Saturday, April 8, 2023

Does anybody use measurements instead of a scale for weight loss?

So I have a pretty bad set of eating disorders, and a frankly terrible relationship with food. The scale is unfortunately something that triggers that.

I recently moved and misplaced the thing, and haven’t gotten around to getting a new one. But, I found my tape measure and an old set of measurements for online ordering clothes.

It’s been nice to look at - I’m down a few inches overall (including half an inch on the neck!), and up a tad on the knees and ankle (went for a run last night). And it doesn’t set anything off, especially because I can see the more obvious “down overall, definitely swollen at the knees” thing.

It feels less loaded to me, and has been a good experience so far. I also have enough measurements it’s really comprehensive and get a real time update of my stuff for clothing purchases.

Thoughts and experiences?

submitted by /u/Sakura_Chat
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/Nr3sLj6

On the brink

I'm on an excruitiatingly slow weight loss journey! I'm 52F 5'4" SW160. I joined a bootcamp, which I did for 2 months and only lost 5 pounds. And yes, I've been tracking food and trying to make good choices, but when you're a short person you don't have much wiggle room!

Anyway, I couldn't afford to continue to go to bootcamp so have just been trying to continue to walk/exercise on my own. The scale is still moving in a (painfully slow) downward direction and so I recalculated my BMI this morning...32.1%! This is still considered obese, but it is right on the edge of being average! I will hopefully be there in another month or so! I'm at 153 now with a goal weight of 125-130.

submitted by /u/mcgwigs
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/hi8g95y

Lost weight now sabotaging myself

I haven't been weighing myself for quite a while and found out at a doctors appointment I'm down 22lbs from the last visit (about 6 months before). I was really pleased with this but I'm finding myself making really stupid choices with meals and snacks since the appointment. Like between a decent normal meal or something deep fried and covered with cheese, I'm choosing the latter.

It's like a switch has gone on in my head. Like I can afford to 'treat' myself because I've done well with weight loss so far.

Its been about 2 weeks and I thought after a little treat it would be out of my system but I can't seem to stop with the bad choices. I need some sense talked into me.

Does anyone else go through this?

Would it be best not to find out my weight at the next appointment? Obviously it's triggered something in me

submitted by /u/radiantcrayons
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/AsuH6Te

Pointless rant about thermodynamics

I really hate this universe and laws of thermodynamics. It takes so much energy to burn single pound of fat it's annoying. I know there is nothing I can do to change that but I felt like writing a post about it. I am on day 43 of calories counting, averaging on 1654 kcal deficit [I have cronometer set to 999kcal deficit but I genuinely don't feel like eating that much and feel fine]. That is still only 19.3lb/8.8kg loss when added all that up. This is so slow... I know people here often have to do with 500kcal deficit per day so I am not discounting their experience but I wish I could lose weight faster than 3lb per week.

TLDR: I wish weight loss could be faster. This rant was brought to you by random 2lb water weight gain this morning lol.

submitted by /u/CabinetMain3163
[link] [comments]

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

Friday, April 7, 2023

I just need some advice on the mental health aspect of this physical weight loss journey.

I’ve been going to the gym 3-4x a week and kickboxing for 2-3x a week for the last year. I’ve seen some results but when I look at myself in the mirror or in photos I can’t help but compare my body to others and feel so guilty and horrible for how I look. I’ve gained so much weight since college. I try to ignore how I look or how I feel about how I look but then I get hit with reality about my actual physical appearance and it’s soul crushing. I see other women and men who are bigger and I do not judge them. It’s just myself. I hate my double chin and my belly. I wish I loved my physical appearance more but I don’t. I don’t want my health/fitness journey to come from a negative place and I’m starting to feel like it is. How can I combat this? Any insight would be great. I’m 25 and female.

submitted by /u/lmarksart
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/1LNa2ql

Why is my weight stuck on keto despite eating less than 1200 calories and walking 4k steps daily?

Hey everyone,

I started the keto diet a few weeks ago, and I was thrilled to see the number on the scale drop rapidly in the first few days. But now, my weight has been stuck at 98.5KG for a week, and I'm starting to get worried.

I've been religiously tracking my food intake, and I'm eating less than 1200 calories a day. I'm also walking around 4k steps daily, so I'm not sure why the weight loss has come to a halt.

I'm feeling a bit discouraged and frustrated, and I would love to hear from anyone who has gone through this experience or has any advice on how to break through this plateau. Should I be changing my macros or increasing my exercise routine?

Thanks in advance.

submitted by /u/crashbash7
[link] [comments]

from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/WM0Bvhd

Officially no longer obese!

SW: 258.6lbs/117kg/19 stone w/ a 33.2 BMI

(Constantly fluctuated between 260-275lbs/117kg-125kg/18-19 stone honestly!)

CW: 233.2 lbs/105.6kg/16 stone w/ a 29.9 BMI

GW: 180lbs/81kg/13 stone

I’m a 30 year old male and about 6’3”/190.5 cm

Since January 20th, I’ve lost 25.4 lbs. I am officially no longer obese and I am now considered overweight. I’ve gone down one full pant size and have started fitting into clothes that I once thought were lost to me forever!

I wanted to share my results and my story because the majority of my weight loss (and weight struggles) has been tied to my medications. I’m not talking Ozempic (or any other weight loss drugs).

I’ve had mental health struggles all throughout my 20s and I was aimlessly put on several different medications by my PCP (primary care physician for non U.S. folks) until we found the “right” mix. Three to four years ago I was put on a medication that caused me to gain the most weight I’ve ever had in my entire life. I never made the correlation despite being warned by friends and family who have experienced weight gain from their own mental health medication. It was always a warning of 5-10lbs/2-4kg/.5 stone. Something inconvenient but manageable.

I gained 70+ lbs/31kg/5 stone during that time period, and I always linked it to my lifestyle choices. I was an alcoholic, I ate out too much, I wasn’t active, etc. While all the factors certainly did help contribute to my weight gain, I never truly did link it to one of my medications. I was the problem and I was ready to change, but despite my efforts to switch up my diet, exercise more, drink less, I hardly saw any true results.

It wasn’t until November of last year that I was formally diagnosed with ADHD, which caused me to seek help from a psychiatrist who helped me connect the dots. She informed me that one of my medications (Seroquel) really messes with the parts of my brain that deal with hunger and satiation, and it made complete sense as to why I never ever felt fully satiated, which ultimately fueled my binge eating disorder. That particular medication was prescribed to me by my PCP as a “let’s see if this works and go from there” mentality. My psychiatrist made an analogy that sometimes doctors prescribe medications like throwing darts at a dart board, hoping to see if they hit the bullseye. I don’t hold a grudge or blame my PCP, either. There just wasn’t much help or follow up with the side effects so long as the medication was doing what we hoped it would do.

Since January, my medications have been altered and the results have been astounding. I feel “satiated” and more in control of my body’s wants/needs. I’ve been sober for 94 days and I’ve done my best to redefine what normal eating looks like to me. I also have mental clarity and focus that I didn’t even know existed.

My main point is to highlight those who struggle with variables like side effects of medication that are outside of our control. Despite your earnest efforts to change your diet, exercise more, etc. you often saw a lack of results because chemically/hormonally something else is going on. I understand that healthcare in the U.S. is prohibitive to many because of how expensive it can be, even with insurance, and that not everyone has the luxury of figuring out their medications in this manner. But maybe my story will help someone feel better because they can relate to it.

TL;DR: Mental health medications contributed to massive weight gain. Working with a psychiatrist helped me understand those side effects and now I’m on medication much more suited to my mental health needs that has resulted in weight loss.

submitted by /u/VictimRoyalty
[link] [comments]

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