Saturday, January 20, 2024

Any LADIES here did a mini cut for their final weight loss phase?

I have taken a break from dieting/weight loss as I mentally felt drained. Countless of times I had asked for advice here which I appreciate but I just decided I needed the break. I do want to resume weight loss in February. Though, I have about 17-20lbs I wanna lose still, and because I feel a little drained still, I’m wondering if I can just do a mini/aggressive cut to kinda reach my goal faster? It’s been almost 3 years, lost 123lbs, I’m tired of deficits but I for sure want to reach my goal of 160lbs. Literally means a lot to me. I love my body now but I know it will be TEA at 160lbs! My question is, any ladies who done this how has it affected your menstrual cycle? How long did you do it? How to make sure I won’t lose muscle? Do any of you ladies fast while doing this? How much time do you think it will take for me to reach my final goal? (Currently fluctuating between 177-179) thanks in advance🫶🏾

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Celebrating the small things

I hit a milestone (SV) I never thought I would this morning. It’s nothing major and I still have a long long way to go but I’ve tried and failed since hitting my highest weight of 267 over 2 years ago to get on track and make sustainable weight loss but I’ve always failed before hitting 250. Instead of a fad or crash diet over the last 2 months I’ve made much healthier changes into my life, I walk everyday, I got a new job that involves lots of moving and I’m loving it and I’m most importantly I’m really starting to understand my emotional eating and instead of eating for comfort I’m eating to fuel my body and feel better. This morning I weighed in at 248. Although I know this might bounce back and forward for the next while knowing that I’ve managed to break through that wall gives me so much motivation going forward !!!!

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Friday, January 19, 2024

Hardly hungry anymore

I started my weight loss back in July and so far I'm down about ~20 pounds. Something I've noticed within the last month is that I don't really feel hungry? Like not in the way I used to. Instead of being this deep feeling, it feels like a dull ache, something I can kind of ignore. Or rather, my stomach feels empty, but I don't feel discomfort from it. A lot of the time I just drink water and any discomfort I feel goes away. It's shocking because sometimes I even have to force myself to meet my calorie deficit because when I do eat, I get so full easily. I can't even finish my meals at restaurants anymore! Most days I don't even eat anything until the afternoon and I don't feel fatigued or impeded at all (except for when I go to the gym in the morning. I always eat after that). I still love food but I don't feel like I have as much space for it anymore.

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Half way to my goal!

Hey all,

I wanted to provide an update on my weight loss. My scale varies from 184.5 to 187.6 depending on the day. I am 5 foot 7 inches.

I started getting serious at weight loss at 217 pounds in late September 2023 when I started to have some health effects from the weight. I had made some extremely minor changes prior to 217, so I believe I may have actually been in the low 220s at my biggest

2 weeks ago I posted that I was no longer obese and I'm still not obese as of today. I had a week of no weight loss despite eating 1500 calories a day and remained at 188 to 190 range. The week after, I allowed myself to have 2 days of eating what I wanted because of special occasions. Despite my scale going back up to 191 for a singular outlying day, my scale is now solidly reading 184 to 187.6 a day after going back on track.

That marks almost 29.5 pounds lost, with 28.5 pounds left before I have a 24.9 BMI.

I'm happy that I got here even if the last two weeks were slow, I believe the fact that sometimes my scale goes as low as 184.5 vs a sometimes low of 188.8 to indicate solid progress.

Thanks so much for the support!

Hope to have another post in a month and hopefully be in the 170s.

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Wanted to share some helpful tidbits from a podcast

A few months ago when I started getting serious about my weight loss (5'1F down 17.5 pounds in 3.5 months), I was listening to this podcast by Cookie Rosenblum called Weight Loss Made Real, While I've since stopped listening (only because I feel like I've gotten into a good groove), I wanted to share 3 things that were helpful to me:

1) It can be an act of self-love to say no to ourselves.

Just as we might discourage a child from filling up on excess sweets, we can also tell ourselves no from a place of love. This was monumental for me because I came from a background of ED recovery and telling myself no always brought up these intense feelings of fear, deprivation, and desperation, but this reframe helped me see that no can come from a place of love. Also, I've allowed myself to say "no, not right now" or "no, not that much" - and even that adjustment to how I talk to myself has been helpful for cutting back on sweets, junk food, and mindless overeating.

2) We can accept ourselves and also have goals for ourselves at the same time.

At my HW (175) I was deep in a pit of self-loathing. Looking at my body brought up a lot of feelings of shame, embarrassment, and repulsion. Those are some pretty strong feelings and while I can't say they've totally dissipated, they've been moderated a bit. Cookie had a whole episode on why you can't come from a place of self-loathing on your weight loss journey, because you constantly beat yourself up for every small failure. These strong emotions recur with every small misstep of your diet, which are bound to happen! Learning to say "My body is ok as it is" AND "I'd like to lose 65 pounds [total], and that's also ok" made me feel like I didn't need to claw my skin off just to get out of my body because my body won't be like this forever and because making a single mistake on my diet doesn't mean I'll never lose weight. Both things can be true at the same time.

And 3) You need to learn to eat like a skinny person.

Now, this point not ring true for everyone, but what Cookie says is that many skinny people are not counting their calories, tracking their macros, stressing over every meal. I don't know for what proportion of thin people this is actually true for, but I can say that this advice helped me observe (non -judgmentally) what I ate and what people thinner than me ate, and try out their meals. Lo and behold, I found that if I ordered a side salad instead of fries with my burger, I felt fine; if I went for a single slice of pizza instead of two, I was fine; if ordered my latte with a different kind of milk and sugar free vanilla syrup, I was fine. It all still tasted good and I still enjoyed it.... and it was aligned with my goal of losing weight.

Maybe these are obvious points to others, but they really helped me reframe my weight loss. This is the most weight I've lost despite many repeated attempts over the last 3 years or so, and I'm feeling empowered and confident that I will eventually (slowly and healthfully) get to my GW.

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Things I wish I knew before I started losing weight / Discussion

Hi! I was thinking about my experience so far with dieting and losing weight and wanted to put my thoughts out there for anyone who cares or wants to share their own. To preface, I started weight loss in February of last year, I was 18 years old and 340lbs at 5'11"(male). Today I am 242lbs and I am back on the dieting horse after taking it easy and gaining about a lb over the months of October->December. I was diagnosed with what they called a binge eating disorder. I personally do not believe that I have an illness that forced me to overeat, I think anyone could get as heavy as I was if they were eating like I was. Eating was a coping mechanism that I had to slowly work through over the last year.

First, I had a pretty terrible experience with a dietician; they tried to sell me a weight loss drug, told me to eat vegetables, stop drinking diet soda, and to come back in a month for more pills. This really irked me and I never really quite knew why until recently, and its not just because that's a dumb, predatory prescription for weight loss, It was because it lacked any kind of explanation or reasoning.The biggest benefit to this process has been learning about things related to weight loss; What is a calorie? What is maintenance? What is a calorie deficit? Why should I eat vegetables? How much protein should I eat? Why shouldn't I be able to drink diet soda? (the answer to this question is you can drink diet soda, there is almost no valid proof that it hurts you). Even when talking to professionals, you shouldn't just be taking their word for everything. Ask questions, and do your own research! How can you go all in on something you know almost nothing about?

Second, you have to understand that each weight loss phase/attempt will not go perfectly, and sometimes you will fall off of the horse, especially when starting. Ive noticed that it takes me a couple weeks of to get into the swing of a diet, and that cold, empty feeling in my stomach that makes me want to sprint to the fridge and start eating only lasts for about 2 weeks. You shouldn't be angry with yourself for failing, you should be angry with yourself for not trying again the next day. I have failed on days 2-5 of the diet several times, and while I do beat myself up about it, I still try again but harder.Its very unhealthy and I would never do it again, but at the peak of my dieting, I was losing almost 6lbs a week as someone who has struggled with obesity since childhood.(I seriously do not recommend doing this, it messed up my hormones up pretty bad and led to a mental crash where I quit my job and fell into a slight depression for about a month). I have a new job now and feel better than ever losing 2 lbs a week). This is just to prove that you can do anything you set your mind to, but you can't just give up after it fails once.

I may add to this but I want to see what other people think. If you're reading this, have a great day and know that you can do it!

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Thursday, January 18, 2024

Need Weight Loss Advice

Hello everyone! I have been using this forum for quite some time now and it has proven helpful! I have a complicated history with food, I used to weigh in the 200s in middle school, dropped it all in senior year of highschool (I was around 150-160), and managed to gain all the weight since (it has been 5 years since I graduated high school). My heaviest weight was last year at 285. I'm currently 240ish, but two months ago I was around 260. I have been counting my calories and wondering what would be the best aggressive caloric deficit to remain in order to lose weight quicker but in a safer manner. I have been stuck at 240 for the past month and haven't moved at all. I know everyone says its better to do it slower, but I really want to try to get more weight off, so please no advice about "taking your time." I'm 24, my current height is 5'8 and like I said I'm at 240. I have been eating around 1,600-1,800 calories the past month.

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