Sunday, August 20, 2023

Do I have a fast metabolism or is it something else that’s helping me?

So I originally gained weight due to binge eating caused by boredom and depression, now i’m cured of binge eating and only eat when I feel hungry with portion control.

I’ve lost 8kgs starting at 63kg and now 55 and so far since starting at the end of May but i’ve noticed a lot of things.

On Thursday I went out drinking and ate a ton and 4 days later weighed myself and I had lost 3 pounds? This is the second time this has happened where I drink and eat like crazy and loose weight a couple days later and it stays off?

I am someone who has a naturally athletic body, wide broad muscular shoulders and lean thighs and even at my heaviest when I was overweight for my height at 68kgs (covid) I still had a flat stomach? The only things that were overly fat was my chest and face. (I’m in between the heights 5’4/5’5 btw)

Do my muscles contribute to the weight loss being super fast even in a surplus as muscles burn more calories, do I have a faster metabolism or is it simply because of something else.

because i’m pretty sure that Thursday I ate well over and should’ve gained atleast a pound from that but I didn’t especially with the super sweet cocktails and shots and pure junk food.

any information to help understand my body more would help! Have a nice day/night

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Walking shoe recommendations

Hello! I recently decided to approach my weight loss journey differently and am now walking over three miles at least five times a week. The problem I'm having is I am literally walking through my shoes. I've gone through two pairs in just over a month and my third pair is already starting to feel worn out. First were just some cheap shoes i had lying around, the next were adidas QT 3.0 sneakers, and currently on puremotion adapt running shoe. Also tried my gym shoes which have a thicker sole but then tend to hurt if I walk too far in them.
I just don't want to keep having to buy shoes every three weeks so any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

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Lost my motivation, don’t want to disappoint my cheerful doctor. Any advice?

Hey guys. Was very motivated to start losing weight in April, and since then I’ve lost 7.5 kg. My current weight is 109 kg, goal weight around 80 kg (35 F, 173 cm). I even made a deal with my doctor that I should lose 2 kg per month, and we have a monthly checkup. This was to give myself some accountability. Worked great for a while, and the guy was super happy. Said I was the highlight of his morning. The past couple of months, however, I’ve only been sitting on my ass eating chocolate in the evenings, and my weight loss is of course at a standstill. Don’t want to disappoint the doctor, he was so excited. Any advice for getting back on the horse?

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How do you track your weight loss?

As in, what starting point do you use?

When I was at my absolute heaviest I was about 335lbs, or 152kg. But I don’t use that as my starting point as I had about 18 months of really low dedication dieting.

I would start, give it a couple days and binge. Rinse and repeat. I mainly lost these kgs by going to the gym, I think, and some periods of intense restriction.

It’s taken me a long time to start recovering from my binge eating disorder and I finally feel like I’m in a position where I can say I’m in recovery.

That’s where I’ve started to measure my weight loss from - I was 137.6kg when I started.

But do I count in those extra 15 or so kgs I lost through very unhealthy methods? I personally don’t count them in my current goals, as I feel like I’d be rewarding very bad habits. But I also want to include it in some way, but I don’t know how.

How do you guys count these types of things?

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Saturday, August 19, 2023

I’m going to lose 25lbs

Im a 5’8, 30 year old man. I was 210 lbs at the beginning of the year and have been at 187-190 lbs for the past 5 months. I’m going to lose 25 lbs. my goal weight is 165, an ideal weight for a guy my height with a larger frame. I’m writing this because I’ve had a bad week binge eating. It’s a habit I’ve picked up as a way of trying to fill the emptiness I feel when I quit drinking and as an attempt at escaping frustrations and loneliness. It has caused difficulties with weight gain over the past 10 years since I first tried getting sober. My heaviest was 230lbs. I’ve gotten down to 170 and back up to 220-230 on two separate occasions over the past 10 years due to setbacks, alcoholism and binge eating.

I’ve been trying the recomp instead of focusing on losing weight, but I now think it’d be easier to get to a lighter weight first and then focus on strength. I’ve had many reconstructive surgeries from sports injuries (all to my left knee, tibia and foot), osteoarthritis in my left knee that flairs up if overused (and when my diet is bad) and general aches and pains from weaknesses/imbalances. There’s a lot of physical activities I want to do very much that I can’t currently do, which frustrates me and makes me sad.

I’ve been only doing calisthenics because I need to improve my in range of motion and body control before I could consistently lift weights. I also walk and kayak, and I do a lot of yoga. Over the years I’ve learned what I need to do to reach my physical goals. Any physical activity requires about an hour of warmup stretching beforehand to warm up my joints and facilitate better form. I also have to avoid pushing myself too far. This is also frustrating.

I was afraid of focusing more on weight loss because I didn’t want to lose muscle, but I now know that getting to a lighter weight will be easier on my body/ joints and make all activities easier/ less painful, and progress would be faster. So I’m going to keep up with my calisthenics routine, and incorporate steady state cardio and interval cardio on the elliptical machine.

Outside of binge eating episodes, I’ve been eating at around 2,000 to 2,150 calories, which is a sleight deficit when factoring in my activity. I probably undo the weight loss progress I make from binge eating episodes that occur every3-4 week. I plan to drop slightly to a hard 1,950 daily intake. I use my fitness pale to track calories. My binge eating isn’t from over restricting calories, but from me trying to seek comfort in the same way I would from alcohol. It’s addict behavior. I have been getting slowly stronger, but the aches and pains I deal with every day are discouraging.

I’m really going to focus on the weight loss process and not give into frustration, and hopefully the pain relief I get from weight loss can help keep me motivated. The elliptical is so boring, but it’s the easiest on my joints and it allows my to exert more effort than probably any other form of exercise.

I’m ending this binge eating episode now. Tomorrow I’ll eat right and go for a short walk and stretch to give my body a day to quell the Inflammation from all the sugar I’ve been eating. Monday I’ll start my cardio routine and keep up with calisthenics and yoga. I figure I’ll have to adjust my calorie intake every 5lbs lost or so. I don’t expect to make much strength progress at this time, but hope to be 165lbs in 3 to 4 months, and then adjust to maintenance and focus on furthering my strength and athleticism with calisthenics and yoga with less pain and frustration.

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NSV: I can comfortably stand with my hands clasped behind my back!

I never realized I couldn’t do comfortably do this until suddenly I can again and it’s comfortable! I can’t stop standing like that, I’m sure I look weirdly formal when I’m standing like a butler in line at the grocery store but I don’t even care. This is my first unexpected NSV and I’m excited to see what others I get to experience along the way!

I don’t remember the exact formatting this sub does for showing weight loss but my highest weight was 325lb/147kg and I’m down about 30-35lbs/13-15kg (I don’t weigh myself frequently)

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The psychological weight loss strategy | Laurie Coots (YouTube CICO testimonial, 6 minutes, 100 lb loss, TedX)

YouTube link: https://youtu.be/DLYb3IgQ1Qk

Transcript:

[Text from the video (her story, not my story)]

So, that was me in 2006. I weighed over 300 pounds. I had triglycerides of 500, and I had just been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.

Now, type 2 diabetes is when your body doesn't use insulin properly, and I like to imagine it as this sugar sludge going through my bloodstream to the soundtrack of "Jaws." Like 29 million other Americans, I was sent home with a diet, a prescription, and a little booklet about my disease. As I dug into it, I learned a dirty little truth – two, actually.

The first says that in America, if you're diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, you carry the same health risk as somebody who's already had one heart attack. The second is that the object of the game, unlike cancer or anything else, is to manage your diabetes, not cure you. So, your doctors will work very, very hard to try to prevent complications that might ruin the quality of your life or kill you.

I knew that this was not going to work for me. I was a hard-charging type-A global executive, and managing my diabetes was not going to be an option. So, I enlisted the help of the people at Canyon Ranch in the medical department, who I knew were a little bit more ambitious.

And here's what we learned on a lesson on a journey that actually took us five years. I learned that even though I was 300 pounds and had type 2 diabetes, my body was absolutely perfect the way it was – for the way I was feeding it, the way I was moving it, and the way I was resting it. Quite frankly, if I wanted a different body or I wanted different health, I had to change the equation somehow.

The second thing I learned was that if I imagined my future healthy self and started living that life now – what kinds of foods I would eat, how many calories I would need to maintain a healthy weight for a lifetime – that would be the way I would achieve my goal. I had to come up with strategies that I could live with for two days, two weeks, two months, two years.

Now, when you do this and you live this way, interesting things happen – like magic. You wake up two years later and you're almost at your goal. I learned that I had to keep track of everything. So, I used iPhone apps like "Lose It!" and I used my UP band to track how much sleep I was getting and how much exercise I was getting along the way. And this really helped me to keep the game kind of rational instead of emotional the way it can get.

This was a big war. I had to break this down to the smallest battle I could win every day because I have a short attention span. I had to take it down to the cellular level – what would make my cells happier and healthier every single day. And with every drop of glucose or every drop of blood I fed into my glucose meter, I could tell immediately if I was moving in the right direction. I became my own science experiment, and I learned a lot.

For example, when I didn't sleep or I jumped time zones or took a red-eye, my blood sugar was 20 points higher the next day and I craved carbohydrates. Well, I didn't need to eat; what I needed was a nap. Portions were always my biggest downfall. I come from the land of all-you-can-eat shrimp and endless platters of pasta. When somebody showed me what a real single portion of something was, it was a huge disconnect for me. So, I needed to really figure out how to do that.

I started eating with smaller plates, eating with chopsticks to eat more slowly, and I promised myself I could have anything I wanted as long as I ate it with a knife and a fork. Trust me, it feels ridiculous to eat a Snickers bar like this, but it helped me be more conscious of what I was eating.

I learned to be in perpetual motion all day, every day – looking for ways to move and to fidget because fidgeting can burn 200-300 calories a day. I counted steps, I got a standing desk, and I learned that my one hour of walking every day was as good for my head as it was for my body.

And finally, life's too short to live without ice cream. When I was first diagnosed, I made a list of all my favorite foods, and I went and did a glycemic index with my glucose meter of each one. Then I went back to each food and I tweaked it, adding a little fat, removing a little sugar, until everything fit in my plan. And now, I plan for a perfect scoop of premium ice cream every day. What I learned is that, given half a shot, your body will recover. It's an amazing adaptive machine, self-healing. Mine did.

I lost over 110 pounds. I now have a perfect lipid profile. I have had a healthy, normal blood sugar without medication for more than five years. I am no longer a type 2 diabetic. [Pause for applause] So, thank you very much.

So, if any of you have a health issue that you need to deal with or a life change you need to deal with, I urge you to imagine your healthy future self and start living that life now. Break your journey down into little battles you can win. Become your own science experiment and come up with strategies that will last for two days or two years. And most of all, you need to start eating like your life depends on it because it does.

(Transcript auto-generated by YouTube. Punctuation and paragraphs by ChatGPT.)

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