Friday, October 28, 2022

medication to treat binge eating?

hi all!

im super new to this subreddit and im hoping this doesn't count as "promoting unhealthy weight loss". after struggling with BED for years, i've finally decided to make the decision to consciously try to lose weight and reduce my eating. it's been really hard and ive broken my progress multiple times. im not gonna quit, but i was wondering if anyone knows anything about taking medication to reduce appetite and/or prevent symptoms of BED. i've heard of certain medications like Vyvanse that can help reduce symptoms of BED, does anyone take this or something similar? has it helped you? and is it healthy to take such medication or should i try losing weight the "normal" way? i do plan to exercise, have a calorie deficit and eat healthier, but I think medication would help. thoughts?

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hoodwinked, tricked, bamboozled!

So I have ben on pretty strict healthy living kick since September( F,29,165cm,130kg)and I signed up for a personal trainer at the gym and have been going 3 times a week every week, weight training mainly. But the scales have hardly moved at all... But my my body feels smaller clothes fit better

I had been very very tired for all the extra exercise and a friend recommended I try increasing my protein intake, which I have done for about 3 weeks and I feel I have much more energy.

I have been tracking my kJs in My fitness pal and consistently staying in the deficit. So pretty confused why I'm not seeing more progress with my weight loss.

Yesterday I downloaded the 'lose it' and there is a big difference in the kJs intake goal compared to MFP, have I been eating too much and not actually been in a true deficit?

MFP recommends 6235kJs a day whereas lose it recommends 5583kJs.

Some advice would be appreciated on what I should eat and achieve foodwise to lose it weight and build muscle, feeling lost and confused, internet is so hard to find true valuable information

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super food greens and weightloss

SW: 245 CW: 209 GW: 175

I recently had a baby in july. I went from 195lbs to 245lbs during my pregnancy. I'm currently down 36 pounds and starting to take my weight loss journey even more serious with CICO diet & intermittent fasting. I work a lot and very early so I'm always so tired but have stopped drinking coffee bcs of the added calories/sugar. I heard super food greens in powder form are a good alternative as they provide energy as well as speed up the metabolism. But are they really worth it?? Does anyone here take super green powders like bloom? are they really beneficial in aiding in weight loss/ gut health?! please let me know!

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I am living proof that eating below your BMR actually CAN stall weight loss & it’s NOT always as easy as eating in a deficit

Quick background- I have struggled on and off with weight loss since I was a kid. I did weight watchers at the end of high school and then gained weight crazy fast in college- got up to 250lbs (I’m just under 5’10”, female). Then I did a 30 day juice cleanse and a year of a super clean vegan diet and got down to 195. Kept that weight off, never fluctuating more than 5lbs or so, for 10 years eating a balanced omnivore diet, playing tennis, walking a decent amount and hiking occasionally.

Suddenly over the holidays last year my body shot up to 212lbs in just a few months. Usually I’ll put on a bit over that time and then lose it in Jan but none of my usual stuff was working. I was so shocked that I got a bunch of hormone tests and blood work done but it all came back healthy and normal. I ate in a calorie deficit, between 1350- 1500 cals a day, exercised, even tried a month of intermittent fasting. But I freaking GAINED weight!! I was up to 220lbs when I finally got my RMR calculated and the associate told me I needed at least 1700 cals to function even if I literally don’t move. I was beyond nervous to eat more because that felt insane considering my body was piling on weight at 1400 cals a day.

But I upped my daily amount to 1800 and voila. I am down 11lbs in a little over 2 months of eating that way plus a couple “cheat meals” here and there. It’s been a slow process but still moving in the right direction and I feel like this amount of cals is way more doable/easily sustainable.

I know everyone has different opinions in this community and it’s all way more confusing and complex than it should be…but I’m SO sick of reading the thousands of comments about metabolic damage being a myth and how you can and should eat way below your BMR. I am literally living proof that too few calories can not only stall your weight loss but make you GAIN weight. Things like hormones and stress DO play a role as well. For the record and those who tend to question OPs about this all over this community- I have a food scale and measure literally everything (sauces, oils, etc), I almost never drink alcohol and hate soda, and I don’t include estimated exercise cals in my count for the day.

So if you’re in the position I was in, so stressed and confused and being told by strangers that you’re wrong about your body- you’re not.

TL;DR- gained weight at a more restrictive deficit eating under my BMR, lost weight adding 300-400 cals per day

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Thursday, October 27, 2022

Husband said something that totally changed my mindset

So we were talking a few days ago and I brought up (again) how unhappy I was with my body shape

For background, I’ve gained about 30 pounds since we were married almost 10 years ago, leaving me at least 10 pounds over a healthy weight.

Trying to be helpful, he said “Well, maybe this is just your body shape now!”

I understand his context, after 10 years of marriage, having kids and leaving our young adulthood and sliding into middle age, clearly bodies change.

But I don’t want this body to be my “body shape” now. I know he was trying to be loving and supportive of my insecurities, but it has actually kicked me back into gear- I need to lose some weight and get back to feeling comfortable in my own body. Settling for what may just “be my body shape now” isn’t good enough for me anymore!

I just needed to get that off my chest. I downloaded the LoseIt app this week and am looking forward to my latest, more slow and steady and sustainable weight loss journey!

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Is the amount of calories I’m eating the reason my weight loss has slowed down

Is the amount of calories I’m eating the reason my weight loss has decreased?

15, 5’7 and 88kg and I am eating around 1’500 to 1’700 calories a day on average. But I just did a TDEE calculator and it says I should be eating 2’900. And I read that you should eat 500 less than that. Is that why my weight loss has slowed down dramatically? Or should I just keep on eating my normal calories or should I go to 2,400?

Before I was losing 4kg a month but not it’s gone down to barely 1kg a month.

If you think that’s the reason please tell me. I’ve been so frustrated this past month because of it

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Journey to New Lifestyle

I'm a little nervous to post such a personal update. But I am reaching a new point in this journey and it's making me ponder a lot of things about the process and how deep change can affect all areas of your life. I don't know what maintenance looks like for me, but I do know I'm getting closer. Should I apologize in advance for a novel about the last year?!

BACKGROUND:

I was "bigger but active" in my childhood and teen years. My parents had a LOT of rules and value-judgements related to food, which led to secret eating and shame during those latchkey kid days. There was a lot of personal trauma and laziness, and I gained about 30lbs the first year of college, and it went up another 75lbs over the next 15 years, peaking at 315 after I had my baby. My mom always tried to encourage me to be healthy for myself, but she has her own body image issues, and as a fat person, I didn't want to hear some skinny bitch telling me advice from her momentous 8lb weight loss journey (eye roll). I also have a problem with doing the exact opposite with what people what me to do.

MAKING CHANGES:

In August 2021, I reached a new point of frustration with my life-long weight struggle, and I finally had enough. I had a 4yo at the time (now almost 6!), and I couldn't do anything with him. I was depressed, angry, resentful, exhausted, ashamed, and lonely. It was affecting everything in my life, including my marriage and my closest relationships. My back pain was unbearable. I finally realized it had NOTHING to do with anyone but me, and I deserved better.

I went to my NP, she recommended their weight loss clinic, and I finally made an appointment. I started working with a weight loss NP, and she helped me find a safe, non-addicting pain medication to help with my back so I could actually move. She also helped me recognize my anxiety and depression was no longer manageable alone, and we found the right medication for that.

I started with tracking calories (do this occasionally now as a check-in), low dose phentermine, added in dirty keto, then IF. Now it's mostly IF and dirty keto. All of this is with the supervision of my NP. I still can't bring myself to get my ass up and exercise, although I'm a LOT more active now just by being able to move more easily and not hating my life.

MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THIS WHOLE JOURNEY: THERAPY!

After a few months, my NP referred me to a therapist who focuses on weight and food, and she has been amazing! She has really helped me explore weight and food theories and patterns, which has only had positive impacts on other areas of my life (parenting, marriage, friends, family, work, kindness, empathy, confidence, moderating emotions). Every relationship in my life is now better and stronger.

Over the past year of therapy, I've really been able to identify how my mom's body image issues affected me, and it has helped me remove/manage some of those issues. I've been able to explore shame, and how I'm the only one to whom I'm truly accountable, and how being intentional in my choices can make life more satisfying, including food choices! I'm learning to truly listen to what my body wants AND needs (both in adding and limiting different things).

Everything is different now: portions, food choices, how I reward myself, timing, speed, how I choose restaurants, treats and drive-thrus, how I think about a day/week/month as a whole when choosing food. I'm starting to realize that I actually made a million tiny changes gradually and worked them every. single. day.

Tiny choices with consistency for a year. And all of it because I treated the source of the problem, instead of using a diet as a band-aid. This has been hard but life before was harder. I'm just choosing a different hard.

Anyone who asks me about losing weight should be prepared for a passionate lecture about the benefits of therapy, probably containing terrible analogies about how even racecars need tune-ups!

CURRENT SITUATION:

After more than a year, this morning I hit 91lbs down. I'm now the weight I was right after high school, but nothing is in the same place! None of my clothes fit, so thank God for old hoodies and leggings to get me through a few months!

My MIL asked me last weekend what I've been doing (she's looking for the easy miracle answer), and it made me realize that it has been EVERYTHING. After a life of dieting and wishing the weight away, I finally understand what it means to make a permanent lifestyle change.

I have COMPLETELY changed my relationship with food and shame. I don't do "cheat days" because I don't cheat on myself. If I want a treat and it's not "healthy," I eat it with intention and thoughtfulness, as much as my body tells me is right and no more. It's all just balanced together over time, all with the intention of contributing joy to my life. OK, I sound like I'm in a cult.

I actually don't know what my goal or maintenance weight will be. I've never had one so I guess I keep going until my body tells me I'm there?

If you're still here, good Lord, thanks for reading. I have a lot of thoughts and feelings to process as I close in on 100lb loss and keep going.

Progress photo because I don't know how to use reddit: https://imgur.com/a/mCcRi3r

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