Saturday, July 20, 2024

Currently in the "quitting sugar phase" and need some advice

How did you guys give up sugar initially?

I'm 6'2 inches, 308lbs, 34 years old, above average sized frame.

For the last couple months I've been binging sugar or chocolate all day. Ill usually drink 12 cokes. That's my main addiction in addition candy bars like Butterfinger, Reese's, etc.

Fast food isn't a huge hurdle. Sugar is my main battle right now in my efforts to even begin on the weight loss journey.

During the day I'm thinking I might replace my cokes with Mio or unsweetened tea with stevia, replace the candy bars with dates or figs or other fruits.

Just like harm reduction none of these options are ideal in the long run, just temporary solutions to get me off the high octane addictions.

I haven't tried replacing my cokes with Mio. If that tastes mildly good which I've been told, that may be the solution. What are other solutions that worked for you all?

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Friday, July 19, 2024

Regular Binges

I started my weight loss back in April and have been pretty consistent with it since. Ever since coming back from my holiday I've been ok for getting back on track for the most part but am bingeing at night much more than before going on vacation.

Now I find myself overeating at least once a week for at least a couple weeks now if not two/three days in a row.

I have continuously tried eating lots of protein/fibre/fats to try keep me full throughout the day and also been keeping myself busy during the night times to avoid possible binges.

I've upped my calorie intake too to see if that would make any difference but it didn't so I've gone back to my normal defecit.

My weight loss has been slowing down because of this and it's kind of demotivating me. Any tips or advice?

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Tips for keeping a healthy mindset?

Little backstory, in about feb-march i got on my weight loss grind. it quickly became unhealthy as i ended up restricting myself to under 800 calories a day + exercise and started doing weird shit like chewing stuff just to spit it back out cuz i was afraid of swallowing those calories. lost 20 lbs. my friends started talking to me about it, trying to get me to stop, as it had definitely gone too far. (i ended up quitting cuz i ate a good ass cheeseburger and was reminded i liked food.) well i’ve regained it all and i’m wondering now: what are some tips/reminders to keep myself doing healthy weight loss this time around? what are good motivators you’ve found? what are calorie limits i shouldn’t go past?

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Weight loss reward ideas?

Currently making a list for every certain amount of pounds I’ve lost, I reward myself. So far it’s keeping me motivated! Currently 18 lbs down! 141 more lbs to go!

New book, new shoes, spa day, theme park visit, concert tickets, weekend get away, cruise, fine dining date, gadget upgrade, new video game, shopping spree.

Feel free to recommend things that are not mentioned by me in here. A lot of these posts that I’ve seen pretty much reiterate the same weight loss rewards, I’m looking for diversity. Yes I know that I also reiterated some of the same things. Some are just too good not to recommend!

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Thursday, July 18, 2024

(yet another) Weight loss journey

Hi everyone! I'm new here. I've been on a fitness journey for a little while now, and I wanted to share my story in the hopes of connecting with a broader community, and maybe also finding some folks who think about physical fitness in the same way I do. :) (Also, fair warning: I'm long winded!)

I'm 33F, 5'2, SW/CQ 170 and GW 145ish. I work in an office, am an avid reader and gamer, enjoy going out with friends, and spending time with my husband and dog.

Most of my twenties I sat at around 130 pounds and was happy with my weight. I've never been an athletic person—in fact, I hated gym as a kid and was weirdly proud of my inability to do even one pushup, but I got decently active in college and kept that up afterwards (running at the gym, biking and hiking for leisure), and I did a LOT of walking while pursuing a graduate degree in a small college town. My weight gain began in 2020, I suspect because my life became much more sedentary during the pandemic and I turned heavily to junk food and alcohol as a coping mechanism for work and pandemic related stress. I also turned 30...haha. So my metabolism probably isn't what it used to be.

I've gained steadily since then but didn’t really mind my physical changes (fat girls are cute too), but now my blood pressure is alarmingly high. I'm currently managing it with medication, but hell, I'm too young to be on the same meds as my 70 year old uncle who thinks mashed potatoes are a vegetable! So I cut back dramatically on junk food at the beginning of 2024, cut out caffeine, reduced my drinking, and made a commitment to cook healthier (lots more vegetables). I also began a strength training regiment with my husband about three months ago. I wanted to build some muscle before jumping into serious cardio, and I feel like that's gone really well. I'm by no means going to take home any weight lifting trophies any time soon, but I'm proud of my progress! (I've gone from 30 lb lat pulldowns to 70 lbs, 40 lb leg presses to 100 lb—still can't seem to get my shoulder presses above 20 though, ugh.)

So now that I'm feeling stronger (and enjoying the benefits of that strength, like less ambient pain, more stamina, more energy, better sleep), I'm ready to think about losing weight. Here's the thing: I'm hesitant to count calories because that has historically been a slippery slope to some very disordered eating for me. Here's another thing: I don't want weight loss/weight gain to rule my life. This kind of thinking is pretty common among the women in my family, and they're all miserable. I know there are lots of people who find pleasure in fulfillment in it, and I celebrate that for those folks, but I don't think I'm built for it. And in a lot of ways, I've gained confidence in my appearance in recent years, so for me "looking" like I've lost weight isn't really the goal.

So what do I want from this journey? To give my body the physical stimulation it needs for a long, high-quality life, and to lower my blood pressure, which necessitates some weight loss.

Maybe this is the place it makes sense to turn from my monologue to y'all, the community. I'd love to get some feedback on my strategy for this next phase of my journey. Right now, I'm focusing on portion size, eradicating late-night eating, and consistent daily exercise.

-I'm not weighing my food or counting calories, as I said earlier; rather, I'm making a meal I would've finished in two servings last me three or four. I'm asking myself if I want seconds because I'm still actively hungry or if I'm just craving the experience of eating more. I'm saving leftovers and letting myself get excited about having them the next day rather than finishing them immediately. -Nighttime eating is definitely my biggest weakspot. It's a bad habit I learned in grad school, when I'd go get drunk with my colleagues then come home and eat essentially a whole other meal. Now it's more like chips or candy or ice cream at around 9pm or even later, but I can't seem to make myself stick to a small portion. I just crave more...so I think the smarter move is to cut it out altogether. -Going to the gym every day isn't sustainable for me (my husband and I currently go at least 3 days a week), so I'm trying to add physical activities to those non-gym days. Just this week I started waking up a little earlier to take my dog on a 15 minute walk rather than just letting her out in the yard to do her morning business, and I've added some small strength exercises to my morning routine as well (some crunches, some squats). I'm REALLY not a morning person, so this has been hard, and I deeply do not enjoy it lol. But I know it should get easier! Ideally I'd also take my dog on a 15-30 minute walk when I get home from work, but I've found it hard to motivate myself to do this due to the mentally fatiguing nature of my job.

So...yeah! That's me. I'm open to hearing any advice or thoughts on what I've done so far and what I plan to do, as well as anecdotes from people with similar goals or similar perspectives on weight loss. Thanks for bearing with my wall of text! I'm hoping sharing this with y'all will help me continue to make healthy choices, and to stay excited about this process.

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Story from someone being thin to gaining 30 kilos in 1 year and what caused it

So I've been naturally thin my whole life. Never ever thought about what i've eaten even once. Today Im 34 and 87 kilos at 183 cm male.

1 year ago I was 59 kilos (+2 kilos for dramatic title). Before this I was hovering around 73 kilos my whole life and had trouble gaining weight. During a period from age 17-23 I was going to the gym and trying to gain weight. I literally ate til I puked. Pasta+meat at 9 o clock you know. No weight gain.

Now? Had an operation for ileostomy which means you remove your colon and I also have ulcerative colitis since 4 years.

Boom, my weight is out of control. +28 kg in 1 year. Sure I was 10 kg short before operation than normal, but still. My diet is even better now than before with no fast food (before I could easily eat once a week) and i am gaining weight without doing anything. I eat fast food maybe once a month now. Snacks are just a 4-pack gluten free muffin that I consume over 2 weeks. Other than that it is a very clean diet with a lot of lean chicken (1-2kg a week).

What I've learned: Inflammation can increase metabolism by up to like 15%. And now when my colon is gone there is now inflammation so that 15% is turning me fat it feels like.

My activity level is more inactive now than before.

Another thing is absorption that I think many who are into weight loss rarely speak about. So my small intestine seem to have chronic diarrhea and many with ileostomy have. The doctors do not really care about the cause, they just treat it with bulking agents or loperamide. Doctors have checked me for Chrons but there is no inflammation going on they say.

My theory is that we have something going on that is undiagnosed. Anyways, so each day I take Psyllium that decrease the speed and thickens my output. I feel much better and more energy than ever. Not just because of inflammation is gone, but because I think my body it feels as now my body is absorbing everything I eat instead of just going through me even in small intestine where majority of nutrients are absorbed. Because it is interesting that cancer patients that does not have IBD seem to have much thicker output (slower process speed in stomach) naturally. Which seem to support my thesis.

I even believe that the chronic diarrhea is the real cause for my inflammation in my colon. Just think for yourself, if your small intestine just let everything through, no wonder your colon have to work really hard. B

As for cravings or hunger. I rarely feel hunger if ever. Maybe if there is a really good meal waiting. But other than that I push myself to eat. So that makes it easy.

Thoughts?

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Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Losing weight may be a life-complete problem

I was reading this article by David Maciver and it made me think of you all. Anyone who has ever gone on a diet and had some success but then stopped what they're doing and gained it all back, or have failed to lose anything at all before giving up.

https://drmaciver.substack.com/p/life-complete-problems

A life-complete problem is any problem (usually a simple, concrete, one) that you cannot solve without improving your life, because no matter how simple it seems, it is actually a manifestation of underlying issues.

Some of the good advice I see on this sub to help people to lose weight is not just that people should eat less, but to work out WHY they eat too much.

The article doesn't address weight loss specifically or give concrete advice, but you might find it interesting as something to think about. All of his writing is really good like that.

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