Thursday, January 26, 2023

Counting calories makes me anxious

Hi! I am a 28 Female, 5’3, and 160ish pounds (it seems to fluctuate a lot).

I have never had success with weight loss because I find tracking calories really difficult. I know I need to be in a deficit but having to restrict myself causes me to panic and overeat.

I’m not sure the exact reason why I get so anxious but I think it has to do with the fact that I’m telling myself I can’t have as much of certain foods as I want. I think I’m also nervous that I won’t be full or satisfied enough (but I think that part is all in my head, I just can’t get over it).

Does anyone have advice on how to overcome the anxiety that comes with restriction?

Thanks!

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Wednesday, January 25, 2023

I've lost 18 pounds in 19 days on 1000 calories a day. Should I be worried?

I'm a 6'2 18M and I have been eating only 1000 calories a day since January 6th. My weight on January 5th was 271 pounds and on January 25th my weight is 253 pounds. I'm happy with the weight loss and my meal plan has been working great for me. I've been sticking to an OMAD vegan diet, and I rarely feel hungry anymore. I've tried other methods in the past but they always cause me to binge. Now I never binge or even feel hungry. The only negative I would say is that I have been experiencing light grogginess and I have been sleeping a lot longer. However I hear that to loose that much weight in a short amount of time is dangerous. I always here people say that loosing more than 3-4 pounds a week is dangerous. I also hear people say that if your overweight (like me) then its fine to loose a lot of weight in a short amount of time. Other than that I feel awesome. Should I be worried of anything? Should I change my eating habits?

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Does anyone else's body go into what I can only describe as "weight loss mode" and drop a bunch quickly?

I'll have a good few weeks of going hard and getting in my workouts and eating at big deficits but see hardly any change on the scale and then out of nowhere I'll drop like 2lb a day for like 3-5 days suddenly doing the exact same stuff if not worse. It's like my body needed to register the work I've been putting on it before it could calculate the results it wanted to give me.

This has happened to me a lot on this journey. I guess it's really just plateaus and finally breaking through plateaus but it's weird how I can like expect it as this point.

Normally I'll lose a pound or so a week or even gain or maintain but like once a month or once every couple months I'll have like a 6lb week loss and that's been pretty consistent this entire journey and that's really how I've lost my weight.

Does anybody else's body do this? Can anyone relate to this? Am I sounding crazy? Lol

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Struggling with tracking and weight loss.

Female/ 28/ 5'3/ 143lbs I've lost about 20-25lbs over the last 2 years but since the summer I've been super stuck. I'm constantly trying to track and then just overeating. My calories aren't too low at all, usually set them between 1700-1900 calories. But I struggle to hit them. My consistency and dedication to weight lifting is 100% on point but I'm stuck with fat loss.

Anyone have any advice for motivation to stay within calorie targets? Or should I try to stop tracking and eat mindfully, although that often fails for me.

Any advice would be amazing!

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33M who's lost 36lbs (238 > 202) in 11wks – here's what I've done and learned

Hey all, have tracked many metrics and done countless of hours of research, so wanted to share what has worked for me and key things I've learned so far.

1. PRIOR TO CHANGES

– I'm 6'2". 2010–2019, fluctuated btwn 195 and 210lbs. Started creeping above that in 2019.

– In 2022, diet went from not great to pure garbage: 3.5k – 5k calories daily, incl. soda, fast food, candy, and other processed junk. Gained 15–20lbs in under a year.

– Hit 238lbs in November 2022 and realized that was... not OK. Louis CK echoed in my head:

"I weigh 240 pounds, which not okay, because there's no way, like, you know, when you go to a doctor, they give you like a formula for how much your weight-- like a rule of thumb? I'm pretty sure it's not your age + 200 pounds. Like, I was watching a boxing match today and both guys, they weighed 110 pounds each. So both of those guys still need a fat baby and a dead dog to make me."

Decided to make some changes, with a goal weight of 190lbs.

2. WEEKS 1-4: REDUCED CALORIES

WHAT I CHANGED

Diet
– Reduced calories to avg. of 2.4k, but kept eating lots of carbs & processed food

– Avg. daily macros: 141g protein, 128g fat, 171g carbs

Exercise
– Had been walking ~1 mile per day. Put a treadmill at my desk, avg. of 6 miles per day at 1-2mph.

Tracking
– Macros: Got food scale and started (honestly) tracking everything I was eating using MacroFactor. (No affiliation w/ the app but it's worked great for me and I recommend it highly.)

– Measurements: Neck, chest, waist at BB / 2cm above / 2cm below, biceps, thighs, calves.

– Weight: Every morning.

– Blood: Glucose in morning using KetoMojo.

RESULTS

– Lost 18lbs (238 > 220)

– Measurements: Shrank everywhere, e.g. waist at BB down 6%, from 115cm (45in.) to 108cm (42.5in.), i.e. 7cm (2.8 in.) change

– Significant improvement in energy and mood

– No change in glucose – average of 93 mg/dL

WEEKS 4-11 – FURTHER REDUCED CALORIES, STARTED KETOGENIC DIET + INTERMITTENT FASTING

Diet

– Cut back back daily calories a further 20% to avg. of 1.9k.

– Cut out processed foods almost entirely

– Went keto: eliminated grains and other sources of sugar.

– Daily avg. of 109g protein, 144g fat, 51g carbs (32g net carbs)

– Staple Foods: eggs, avocados, spinach, olive oil, zero-carb cheeses (cheddar my fav), chicken, prosciutto, macadamia nuts, sugar-free whipped cream.

– 24-36 hour fasts 1-2x per week.

Exercise

– Continued walking at least 5 miles/day, added RUCKING...

– RUCKING = walking 3-4 miles 2-3x/week with weights in a backpack. "Cardio for people who hate cardio". Started with 20lbs, upped it gradually. Got up to 65lbs but now focusing on speed and more hills with a ~45lb bag.

– Dr. Peter Attia on rucking benefits: https://youtu.be/OHdp75ezdyY?t=6191

Results

– Mood and energy improved even more. (It's not a NIGHT AND DAY difference, but enough of an improvement that it's a big motivator for me to remain on keto.)

– Majorly reduced desire to nap during the day. Energy levels more stable.

– Glucose (fasted, after waking up): Avg. 93 mg/dL (5.2 nmol/L) in weeks 1-4 declined to 82 mg/dL (4.6 nmol/L) in weeks 5–11.

– Ketones: began measuring blood BHB using KetoMojo: avg. of 2.0 mmol/L (36mg/dL), highest I've ever been is 4.2 mmol/L (76mg/dL)

– Blood pressure and resting heart rate have remained the same.

MY TAKEAWAYS

1. Enter a caloric deficit and you'll lose weight. Revolutionary concept, I know! I'm proud to be the first person to ever realize this. You're welcome.

2. If you've never tracked your macros before, consider doing so. Get a food scale (they're cheap) and use an app. It will make you much more mindful of what you're eating and likely inspire you to make better decisions about what you eat.

3. Consider tracking weight and body measurements at a minimum, weekly. To see your progress in quantified form is hugely motivating.

4. While on keto and/or fasting, make sure to consume lots of water and enough sodium, magnesium, and potassium. Otherwise, you're more likely to experience the "keto flu" (e.g. headaches, lethargy), muscle cramping, and other commonly reported issues.

5. Early on in keto, cheating isn't worth it.

– In early January I had a few cheat days where I stopped exercising, stuffed my face with carbs, and fell out of ketosis. I will admit, the giant bowl of ziti I had for my first cheat meal was a near-religious experience. But my weight loss stopped immediately and it took me ~2 weeks to see my exercise habits, mood, ketone levels, and weight loss to fully recover.

As Dr. Stephen Phinney, one of the godfathers of the modern ketogenic diet, once said:

You learn very quickly, by not feeling well, not functioning well, that it's better to stay on [keto] than to take the occasional holiday and then pay the price of having to go through the re-adaptation process.

That said, many people who have been on keto for longer than I have and are more fully "fat-adapted" report that they can have a cheat meal or even a cheat DAY without falling out of ketosis – or if they do leave ketosis, they can get back into it very quickly.

I'm just reporting my experience, which is that I wish I hadn't cheated for multiple meals in a row after only a month on keto. I would probably be at 195lbs right now instead of 202lbs.

6. There's still a TON of unsettled science about nutrition, metabolism, the obesity epidemic, etc.

– Some experts claim that ketosis + fasting prompt you to burn body fat for energy WITHOUT reducing lean body mass or significantly lowering your baseline metabolism, allowing a sustainable reduction in your "set point" weight when that # is otherwise very stubborn.

– Calories-In, Calories-Out (CICO) Counterargument: Others say that these effects are overblown, and what actually matters far more is that keto and fasting both cause many people to consume fewer calories. In this way, they say, keto + fasting succeed for the same reason ANY diet succeeds: a caloric deficit.

I suspect both schools of thought have a point. I wish I could re-run the past 11 weeks, consuming the same calories and exercising the same way I have each day, but eating carbs and never going more than 6 hours during waking hours without eating.

How much weight would I have lost so far instead? I strongly suspect it would be at LEAST 50%, but almost certainly UNDER 100%, of what I've lost doing keto + IF. But I have no idea beyond that and am open to being wrong.

Curious for y'all's thoughts on this!

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ARFID and weight loss.

Wondered if anyone else here suffers from arfid (avoidance restrictive food intake disorder) whilst trying to lose weight. I have a very limited diet which is mostly processed/frozen food. I have a phobia of trying new foods and certain textures completely freak me out. I don't eat any fruit and the only veg I eat are peas, sweetcorn and carrots.

I've been pushing myself to cook more as I will mainly rely on takeaways or quick meals to help lose weight, I basically have a weekly cycle of a menu of meals I can cook fresh that I deem as 'safe' but altered (I.e certain veg not in them, no onions etc)

I start therapy for this on Friday which I'm really excited for but was just curious if anyone else here suffers from the same condition and how you are coping etc

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How do I find a motivation, when the old one I used for years is thrown out the window?

So I have always used looking good as my primary motivation. I was picturing as I was on the treadmill how sexy I will be once I lose weight, the sexy clothes i would wear, all the attention I would get... And BOOM it's gone. I am in a great relationship but my boyfriend never gives compliments and he isn't a visual, it doesn't matter how hard I try to look good, it doesn't really matter to him, he loves me for me. So this part is great, but now what I have built everything on is gone and I don't know how to replace it. I want to be healthy of course, but being healthy and losing weight are two different things. If I just eat healthy I eat at my maintainance calories. I work out but it will not show as long as I am fat. (BMI around 30) So at this point I have no idea how to get me going on the weight loss path. From time to time I feel ashamed of how I am, but that just makes me eat more. Any advice?

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