowly but surely I lost the weight. I'm not done yet though, i still want to get down to 180 lbs, ive been around 210 for a while so Im happy I am now sub 200, but I still have another goal to reach.

Just to let you all know, this wasn't at all linear. WHen I was at my heaviest and I began losing weight I was yo yo dieting. I went up and down 10+ lbs. Some days I would heavily restric, which lead me to binge at night which lead me to gain the weight back. Even after I lost around 20 lbs and maintained 240, I stayed at that weight for 3-4 months. I say I let my body adjust to the weight, but I honestly just wasnt feeling as motivated at the time, but I was glad to at least maintain that weight loss instead of gaining it back. I hit another brick wall at 210, and now I am finally at 199. My next goal is 190 with the ultimate goal being 180. THere will be struggles, I will probabyl lose motiviation at some point but right now after weiging in I feel more motivated than ever. Just last night I was craving a snack but I told myself not to, I wasn't expectng to be sub 200 today but hey, I guess that was my reward for not eating that late night snack!

Just hope to provide some motiviation to those who may need it. Feel free to ask me any questions, I'd love to answer them.

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I think my Need to lose weight is Compensatory

This may be a little unrelated, but I wanted to share my experience and see if anyone else relates to this. When getting into the whole weight loss thing, it’s very easy to become unhealthily obsessed with it and end up with some form of eating disorder. Some days, I realize my goal and journey to lose weight is probably hurting me more than any benefit. I constantly stress, I always think of what I’ll eat in the day and be depressed if I eat above that. I work out if I think I ate too much and I frequently get into binge/restrict cycles in between everything.

I feel like I want to lose weight simply because I don’t feel good about myself in other areas. I like, if I can’t be the smartest, most successful, or something, at least I can be successful at losing the weight. Ironically, focusing so much on weight loss probably steal from time I could be investing in work, school, etc. Anyways. So its like I lose either way.

Thought I’d share some of my thoughts on my personal experience and was wondering if anyone else has similar experiences?

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Battling the mental health part of weight loss on the daily. Any advice?

Long story short, 3 months ago, I started this journey after being dumped from my very first long term relationship of 3Y. It destroyed me, nearly killed me. First week was mentally exhausting and I was at the lowest of lows. That being said, I started this journey because I was told by my ex regarding many aspect of my life that "I couldn't change" so I decided to start with something she could notice, that would be hard, so I started this weight loss journey.

These words echo'ed in my head for weeks/months. When I started this journey, I cannot lie that the main factor was that I had to prove her wrong. I had to show her that I could change, and I was going to start the hardest journey of my life to prove my point. Weeks passed and I started to emotionally feel better/mentaly better aswell but I had created another "problem" for myself. Slowly my reason to workout and lose weight became an obsession and my "Why" shifted. To this day, I still hope to prove her wrong, but it's faaaaaaar behind many other things now, but I can't lie to myself, there's still a part of me that's doing the cliche "Revenge body". It's very silly of me because she never cared for physique and was with me for 3Y while I was at my heaviest, but that's something I'll have to figure out.

The issue I really created for myself are my obsession and the pressure I'm putting on myself which is getting mentally and physically exhausting however, the discipline, the grind, I have to keep going. I started this journey 7 days a week no rest day, eventually decided it was better for me to at least have 1 rest day, so now I take saturday off. Food is okay-ish, I often have cravings but I dont have said cravings in the house, so impossible for me to cheat or go overboard. The more I'm losing weight, the more I'm wondering why am I really doing it? I'm not dumb, I am obese, even if I have good fat distribution and a 6'4 frame which makes me look thiner than I statistically am, I am still obese, and when shirt off, it's very obvious that I have excess fat to lose. My "Why?" slowly became that I wanted to look good, but not necessarily for myself, but for women. Until recently where I brought up the subject and I was told something that just made me doubt this whole journey. Do I really want to be with someone shallow that only started looking or talking to me because I was physically fit? Is that something I want for my future self? You fall in the trap of the "gold digger" type of deal. People want to be your friend because you have money - which I can make a parrallel with - people want to talk to you because you're fit and good looking.

I know deep down I'm doing it for health reason mainly, but I'm noticing that aesthetic is starting to take a big part in my head, I'm scared that I'll slowly develop body dysmorphia. I also know that the goals I'm setting for myself are very achievable but stressful, as in 2lbs a week for about 8lbs a month however, making that my "standard" makes it so when I'm closer to my weekly weight in and am still a bit away from that "benchmark" I set for myself, I go harder in the gym, I "Diet" harder and I generally make the weight. That being said, it puts stress on me and I know it does, not all the time, but it's unnecessary stress. The first month was fun regardless of the events leading to this journey. Working out was my therapy, my mental escape, my coping, working out was THE thing making me feel got for a brief moment in this VERY dark time I was going through. It made it a whole lot easier to get up and lose myself into exercise for 2 hours +. The food part sucked, but again, considering the events, I wasn't eating much at the start anyways, had 0 apetite. Now though, trainings are starting to get harder due to progressive overload, my runs are getting harder because I'm trying to improve my speed for goals I set for myself, the food is.... alright.... I'm not enjoying myself and am restricting myself a lot on certain foods I used to and still love.

I knew this journey wasn't going to be easy, and I chose my hard. I knew there would be sacrifices, especially in the kitchen... but man... right now.... I'm having a very very tough time. I talked briefly about my weight lost with my therapist which told me that it takes about 3 months to create a new habit, meaning this whole thing I'm doing right now is pretty much programmed into me now... to a certain extent.

Now I'm not sure how to make this journey more "enjoyable", how to shift me mental state so it's ok if I only lose 1 lbs for a certain week, or if I eat out 1 day of the week. I want to learn or get advice from people about how to overcome that obsession, or if I should just stick with it until my "grind" is over and then get back to a looser lifestyle. I'm an "all in or all out" type of person so I guess that's one of my problem to begin with.

Sorry if this is a lot rambling but I had to get this off my chest

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Christmas Workout Challenge: 12 Days of Holiday Workouts

Is it just us or does it feel like Halloween was just yesterday? And yet here we are, already in the throes of the winter holidays. If you’re anything like us, you absolutely love the holidays. But what you don’t love is the impact they can have on the healthy habits you work so hard to stick to. Our Christmas Workout Challenge can help you stay in shape and maintain your healthy habits throughout the season.

Doesn’t it feel like, despite your best efforts, your clean diet flies out the window the second talk turns to the holidays? Food-packed festivities mean your healthy eating regimen can take quite a hit. And while there are plenty of tried and true strategies for minimizing the diet damage—bringing your own healthy dishes, loading up on water and focusing on family and fun instead of food—the reality is, all of the celebrations can take a toll.

That’s why it’s especially important to keep up with your exercise routine this time of year. While the uptick in social events and errands (we’re looking at you, present-shopping procrastinators!) mean that you’ll probably have less time to squeeze in super long sweat sessions, there’s good news: You don’t need to spend hours in the gym to reap the benefits of exercise this holiday season. Getting moving, even just a few minutes each day, can be all it takes to preserve the fitness you’ve been working so hard to build. It can also help neutralize some of the indulgences that top your holiday table.

While the holidays may not be the time to expect quick weight loss, they don’t have to undo all of your hard-earned progress. If you are smart about your indulgences, follow your Nutrisystem meal plan and stick to a holiday workout routine, you can maintain your weight loss throughout the season.

That’s why we put together this Christmas Workout Challenge. With this holiday workout plan, you’ll alternate between cardio moves designed to get your blood pumping and slower, more static moves designed to stretch you out and promote strength and balance. By the time the big holiday rolls around, you’ll feel fit and fabulous!

Please note: Always consult with your doctor before trying any new workout plan.

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Your 12 Days of Christmas Workout Challenge:

December 14th Workout of the Day: Mountain Climbers >

On the first day of Christmas, we’re kicking things off with a simple, full body workout move: mountain climbers. This holiday workout move requires no equipment, which means you can do it anywhere, even if you’re away for the holidays. Simply find a flat surface and give it a go. Watch your form to prevent injury and start with just a few reps, then work your way up to more.

December 15th Workout of the Day: Side Plank >

If yesterday’s workout of the day left you breathless, you’ll be happy to switch gears to this move. The side plank requires slow, deliberate movement and long pauses. But don’t underestimate the impact of the plank. It’s a great workout for your abs—specifically, your obliques. Hold it long enough and you’ll feel your muscles really tremble, which means it’s working! As with all the holiday workouts on our list, start slow with just a few reps and holding for just a few seconds. Work your way up to more reps and try holding the position longer each time. Need an incentive to hold your plank? Challenge a loved one to do this move with you and see who can hold it the longest!

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December 16th Workout of the Day: Chair Pose >

All of the holiday shopping and decoration hanging can really do a number on your back. This move will help you strengthen your lower back while also toning your legs (get ready to feel those quads trembling!) and improving your balance. It can be done any time and is completely equipment-free, which means holiday travel won’t get in the way of squeezing in this Christmas workout.

December 17th Workout of the Day: Cobra >

If strengthening and stretching your shoulders, chest and abs while reducing stiffness in your back is on your holiday wish list this year, this move was made for you. This move is easy to do and an extremely effective way to stretch out multiple muscles; a great follow-up to yesterday’s Christmas workout.

No Daylight? No Problem! 5 Ways to Work In Your Workout

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December 18th Workout of the Day: Jumping Jacks >

A classic move you probably remember from your elementary school gym class days, jumping jacks are a great aerobic workout that’s sure to get your heart pumping and your blood flowing. If you’re new to this move, start slow and consider beginning with just the arm or leg motions until you’re comfortable doing both. Please note that this is a high impact exercise. If you have joint pain, you may want to consider substituting this Christmas workout with one of our other holiday moves on the list.

December 19th Workout of the Day: Downward Dog >

After yesterday’s Christmas workout move, you’re due for a nice, slow stretch. The downward dog is the perfect answer to sore muscles. Stretching and strengthening your muscles while improving your balance, this holiday workout move also targets your upper and lower body. You’ll feel it in your hands, arms, shoulders, back, calves, hamstrings and even the arches of your feet.

December 20th Workout of the Day: Lunge >

Who knew a simple step forward and back could give way to gorgeous gams? But it’s true: Nothing targets the legs quite like a lunge. It’s very important that you maintain good form while doing this holiday workout move, as poor form can result in injuries. When you step forward, make sure your knee does not extend beyond your toes.

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December 21st Workout of the Day: Warrior II Pose >

If you’re feeling a little sore after yesterday’s Christmas workout move, congrats! That means you put those muscles to work. Reward yourself today with the Warrior II pose, a powerful stretch for the legs, groins and chest. Bonus: Warrior II also helps relieve backaches and strengthen the muscles in the thighs and buttocks.

December 22nd Workout of the Day: Push-ups >

If you want great arms, push-ups are your solution. But this holiday workout of the day is good for more than that; push-ups also work your chest and abs. Intimidated by this challenging move? The great thing about push-ups is that if they prove too difficult, you can modify them.

December 23rd Workout of the Day: Cat & Cow Pose >

If you’re still on cloud nine after mastering yesterday’s Christmas workout move, good! You should be proud. Reward yourself today with the Cat and Cow poses; two moves that warm your body and bring flexibility to the spine. Both are great stretches for the back torso and neck. They also open the chest, encouraging your breath to become slow and deep. Coordinating this movement with your breathing can relieve stress and calm the mind—something we all need this time of year!

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December 24th Workout of the Day: Plank >

OK, holiday workout warriors; it’s time to give yourself a serious pat on the back. You’ve been working hard to stick to your holiday workouts and by now, we bet it’s starting to show. Let’s keep the momentum going with this super effective move that engages your entire body. Hold the pose as long as you feel comfortable, then try again a few times throughout the day to see if you can increase your hold time with each attempt.

December 25th Workout of the Day: Butterfly Pose >

Congratulations! You’ve made it to the last day of our Christmas Workout Challenge. A simple and effective stretch that’s great for improving flexibility in your inner thighs, knees and spine, the butterfly pose is the perfect Christmas workout move to start your day. Engage in this relaxing and stress-reducing move first thing in the morning (before the happy chaos ensues) for a beautiful start to a beautiful holiday!

The post Christmas Workout Challenge: 12 Days of Holiday Workouts appeared first on The Leaf.



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