370 Fat Burning Soup Recipes

Thursday, 31 January 2019

[Daily Directory] Find your quests for the day here! - Friday, 01 February 2019

Welcome adventurer! Whether you're new on this quest or are towards the end of your journey there should be something below for you.

Daily journal.

Interested in some side quests?

Community bulletin board!

If you are new to the sub, click here for our posting guidelines


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Started my weight loss journey on January 5th and I'm down 12.8 pounds as of today. I'm damn proud of myself.

Stepped on the scale on the 4th of January and saw 233 lbs. Most I've ever weighed. I used to be pretty damn skinny playing tennis in high school, but all of college made me gain a stupid amount of weight.

Saw that number and literally wanted to punch myself. Went straight to the gym and signed up for a membership the same day. And even though I still have a long way to go, I'm down almost 13 pounds already and damn does it feel good.

I've lost it by simply just by burning more calories than I take in, and switching from soda to almost strictly water. Water has changed everything and I'd say that has been the biggest factor in me losing weight.

Anyway, sorry for the rambling post, but I feel pretty proud and I figured it's better to post about it here than to annoy my friends with it lol.

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Water is magic

Still in the beginning stages of my journey, still struggling, but I wanted to share a quick lil victory that just occurred tonight. It’s almost 11pm here, and I felt an impulse craving for something warm, sweet, chocolate...chocolate chip? Cookies? From the store? Fuck it; Let’s head there now! Before I knew it, I was parked in my car a mile or so from my house outside of the grocery store. My mouth was a lil dry so I took a swig of water from a bottle in my car, then went inside. As I headed to the back of the food warehouse for cookie dough, I found myself gradually slowing down. Once I reached the refrigerated shelves I was looking for, I realized I lost my appetite. I realized I was already satisfied. I pondered around for a bit, feeling a lil strange to walk right back out to my car within a few minutes and completely empty handed. But now I’m back in my car like nothing happened. It’s crazy how much more powerful you can feel just staying hydrated. So, back to my house I go now. I have some Halo Top in my freezer anyways ✌️

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Starting my journey right now, no exceptions. I've been putting it off way too long.

In June 2017 I graduated high school weighing about 190 pounds. Since then, I've had lots of free time due to the fact that I have not enrolled in college. My weight was already starting to climb soon after graduation and my acne was getting very bad quickly as well. I was getting fast food a lot after graduating but not as much as what I'm about to describe. Last year a had a rough 3 months where I quit my job and developed a Meijer/fast food addiction. I started becoming depressed, not leaving the house unless it was for food or going out to eat with friends. Every other day I would drop $20-30 on chips, little Debbie snacks, pop, taco Bell, McDonald's, etc. You name the junk food and I've most likely had it during that 3 month period. I went completely broke, savings and all. I started working again and have been working now for 5 months now. I haven't been able to shake this addiction. I still get fast food every other day and I know my money is being wasted. I'm still broke. I now weigh 240 pounds. It's time for me to wake up and stop this poisonous lifestyle. No more eating like garbage, no more unlimited snacking, and when I go out to eat with friends I'll order healthier and cheaper options. These are vital things I need to do to make my life better. I will become a better person. You all are an inspiration to me. Thank you.

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There is a lot of toxicity i see around weight loss i just want to address it since i see a lot of people lose hope like i did.

So i always see people online who will say they eat less for example 1600 calories when their tdee is 2200 for maint and can't lose weight.

I also see these people get told they are wrong with their calorie counting / eating too much.
Now whilst i think this is the case of most people i also think in those cases people shouldn't just be saying "well count again if its not too much then your wrong since you can't lose weight" and that kind of shit.

My reasoning behind this is i used to be the guy i ate 1500 calories a day and couldn't lose weight despite being morbidly obese....at the end of the day it wasn't the calorie counting that was wrong.

I went to the doctors and learnt not only had my body not been through puberty due to hypogonadism (lack of testosterone) i have a severe hypothyroid problem.

After i had those issues fixed through medication i started to see that even at 1800 calories a day eating more (due to the hunger from having testosterone) i was losing weight.

Im nearly out of morbid obesity due to fixing these health problem i went from having sever lack of muscle mass to actually having a healthy range of muscle now.

Calories in and calories out is the whole story in a simplified version but i think people need to remember weight loss has a lot to do with other variables.

If you are certain you are calorie counting correctly and are still not losing weight.

Goto the doctors and get reffered to a specialist it could be that you too have a health problem or two that impacts your metabolism.

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450+ pounds...I made a blog!

After many false starts, procrastination, and too much fast food, I am ready to start my journey. At over 450lbs, I have a long way to go. But I'm determined to get fit and healthy.

I made a website/blog. It's about the real struggles of losing lots of weight. Including some shameful "before" pictures.

I'm nervous because I'm afraid of failing. Again. But I'm excited because I think people see the show 600lb life, and look at the highlights of a many year weight struggle. I want to be a voice for the day to day person. I want people to feel safe discussing their binges, or their days when they did nothing. I want to be real. And if that means posing in my underwear at 450lbs so people can see the rolls, then I'm gonna do it.

Not only that, but it's good accountability for me as well. If I know people are reading my posts and care about me as a person, that will help continue to motivate me to be healthier.

I'm just terrified of people making horrible comments. I know what I am and what I look like. I don't need other people to point it out.

(PM for site, if you're interested!)

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First time being under 200lbs in yeeeaarrss

Feels pretty good but i still want to lose more.

I got into a bad depression at the beginning of high school and stopped being active. Sat in my room and ate every day. Went from working out pretty much every day, to not and still eating the same. That got me real thick real quick

I’m in the process of making myself feel better, look better, and be better. With intermittent fasting, and just eating less, as well as basic daily exercising, I’m down to 195ish from 230+ in a little over a month.

I feel really great. I hope to one day be fit and… sexy… again, with only the stretch marks being a reminder of my former bigness.

I’m not completely happy with my weight yet. I wish I weighed less in this time, and there’s been a few times where i’ve given into my urge to eat, but I can only lose so much so fast and I just need to move on from those incidents.


tbh i’m only writing this to maybe convince myself that what i did is good enough for now. i need patience, i’ll be fit again one day. i just want it now

yeah thanks for the read wish y’all well with your weight loss journey god bless happy skinnying

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I worked out for the first time willingly in my life- and this is what has happened:

Hi everyone.

I’ve lurked on this subreddit for a long time. I finally decided to do something.

I’ve never worked out or gone to a gym willingly in my life until this year. What convinced me wasn’t my newly diagnosed medical condition, but the fact that I was struggling climbing slopes and hills in Israel while on a trip over my winter break.

I came back to my campus, went into the exercise room downstairs, and walked on a treadmill for a half hour.

Now, I know that’s not much, but I did it again twice that same week, and I haven’t had the time with school to go to the exercise room until tonight, but I struggled hard- with the treadmill, with the elliptical, and now I’m on a stationary sitting bike thing. But at least I’m moving.

I feel happier.

I’ve never liked to take photos, but I now am a little bit more open to it. I haven’t weighed myself (I’m 5 feet, 1 inch) and maybe 130ish pounds, but I can go into my doctors office for a check up and tell her what I’ve started to do.

I don’t really have a clue about how I should be running on a treadmill when I can’t breathe, but I’m at least trying.

So thank you, lose it. I’m trying to lose 10 pounds. And I think that’s a good number.

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I’m actually starting to be alright with my body image

I just finished working out. After a long plateau in the 180-185 range, I finally broke the 180s and weighed in at 178.4 (although I’m pretty sure I lost fat while I plateaued too).

I never imagined I’d even get this far. I just looked back at some old pictures of me... holy shit. I can barely look at those. The difference is so noticeable now. I look like a completely different person. I feel like a completely different person. I have a bit of loose skin, but nothing too bad. I still have a little ways to go, but I’m actually starting to get some decent muscle now. For the first time in my life I’m not cripplingly self-conscious about my appearance.

Although my depression is far from cured, this is a huge weight (literally) that has been lifted off my shoulders. I’m glad I did this for myself.

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How to stick to your calorie goal when food is your coping mechanism?

I had decent success from July-November, lost about 40 pounds with CICO (1800 cal/day) and exercise. However, I lost focus over the holidays, and I can’t get myself back into a routine now that stress in my life has picked up. January-April has always been an incredibly stressful time for me, and it’s a lot worse this year due to big changes in my life (I won’t bore you). I also have general anxiety unrelated to the stressors. I am an emotional eater, and I have always used food as a crutch to make myself feel better when I get those feelings of anxiety - that’s how I ended up so overweight in the first place.

It’s so far out of hand that I don’t know how where to start right now. I have horrible binges (1000+ calories in one sitting) 3-4 times a week, usually shortly after my anxiety flares up. I rarely stay within my calorie goals. Asking for professional help is not an option at the moment, and I’m too ashamed to tell all this to any of my friends that would support me. I don’t know how to get back into a sustainable routine of eating healthy and not using food as a crutch.

If any of you have experienced this, how do you deal with no longer being able to be an emotional eater? What strategies do you use to keep yourself on track, even when everything else in your life is not so good?

Sorry for the long post. Thank you for reading, and good luck with your goals :)

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Learned about alcohol addiction in med school today, and realized how problematic my relationship with food has been

We have these classes in med school on doctoring skills - speaking to patients, counseling patients, etc. and today we covered alcohol abuse.

We started off by reflecting on the reading material we had for the week, and one student spoke up about an alcohol abuse screening questionnaire (the AUDIT-C). He said that he was surprised that the questions focus only on the number/volume of drinks a person has, rather than how the alcohol is affecting their lives. For example, someone who has a glass of wine with dinner will trigger the screen, but someone who gets blackout drunk after critical life events might slip under the radar because it happens infrequently.

He said "I thought that alcohol addiction means that you crave alcohol - you think about alcohol, and it's almost physically impossible for you to stop or say no to a drink"

I go home and start my daily battle with food where once I start eating, it's like I can never stop. I'm sitting at my table after overeating, hating myself and wishing I didn't just eat everything I did... and holy shit I've just realized that I am literally exhibiting addictive behavior.

It sounds stupid that I haven't realized this before, now that I'm typing this out. I guess I've struggled with food for so long (I remember sneaking downstairs to steal food from the fridge when I was in like, 5th grade) that I've lost some perspective on what's normal.

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Food as Fun

I’ve seen a lot of posts about emotional eating and using food as a reward, but I don’t think that’s exactly what I struggle with. It’s not so much the, “Food is my friend,” thing as it is a way to celebrate an occasion or make an otherwise uneventful event feel more festive and special? If that makes any sense? For example getting a pizza on a Friday night in makes it feel more like a Friday night than having a normal balanced weekday dinner.

I think cutting out drinking lately, which is partly for the weight loss effort, has actually made this even more of an issue for me.

I know the obvious suggestion is going to be to make something more interesting for a Friday night dinner that’s still healthy, but I’m more interested in actually changing my mindset somehow.

Does anyone relate to what I’m talking about? Any advice on how to overcome it? I think it’s partly that I like making things more memorable and interesting for everyone and it feels less eventful to just sit with nothing. I’ve been at this for a while but maybe it still just takes getting used to?

I would love to just feel satisfied with the event and my family and friends and leave it at that!

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[SCV] I went to Yoga twice this week!

My parents were obsessed with my weight when I was a kid. They monitored all of my eating, they would tell my friends and their parents what they were allowed to feed me, and they would punish me whenever I didn't lose weight. Because of this, I ended up rebelling once I turned 18 by getting fatter. Not totally obese, but definitely fatter. I was so afraid that candy and junkfood wouldn't be available to me whenever I wanted that I would hide it by my bed and binge eat until I got sick and then starve myself for two days to make up for it.

This unhealthy lifestyle contributed to major health complications, and I ended up having severe hormonal issues and seizures. Because of this, my anxiety got worse and I just kept bingeing.

At my worst, I was 5'1 and 165lbs. When I felt my fat folds rub on each other while walking, I knew I needed to do something. But I still can't calorie count. When I do, I feel restricted and like I don't have control, and I will binge.

So, instead, I started just looking at what the calories were in a suggested serving of food. After doing that, I would choose to not eat that food or choose to only eat the exact serving. I still didn't track how much I ate, but really focused on portion control and not eating until I was full. By doing this, I lost 20lbs.

I've been hovering at 142lbs-145lbs, but I'm still not ready to track my food. I know that is my ultimate binge trigger, and someday I intend to beat it, but for now I am taking steps in seeing my health as my form of control. So, this lead me to start taking yoga classes.

I went on Tuesday and felt amazing. Then, yesterday, I was in full body pain. I still ended up walking 6 miles, but by the time I went to bed it was excruciating! Still, I knew I promised myself I'd go to yoga today, and I did.

It was exhausting! My whole body hurt, and I was dripping sweat, but it felt SO GOOD to take control of my health and do something good for me that was also challenging!

I'm super sore and I know tomorrow's yoga is going to suck, but I'm taking the weekend off from any yoga so the least I can do for myself is commit to taking this class. I'm going to continue going 3x a week until it becomes a habit, and then I'll increase to 5x a week. And I'm excited! I haven't been able to feel positive about weight loss and health before in my life, it was always a punishment. But I'm getting older, and I need to care about this stuff. I'm just so glad I've been able to make this much progress and I can't wait to lose another 20lbs!

TLDR: Lazy chubby girl is being less lazy and is sharing this on here to make sure she doesn't give up on herself and bail on her yoga class tomorrow!

EDIT: I am so sorry I miswrote NSV! I even was saying to myself "Non Scale Victory" as I typed it so don't ask me why I couldn't figure out words!

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Tired of living like this - looking for help.

I've had a shitty week and there are a million things in my life I'm not happy with, but this is the one I'm starting with. I DON'T WANT TO GO THROUGH ANOTHER YEAR FEELING LIKE THIS. PLEASE HELP!

Some background: I'm 5'10", 32yrs, male, 275lbs. I lost a lot of weight when I was around 20 - went from 303 to 164 in about a year and a half. I felt so IN CONTROL then, but the weight has come back and I can't seem to do anything about it. I don't know if my body has changed or I just don't remember how I did it the first time well enough, or what. But the best I can seem to do is hold steady until something throws me off, then I gain a few pounds and that's the new floor.

So I'm reaching out to the community here for some crowdsourced encouragement and rules for the road. Thoughts on the following statements:

(1) If I maintain my calories to 1500 a day, I should lose weight. Right?

(2) I can budget those calories out over the course of a few days - so that I'm having Maybe 2000 one day and 1250 the next two days. Is that right? I'm trying to figure out how to do this without limiting myself too much in social situations because I just moved to a new city and I'm feeling socially isolated right now.

Any other thoughts? Things that have helped folks here? I know that the name of the game is slow and steady - but I also feel like I need to see some success soon to keep me moving because I'm just feeling so discouraged right now.

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Goal Weight Baby!!! 280 to 165!!! 3 Year Journey

http://imgur.com/a/abi1mqh

Hard, Consistent work pays off... I feel x1000 better, life feels like it actually has a purpose again and I can thank weightloss for a lot of that.

Cico is 100% the key to success, other plans might help you keep under your TDEE ,but the absolute truth is just count your calories and the weight will come off.

It is very simple in theroy ,but very hard to execute. But everyone who sees these know to just keep fighting and winning battles and you will ultimately win the war with your weight.

Tips that helped me the most Frozen Fruit- Can eat a pound of it and it tastes like dessert

Water Flavor Enhancers- Sometimes water is boring and this is a great 0 cal fix to help it

No liquid Calories- its just to much. It's a lot of peoples first thing to cut out and there is a reason.

A mindset of I'm in this for life- You can't (imo) change your weight for years to come without thinking you are trying to change your life forever, not just I'm going to lose this weight and then eat however much I want.

Exercise is Not Needed- This is also always preached and is so true, you can sit on your ass all day and lose all the weight you have, I do recommend it though. After a while it will feel real good to do some kind of exercise.

Edit: 6'2 19 years old

Went from wearing size 40 pants to 30 and from XL Shirts to Smalls

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From size 18 to a 12! Haven’t been this size since high school!

So four the last six months or so I’ve been sticking to CICO. Very little exercise since both of my jobs keep me on my feet and active. For the longest time I felt like I wasn’t doing enough. For a few weeks id be at about 1500 calories. Then getting frustrated with no result is cut back to 1200 which just wasn’t sustainable so I’d eventually binge. Then hate myself. Then start all over. I really felt like I wasn’t getting anywhere at all.

Then about a month ago one of my coworkers commented on my weight... in a good way. He told me I looked thin, that my face and body both looked good. I didn’t think a whole lot of it, honestly. Just figured he was seeing me without glasses for the first time in a while. But then I went shopping with my sister for the first time in months. I tried on a pair of jeans in the size I normally wear and they were HUGE. (The last few month have mainly been yoga pants or sweats lol). Tried the next size down, too big, finally another size down and they fit like a glove!

Now, finally wearing clothes that fit me, I’ve noticed just how big my other clothes were on me! And compliments are coming out of the woodwork. I just went shopping with my friend and the whole time she kept commenting on how good I look! And now I’m small enough to shop in regular stores and not plus size places. My wallet is hurting but dammit I’m so happy! Here’s to the next six months of hard work!

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NSV: I hit 100 miles walked for January today. Feels really good.

I've been overweight for most of my life. I graduated highschool in 2012 at 364 pounds. I've steadily creeped up over the years and I really don't know what my highest was but it's safe to assume that it was over 450 pounds. Walking is my escape, it's my way to get out, it's something I can control. It's my favorite way to burn extra calories as I've never fallen in love with weight lifting even though countless of people have suggested it's the better way to lose weight than cardio.

My goal for the year is to do over 1000 miles this year and I'm off to a good start with that.

I walk 4 miles a day Monday through Friday and whatever I feel like on the weekends. I had to do 10 miles these last two days to reach it.

Here's a picture for reference: http://imgur.com/gallery/KYYDstC

In 2016-17 I lost about 60 pounds by walking a ton and eating better. 2018 was very difficult for me in all aspects of life and needless to say I stopped exercising and gained all my weight back and then some. Going into this year I said enough was enough and that regardless of how I felt or how things are you're going to take care of yourself for once.

I started the new years around 442 pounds and now I'm at 427 pounds. Counting my calories, and walking is all I've done. I use a Fitbit zip that clips on my shorts and it tracks my steps and distance for the day. I use the Fitbit app to count my calories as I don't really trust MFP any longer.

Can't wait to keep it going all year long and to put the focus on myself for once. I know that if I stay consistent with this that only good things can come of it.

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Lost more than I thought...

I started keto on the 1st of January. Not strict keto as I have had a few cheat meals here and there.

I knew I had lost some weight but I didn’t think much as I have been so swollen from the disgusting heat we have had.

But..... I have lost 4.3kgs (9.48 pounds).

I am so proud of myself! I am definitely on the right track to lose a decent amount of weight before my dream holiday in September.

There were times when I didn’t feel like I was getting anywhere but you can surprise yourself. So everyone who is just starting out - stick with it! I know I will be :)

(I made a weight loss calendar but I have no idea how to link it)

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NSV - I got approved for surgery!

This is the post I’ve been waiting to make since I joined this sub. I had one goal since starting this journey and I hit that goal today thanks to the help of r/loseit

About 18 months ago I was diagnosed with gallstones. Super duper painful, but I was newly pregnant at the time so they couldn’t do anything, just arranged for me to meet with a surgeon about gallbladder removal a few months after the baby was born. I was RELIEVED because I had been in pain for ~7 years at this point, had been tested for everything under the sun (except gallstones, apparently), eventually being told the pain was caused by “anxiety” and referred to the mental health team. So finally finding out what the problem was and being told there was a solution was awesome. At the time I was diagnosed I weighed 330lbs and had a BMI of 55.

Exactly a year ago I rocked up to my appointment with the surgeon, I’d had the baby and was excited and ready to get this awful organ out of me. And... the surgeon said no. I was too big and surgery would be too much of a risk. I had already lost some weight at this point due to being unable to eat fatty foods (but I could still smash carbs like a boss, so I hadn’t lost that much). They didn’t even weigh me at the appointment if I recall, just refused me on sight. He told me I had to get my BMI down to 35 before he’d consider me for surgery.

I sobbed for days. I thought losing that much weight was impossible for me. I’ve always been big, and I mean always. I was a fat baby, a fat toddler, the fat kid in school, and I just kept getting bigger. I’d tried bullshit diets in the past that I never stuck to and blamed everything else, before coming across the whole HAES crap on insta and deciding to stay fat because I thought that’s just where I was meant to be. So I refused to listen to the surgeon, went right out to the desk and made another appointment. Of course I got refused again. Undeterred, I got myself referred to a different hospital, the surgeon there said exactly the same thing. By this point I realised I was relieved when I walked out. I HAD to face up to this now, staying fat was no longer an option.

This sub showed up in my suggested subs around that time (maybe Reddit is listening idk) and the way everyone here spoke so matter-of-factly about weight loss and CICO finally made me realise that there’s no mystery to it, there’s no magic, it’s simple science. Put in less than you use. It’s not like that was new information but seeing it here and seeing it work just made everything click for me. I downloaded MFP and I took it seriously for the first time ever, not like the silly weight loss clubs I’d done before, just eating til I hit my calorie limit then stopping. Not treating every fleeting craving like hunger. Why had it never occurred to me before that I can say no to myself?

Shortly after I started, I found out I was pregnant again. God could that ever have come at a worse time. I was so poorly with my gallbladder I ended up in hospital for a while, but even from my hospital bed I was still logging my meals. I’d started and I wasn’t giving up for anything. I saw a dietitian and carried on losing weight throughout the pregnancy. I had the baby five weeks ago, and today was my consultation for surgery.

I knew what my BMI was going in, my weight today is 203lbs making my BMI 34.6 according to NHS calculations. I’d done it. I was still half expecting to be turned away and told I need to lose more weight, I am afterall still very much in the obese category, and I would’ve been ok with that since I know that I can do it now. However, my weight wasn’t even brought up at the appointment! He did an exam, pulled out a referral form and asked if I’m happy to go ahead. I could’ve cried!

Now, I may still hit a wall at pre-op since I’ve had other health issues recently that made the consultant very hesitant to put me on the list. So the likelihood of surgery actually happening soon may be slim, but right now I don’t care. I had one goal and I achieved it, and it may be my proudest moment. I still have a lot of weight to lose before I get to a healthy BMI but I’m prepared to get there, and I know I will. Thank you to this sub!!

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30 Day Accountability Challenge - January Wrap Up!

Hello losers,

Last day of January 2019. Time to reflect on the month as a whole! Let's hear it all, the good, bad & ugly!

Reminder: Sign up post is up for next month: https://redd.it/al5t6k

Weight by end of the month 275 - 273: Started the month at 281.8, 283 trend weight. This morning, 273, trend weight 274.8. Delta of -8.8, -8.2 on trend weight. I'm happy with this especially considering the number of maintenance/indulgence days I took this month.

1500 ish calories a day (net): I took more maintenance days than usual. I think I can do better next month but I'm not unhappy with my results. 19/25

Exercise 5 days a week: Habitual. I need to find new workouts to be doing so I don't get bored. All my stuff is at home fitness (I have a decent kit though) or dog park. It maybe time to start using the apartment fitness center & incorporating more strength building stuff. As the deficit from CI starts to get lower, the intensity of my workouts will need to increase, which is something I need to be mindful of in the next few months. 23/31 days.

Self-care journaling once a week & love journals once a month: I did good work at self care journaling but I didn't find time for love journals. Need to do better with this one. 5/5 weeks.

Self-care treat once a week: I'm good at this even though it's still tough, over a year & a hundred plus pounds down, to not use food as a reward. 5/5 weeks.

Do a sketch prompt everyday: I did pretty well at this one. I like it as a way to get away from screens & unplug a bit. It's a different head space than journaling & I want to keep it up & work my way towards being okay at it haha. Then maybe I'll share some sketches. 30/31.

Tell us all about your month, progress & if your goals need tweaking!

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I just banned myself from eating in my car thanks to that "wake up calls" thread. Thanks!

That "what was your wakeup call that you didn't heed" post is an intense one, guys. I'm glad we're talking about what, looking back, we wished we had noticed and acted upon.

It's also a really useful discussion for identifying patterns of behavior that get us into trouble NOW, when seen thru the lens of others who did the same thing.

In my case, I noticed how many people talked about embarrassing moments when they ate a bunch of calories in their car - whether it be from multiple sources, in secret, out of stress, out of depression, or just absentmindedly between meals.

Having read thru these comments and examined my life, I realized: there is literally zero reason for me to ever eat in my car. Yet I do. Often. And it's never a good choice, it's always an impulsive choice, and I have done it intermittently for so long that it has become a pattern. it's not every day that I do it but, now, a part of my brain reflexively says "what's for eats?" as soon as I'm done and about to head home. I've trained myself like a dog to expect a treat in the car.

Not only is this evidenced by my body - it's also evidenced by my car! My poor car isn't wrecked, but there is definitely a crumpled fast food bag in it, or a partial bag of chips or cookies, at any given time. I'm sure there's a French fry or 3 under my seat. No more! I'm done eating in my car.

So, thanks, everyone, for turning your missed wakeup calls into a fresh one for me. sharing what you should have noticed caused me to notice something myself, and the general sentiment of the thread inspired me to act on it!

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Pro tip: keep your fat clothes for potential polar vorticies

So as many of you probably know, its been really f*cking cold in the midwest. As a result, we have had to really bundle up to not die after being outside for 10 minutes. (P.S. - I hope everyone going through this polar vortex is staying warm and safe!)

I recently decluttered a lot of my belonging, but I did decide to keep a few clothes that no longer fit me, and I am so glad I did. -30 degrees ain't got nothin' on me!

Need more layers of pants? Easy! Just throw your fat jeans over a few layers of leggings and your good!

Need more layers on top? Easy! Just put your old winter coat on top of your current one - TWO COATS!

Did I look ridiculous and like the little brother from A Christmas Story? You bet - but I was warm.

Keeping old clothes not only serves as a NSV, but it also has some utility sometimes!

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How do you avoid a binge? Eating disorder trigger warning.

I have been on a binge, and self loathing since a failed weight loss attempt in October. Recovering anorexic and bulimic. I am 5'2 and 227lbs now.

When I say failed weight loss attempt, I did lose 25 lb but it came off so slow. Over the course of months. The difficult thing is that when I was anorexic, weight would come off 10 lb a week. How do you cope with losing weight slowly after recovering from an eating disorder which caused Quick Weight Loss? I have pretty much stopped starving myself on account of having been pregnant three times and nursing three times, currently still nursing my last one. I can't starve myself and keep up my milk supply but I know I would do it if I wasn't nursing..

I haven't stopped binging and I try to avoid purging although over every once in a while I slip. I just feel like I have this overwhelming desire to binge that I cannot control. I lose control of my hands and my mouth and my legs take me to the fridge and I eat, and I eat, and I eat, and I eat. The whole time I am euphoric and hating myself at the same time. What is something you have done that has actually helped you avoid binging?

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Dealing with the guilt from a “binge”

5ft4 female, 19, 160lbs.

I’ve been making good choices recently and have been keeping it up solidly for a little while. I’ve been getting more and more urges every day and today I cracked. Before that I had a healthy lunch of 490 calories and planned to have a 600 calorie dinner but on the way home I had a sudden crazy craving for chocolate. I have always struggled with having far too much chocolate and other sweets at once and the urge has finally come back

I bought two large sharing sized bars and ate one (700ish cals on its own) then spurred by cravings from eating so much sweet stuff and hunger I made an extra large portion of spaghetti with generous sauce (900, maybe 1000 calories) and I have already had a 450 calorie lunch. I’ve thrown away the other chocolate bar, unwrapped into the bin so I won’t be tempted.

Even though this wasn’t a binge like I used to experience, it was so many calories in one day and I feel fucking awful. Approx 2200 when I only burn 1800 a day.

How do I redeem myself tomorrow? I’m tempted to just starve myself the whole day! I know I won’t gain fat from this one bad day but I’m terrified to see any kind of gain on the scales. I feel terrible. How do I deal with this?

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[SV] For the first time in years I weigh under 300. I cried when I saw the 299 on the scale this morning.

I distinctly remember several years ago, I told a guy I work with that I hit 300 pounds and was so disgusted with myself. Over the next few years I would go back and forth from 310 to 330. I would try to lose weight, then give up. In May, I peaked at 350 and a few months later I found out that I am going to die of a stroke soon if I don't change things.

I actually had to get my depression under control first. I would get depressed and just eat nonstop. I'm talking 3000+ calories at once. Then I would be depressed about gain weight and eat more. It's stupid but that was the cycle I was stuck in.

Several doctor's visits, a few prescriptions, a gym membership, and months of therapy and I'm feeling much better about life. Losing weight is relatively easy compared to undoing decades of self hatred, but I'm working on it every single day.

I have to force myself to be honest with my tracking, force myself to drink water instead of beer or soda, and force myself to the gym. Some days I lose. But I win more days than not.

Some of you may remember my recent post about how frustrated I was that I couldn't get below 300. The problem was astoundingly simple, I wasn't drinking enough water and mistook thirst for hunger. I started carrying water bottles with me everywhere and keep them in every room of my house, and that did the trick.

I have a doctor's appointment in two weeks. If I have fixed my health enough I won't have to take cholesterol medication. There's nothing wrong with taking it, I just really don't want to take another prescription. Fingers crossed.

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A few skinny people habits I want to adopt in the next few months.

  1. I watched my MIL eat the other day and I noticed how long it takes her to actually put a fork full of food in her mouth. She picks around her plate adding small bits of her food to her fork to get the “perfect bite.” When there is no more pieces on her plate that create a “perfect bite,” she stops eating. I’ve been trying this habit the past couple of days and not only does my food actually taste better, I am much more satisfied after a meal. This helps me not eat just to finish my plate (I normally don’t), I eat because I am hungry and the food is satisfying.

  2. My husband only eats when other people are eating. Even if he says he is hungry, he will wait until I am hungry to eat a meal. I have a very bad habit of eating when nobody is home because it means nobody can judge how much I’m eating (it’s a lot). When possible, I want to start eating only when other people are around.

  3. The skinny people in my life seem to either be too distracted to eat or they are only concentrated on eating. In a restaurant, the thinnest friends always seem to be the last to finish because they get too wrapped up in the conversation to eat. Food is less important than the social aspect of the meal. On the other hand, when I watch my husband eat breakfast, he is only focused on eating and nothing else. When I eat, it’s like I WANT a distraction because it’s easier to not pay attention and feel bad about the food I am eating. I want to stop watching TV, Netflix, Hulu while I eat and just focus on the food in front of me.

  4. This is a tough one, but most skinny people I know don’t have a “3 meal a day mindset.” If they have a big breakfast, they may not need lunch because they are still full. Right now, I could have breakfast at 11:30am and then eat lunch at 1pm just because in my mind it’s lunch time and I don’t want to miss an opportunity for a socially acceptable time to eat. I want to start asking myself before each meal/snack “am I really hungry or do I just want to eat?”

  5. Lastly, most of the skinny people in my life have an active lifestyle. This doesn’t always mean they do a lot of scheduled exercise. A lot of those people just always seem to be doing SOMETHING. I’ve always had an easier time losing weight in the summer and I have realized it’s because I am not so damn bored all the time (snow is an activity killer for me). When I’m bored, I eat. I want to try to keep myself moving or at least entertained most of the time. Maybe I’ll go to the gym, but maybe I will just go to the library and read a book. I just need to do something besides eat if I am not truly hungry.

Please share if you have any other tips!

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NSV: Went on a weekend getaway, ate at maintenance, lost 2 lb!

Sort of a combo NSV/SV, but the take home message is really the NSV part...

I live in the ridiculous midwest and I hate winter, so my partner and I went to Las Vegas for the weekend. We left Saturday morning and came home Tuesday afternoon, so it was three days in the land of food and drink and indulgence!

I have a history of over-restricting, but I've been sticking pretty closely to 1200 calories for the past seven months. I was freaking out when I got to Vegas because there are very few places with calorie counts, I didn't bring my food or personal scale, and I get worried when I don't have data. I was having a little panic attack and then I had an epiphany--the whole point of this lifestyle change is to be healthy and to be able to enjoy my life! If I'm on vacation, freaking out, then I'm not succeeding in that second part, right? So I guesstimated what I was eating, made the healthiest choice I could, and decided my goal was just to maintain.

I weighed 166.9 on Friday and had been bouncing around 166 for the whole week. Saturday, I ate/drank 1600 calories and walked 23k steps. Sunday, I ate/drank 1600 calories and walked 20k steps. Monday, ate 1300 calories and walked 25k steps. I flew home Tuesday and got on the scale this morning... 164.9 lb! And I had such a good time in Vegas, and now I feel like I might actually be able to do maintenance, because I can actually eat more without totally flipping out and binging.

I hope you all have an easier time "letting go" than I do, but if you're someone who stresses out about not having all of your data and tools available to you, remember what it is you're doing this for--to be able to live!

Pic from the High Roller LV, the first full length pic of myself in "normal" clothes where I'm not ashamed: https://imgur.com/a/v0zM1Fr

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Filthy casual study: how 🦈s affect water weight!

I wish I knew of an app that did this automatically (plotted cyclical data on the same chart as weight data so I could see trends at a glance) but I don't, so I did it myself. All I did was mark the first day of each cycle in red. Shark week lasts about a week for me. I've observed that I seem to fluctuate down just before and during the first few days, then it swings up hard only to fall back down again once it's over. I'll then typically flux upward again mid-cycle (post-ovulation, the luteal phase).

My TrendWeight chart seems to corroborate those observations. The gray line is actual weigh-ins and the red line is the trend. (Disregard December: I was out of town and didn't actually weigh, so those are estimated missing scale readings using linear interpolation.)

Anyway, every woman's different—feel free to share your own experiences and/or data!—but I wanted to share an illustration of how much my cycle affects my weight via water, particularly as someone who's maintaining. It's not just during "that time of the month," it definitely varies based on the other phases of the cycle as well.

While I'm here, shout-out to TrendWeight (trendweight.com) for being a very handy tool!

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Thanks for your concern but I have self control now.

It’s Girl Scout cookie time.

Mini background there are two separate bakeries that make GS cookies, meaning the ones you get in one state could take completely different in another. This happened to me when I moved from the south to the north. I didn’t think I could hate a thin mint until I tried the ones from the other bakery.

Thankfully with modern tech, you can order online directly from the bakery you want and ship them anyway to the US, so I purchased about $120 with of cookies from the bakery I wanted. They came in yesterday and i posted my haul.

Incomes the floods of texts, messages, comments; people judging me, saying that I should stay away to not ruin my process, or saying they avoid these like the plague so they don’t slip up.

I haven’t had real pasta in almost 2yrs (my biggest weakness) , I rarely drink a soda, after almost always drinking soda at dinner, and I went from having something sweet after every meal to eating a handful of grapes.

So thanks, but I have self control. I want these to last awhile, I want my progress to continue. I Know what running through a box of thin mint would do. Through the weight loss journey you learn what full is, what craving is and how to concur it and you learn self and portion control. I’m longer scared to have 20 boxes of cookies near me because I know I won’t rip through a box a day.

This community has taught me all that, not giving up on things you love but moderating them.

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Fit For Life: Week 5 Day 3

The techniques you’ve learned here with Katie, Nik and Amanda are building blocks for you to incorporate into your routine in a way that works for you.

The post Fit For Life: Week 5 Day 3 appeared first on Under Armour.

source https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/watch/fit-for-life-week-5-day-3/



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I’ve lost 186lbs over the last 361 days!

I started my weight loss journey at 405lbs on Feb 5, 2018. Over the last year I have not had a cheat day, meal, or bite and have been grinding at the gym daily in an effort to completely take my life back from obesity! I recently started sharing my journey with others in hopes to spark change in those seeking it! I want to let people know that if I can do it clearly anyone can do it!

My diet was the key to my success. You can’t outwork a bad diet! I focused on 3 main things!

  1. Reduce calories to 1500- calories are king! I focused on tracking my calories daily to the T! If I couldn’t track it I didn’t eat it!

  2. I focused on my macros - I my goals were 40% protein, 30% carbs, and 30% fats. To do this I focused on lean meats, protein shakes, cheese, eggs, and Greek yogurt

  3. I avoided all added sugars - after looking at calories i would immediately look at sugar content! Sugar makes people fat not fat content! I even tried avoiding artificial sweeteners as well as much as possible!

Once I had my diet plan in place weight started dropping fast! This helped motivate me to keep going and start exercising!

Towards the end of May I got a gym membership and haven’t looked back since! I am currently down to 219LBS and looking to get right at 200lbs.

Just yesterday Men’s Health shared my story as part of their January transformations series. If you care to hear more about my journey and see some before and afters the link is below!

If you are currently trying to lose weight keep going! Trust In your process and ultimately Train your mind and your body will follow!

Take care!

Men’s Health

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It's 10 a.m. and I've blown it

f 48, 5 ft 2, sw 321, cw 304, gw 150.

I've been really on target since the week after New Year's. I am a super fat woman so my goals were pretty small compared to most of you - carbs under 100, calories under 1400, cook most meals, and eat between 12-8. I can't believe how much I've cooked, considering that's not my favorite thing.

But last night I just had a really bad night and woke up starving and ate mozzarella sticks for breakfast. Now I've blown 800 calories, 60 carbs and 50 g of fat. I feel awful.

I'll get back on it now, but I'm just so depressed. I hate that food is my go to.

(Also, I have a crappy disease where I can't walk very far, so it's not like I can go run it off)

Suggestions welcome: https://www.myfitnesspal.com/profile/wishfuldancer1970

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Today is my birthday and I’m entering my 30s in the 150s!

Today is my 30th birthday and I’ve had a goal of being below 160 for my bday since I started (really) losing weight in June - and I did it!!!! Stepped on the scale this morning and am 159.2 - down 25 lbs from June. I’m also getting married in July and want to be 145-150 (but need to know what size I’ll be in order to plan my dress) so my birthday was a big milestone for me to be on track for that as well.

I’m just excited and wanted to share. 25lbs over 7 months isn’t that much, but I have been slow and steady and consistent. Eating real food (no diet food), focusing on low carb and low low sugar (but ok with occasional brown rice, quinoa, or even a bit of white bread), and letting myself have two bites of a dessert or treat I wanted.

I started weekly therapy in August and I really think that was the secret ingredient. My goal was to feel happy and healthy, and the two are so interconnected!! I also decided that for January 2019 I would cut out alcohol and commit to daily yoga (just 20 mins a day with YouTube yoga videos) to help me push through to my 150-something goal. No drinking was definitely healthy (the calories you save!) but I’m so excited to have a nice wine with dinner tonight! The biggest change has been the yoga though - I’m going to try to continue the daily practice for a year!!l

Yay for physical and emotional health!!

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Nice Suprises getting ready in the morning

I just realized after years of gaining weight and having the ritual morning thought of “ok, what can I still fit in” or “thank god I fit in this still” knowing my eating habits were out of control and I was only going to continue gaining weight until I only had one or two options in my closet. That was actually my deciding factor in starting to lose weight. Besides the millions of other reasons, it was financial. I didn’t want to buy a whole new wardrobe in the next sizes up. Clothes are expensive and they are like a commitment to a lifestyle that I hated. Fast forward a year of IF, CICO, Yoga and cardio and I am finally at the point where I can wear 50% of my closet again and every morning it’s “omg yes!! I can wear this again!” And it’s a nice little surprise every time. I promised myself no new clothes till I’m at my goal weight and I’m excited for that day, but losing weight is like mini shopping almost 😂 mini victories

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We are back back to our Pre-Pregnancy Weight!

My wife and I had our first child in March of 2018. He is an absolutely amazing joy to us, and I can't imagine our lives without the little guy around, smiling and babbling. You never truly realize how much you can love a little one until you have one of your own! But I digress.

During my wife's pregnancy, as expected, she gained some weight. While I still thought she was radiant and absolutely gorgeous, she kept calling herself "ugly" and "fat". Of course she wasn't! She was magnificently beautiful. However, to her, the numbers didn't lie. Though we both tried to be healthy, because of her cravings, and my giving into them (because who doesn't want a pizza instead of the salad you had meal-planned?!), we both gained weight. I, myself, gained about 15 pounds during the pregnancy, which I was surprised by. However, this sympathy weight gain is actually pretty common!

When our little guy finally came, we were both so ecstatic. However, we started to realize that we didn't have the spring in our step we had before he came along. We couldn't chase him around as easily as we had hoped. We both had our pregnancy weight still on us. And boy, was it taking a toll on us mentally and physically.

Que me finding this sub, as well as r/EatCheapAndHealthy.

My wife and I began using tips, tricks, and recipes found on these subs. We began taking turns working out while our little one was napping, or early in the morning, or late at night. She prefers the elliptical, while I am more of a treadmill kind of guy. Anyway, we started on our road to feeling better, not just for ourselves, but so we can be the best we can be for our little guy. We started working on eating healthier, with the help of apps such as MyFitnessPal, and being more conscious of what we ate and when we ate it. Slowly the pounds started falling, and the waists started thinning.

It took us time. We weren't always good, and sometimes we cheated by making brownies because the little guy had a bad night and we needed a pick-me-up. We had our ups and downs...but this past week we both reached our pre-pregnancy weights! It was an amazing feeling, one that we are both incredibly proud of. Not only have we lost weight, but we have gained muscle from working out. Even though our little one is bigger, it is just as easy to pick him up, carry him around, and play with him as when he was little. And here is where we have what makes us want to keep it up: our baby boy. We want to continue to be able to lift him and carry him and run around with him, even as he continues to grow and gain weight.

Our little guy is the reason we started losing weight. Because of this community, your inspiration, and our dedication, we made it! And our little guy is the reason we will keep it up. To make sure we are healthy and around for him in every single way.

If we can do it, so can you. Find your "why". With a big enough "why", you can find a "how". And know that we are ALL here to help you in your journey!

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Treadmill/Elliptical/Exercycle Pushers: Visit /r/walking and Check Out the Walking Tour Videos

On /r/walking, several times a week someone posts walking tours of wonderful places around the world. Picture someone walking around historic Rome with a GoPro strapped to their head.

The tours range from 20 minutes to an hour and usually include the ambient noise, so you can get a better feel of the place. It's the perfect audio and visual to complement your workout.

Posters /u/JetSetMusic and /u/ikejohn79 post many of these. You can also search Walking Tour on YouTube for many others!

Along those same lines, YouTube has some nice videos from the front of trains. Want an HIIT workout? Try this one and go fast when the train is moving and slow when the train is stopped.

♂55 5'11/179㎝ SW:298℔/135㎏ CW:183℔/83㎏ [3Y AMA], [1Y recap] MFP+🚶🏋+TOPS

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[SV] My journey from chronic obesity to taking back control of my life

(Long time lurker but first time poster so please go easy on me!)

I am a 25M 5'9" SW:221 CW:171 GW:166 I work in non-profit and homeless advocacy.

I was overweight/borderline obese and chronically depressed, low energy, sweaty, and self conscious from ages 13 to 22 before deciding to make a change.

I want to open by saying that I am not a role model.

Ya’ll’s positive attitude and progress pics are what have kept me going. I don’t look nearly as good as a lot of the people in this sub so I can’t tell you how to get perfect abs and a huge chest because I don’t have perfect abs and a huge chest. My journey hasn’t been about looking like a fitness model. My journey has been about striving everyday to improve my emotional and mental health and using fitness and nutrition as a vehicle to get there.

I have played sports my entire life so I have always assumed that I knew what good nutrition and exercise looked like. This is why it has always been extra frustrusting looking around a locker room and not understanding why my body looked different from all the other guys doing the same workouts I was. I tried just about every diet or exercise life hack I could find and never achieved any long-term sustainable results.

3 years ago I found myself in a really dark place. I was working too many hours, at a job I hated, for a company I didn’t believe in and progressively I found myself neglecting the important relationships in my life and feeling deeply depressed more often than I didn’t.

This realization settled in all at once when I vomited after trying to attempt to jog a mile on the treadmill.

I decided in that moment dry heaving at my office gym that I wasn’t going to allow my life to continue spiraling down the path I was going. The next day, I walked into my office, put in my two weeks’ notice, went home and bought a one way ticket to Madrid with every last penny in my savings account (I live in Texas). From there, without any training or previous hiking/camping experience, I backpacked 192 miles on foot from Leon to Santiago, Spain along the Camino de Santiago trail.

When I came home, I made the promise to myself that I’d never return to being the person I was before I left.

During the period of the 2.5 weeks I spent backpacking, I hiked an average of 15 miles a day while consuming what was likely more calories and fat than I ever have in my life and still came home having lost 11 lbs. This experience entirely altered the way that I looked at food and health.

While I was in Spain, my eating habits could not have been more different from the traditional “Western Diet.” I subsisted on primarily bread, tons of red meat and animal fat, a good measure of wine, and whatever fruits or berries I could find growing along the trail. I was eating the way the locals in the small villages I passed through ate. The food I consumed was simple, fresh, and produced almost exclusively within a 50 mile radius of where I was eating it. This simplicity has been the foundation of my current nutrition regimen. The only foods I actively avoid today are those that are heavily processed or high in sugar. And I eat local and flexitarian as often as I can. Aside from that, when I do crave a cheat meal whether it’s chicken wings or chocolate cake, I indulge! The difference is that now, I earn it by always cooking and preparing it myself.

Everyone’s path is different. For me, good fitness and nutrition has been about avoiding extremes of any kind, positive or negative, in exercise and diet. What I mean by this is that I’ve tried Keto diets, cutting out carbs, intermittent fasting, etc. and, to be fair, some of them gave me incredible weight loss results. The problem was that none of them were sustainable in the long term because they forced me to constantly monitor and sometimes physically weigh everything that went into my body. This realization to strive for “sustainability” as opposed to immediate results was the key to success for me personally in maintaining my lifestyle over a period of years as opposed to weeks or months.

My success in long-term diet maintenance can be simplified down to two key principles I learned from the writing of Food Journalist Michael Polan; “eat (real) food, not too much, mostly plants” and “everything in moderation, including moderation.”

My success for long-term fitness maintenance comes down to two simple rules I made for myself; make exercise the first thing I do in the morning and work-out in whatever way will get me moving based on my motivation that day.

Know yourself. I’m lazy! I know that. So by waking up at 5:15AM and going to the gym before work, I know that when 5PM hits I get to go home and play video games :)

If I were to offer one piece of advice to anyone getting started it would be to follow the “work-out in whatever way will get you moving” principle.

I never used to feel comfortable in a proper gym because I was always so intimidated by the yogeys, crossfitters, and gym rats. Everyone is different so it’s critical to make the gym work for you, not the other way around. For me personally, running, swimming, cycling and most other forms of traditional cardio are miserable chores. So instead, I chose to play racquetball and rock climb at a bouldering gym (for those that haven’t tried it, bouldering gyms are amazing; basically jungle gyms for adults with an incredibly supportive community) 3 days a week to make sure that I’m getting my heart rate up in a way that’s constructive but more importantly, enjoyable for me.

My greatest obstacle has been in working to fundamentally change the way I look at food and exercise. I had to learn to cook healthy foods in creative ways that actually tasted good (keep your baked chicken to yourself lol) and find fitness outlets that made me excited about going to the gym.

Long term success is not about working out to compensate for bad behavior, it’s about slowly accommodating your lifestyle to incorporate activities and choices that will make you look better and (more importantly) feel better every day.

Weight loss changes your life in ways you wouldn’t imagine. In addition to losing the 50 lbs. so far, I am so much less tired throughout the day, I don’t snore anymore, my chronic sweating has subsided and my skin is so much healthier. More impactful and important than any of that though is the fact that for the first time in my life, I’m confident being the man I am. I don’t have perfect washboard abs but I know that every day I get fitter, healthier, and stronger. Nothing is more rewarding than that feeling.

Healthfulness is about emotional fortitude not crunches and cauliflower

Your goal is to live a life that you’re proud of in all regards. What that means in pounds lost or miles run is ancillary and it’s up to you.

I’m sorry that I don’t have any current pictures but here’s a comparison of me at my heaviest to me 6 months ago (219lbs on the left and 185 lbs on the right)

https://i.imgur.com/CBGEC93.jpg

Love you guys. Thanks for listening.

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I’ve spent a small fortune on new clothes thanks to this sub and couldn’t be happier.

I’ve lurked on this sub since 2017 I believe, and, like many of you, I’ve struggled with weight. I read about CICO on here and, for a laugh, I decided maybe to give that a go.

Well anyways, I did the MFP thing and I’m down 30 pounds with 20 more to go but seriously, I completely forgot about the need to, you know, buy clothes that actually fit my new me surprised Pikachu face.

Well I’ve dropped from an XXL down to a M (27 M, US) and nothing puts the journey into perspective better than going through all your favorite shirts and realizing “this used to be how big I was not too long ago.” So for that, thank you.

As an aside, it also feels great donating those old clothes to organizations that serve people in need and/or thrift shops. Definitely have had a few moments of temptation and keep that in mind as motivation.

Sorry for the rant, but seriously, CICO and MFP are a match made in heaven. Like many of you, I’m not that hardcore with my diet. I’ve incorporated more greens and whatnot, but I dig my BBQ as much as the next person!

Definitely strive to get fit!

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What are things you can do to stay regularly active when you dont have a regular schedule?

For one, I'm a bartender. I work usually at night and sleep in as I didnt get home until midnight-2am, but my schedule is almost never the same. I'll pick up morning when I'm short on cash, things like that. Thankfully where I work has some healthy options so I'm fine eating at work but try not too. My boyfriend who is one of those people who just doesnt gain weight, and he loves my home cooked meals, but hates fruit, hates most veggies, and just about anything that isnt meat, cheese, and potatoes.

My diet isnt regular and my availability weekly to work out isnt regular and I cant find a way to keep to a regimen with my inconsistent lifestyle.

Any tips to keep to my diet with a boyfriend who wont eat healthy and/or to keep on a workout plan when my schedule doesnt stay the same.

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Sweet Potato Black Bean Enchiladas

Enjoy this healthier spin on enchiladas when you’re craving Mexican cuisine, but still want to stay on track with your health goals.

The post Sweet Potato Black Bean Enchiladas appeared first on Under Armour.

source https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/watch/sweet-potato-black-bean-enchiladas/



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NSV: Had my heart broken, didn’t stress binge OR starve myself!

So on Friday of last week I walked in the front door from a family funeral to find that my boyfriend of 2.5 years had packed himself a bag and was leaving me without any warning or indication that he wasn’t happy with me. It was the biggest shock I’ve ever had in my entire life. I thought I was going to faint. The city we lived in is very expensive so this breakup means I can no longer live there either. So in an hour I lost my partner, my home, and my proximity to all my friends and the people I love. I turned 30 a month ago with a partner I loved, a home I had lovingly created with that person, and a beautiful future ahead. I’m now single and living in my parents spare bedroom while job hunting. Life, eh?

Normally when I’m dealt a bad thing, I either stress binge all kinds of crap or I lose my appetite entirely and can’t bring myself to eat. Neither is how I want to respond from now on.

One of the only sticking points in my relationship was my desire for a healthy lifestyle and his desire for it, but not the commitment to make that happen. He gained about 40lbs during our relationship. I put back on 10 after losing much more before we met. So I decided that the thing that was going to come out of this breakup was that I would make the progress I wanted to, because it’s the only thing he was in any way holding me back from. So I’ve made a clear effort every day to eat something and to eat well. I’ve been to my old yoga studio every day, and to an aerobics class last night.

The first 24 hours I had no appetite. None. But I forced myself to eat a banana, a salad, and make myself a smoothie. Every other day I’ve been able to eat two solid, healthy meals with small snacks when needed. I have been eating how I wanted to eat with him. I even got takeout yesterday and for the first time IN MY LIFE managed to make myself order something healthy and only eat until I was full, not eat the entire huge portion.

I’m hoping these habits can continue now, and that maybe the ex will see how well I’m doing when we meet up to discuss apartment things in a month or so and be inspired to do what he couldn’t before. But maybe he won’t, and that’s okay. I’ll keep going.

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Shocked at how much weight I've gained and just need to vent

Just getting this off my chest because I'm in tears right now.

I just weighed myself and am in total shock. I knew I gained weight last year when I went to urgent care mid-December and was fifteen pounds more than usual, but I've gained TEN pounds in the past month and I couldn't believe it. I quit drinking and count my calories and thought I was always slightly below maintenance so I'm in complete shock, but clearly I've been way off.

It's time to be more diligent and get a grip on this, like I should have ten pounds ago when I saw I gained weight. I've had a rough year and used food to cope and I absolutely need to address this toxic habit now.

Thanks for letting me vent. I'm so overwhelmed and angry with myself and just want to fast forward but I'm trying to accept the long and patient process.

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Anyone else backsliding? Let's stop...

35f, sw 224, cw 198, gw 150.

I've been doing a great and workable 1 lb lost per week since last june, mostly cico. But in the last month, I feel like I've been SO HUNGRY all the time, and think "fuck it, I want to feel full, I'm gonna eat what I want. Just tonight." But then I feel that way every day.

I'm no longer loosing weight. I'm gonna start gaining weight if I don't stop this. A few reasons I see:

  • emotional. I've been bummed. Life is a little hard sometimes. I think I need some Vit. D, I live in the pnw...Also, I'm giving in to the bunmed by being lazy around the house, instead of addressing it and going to the gym and doing my hobbies, which make me happy. Gotta get back to DOING more in a day.
  • the type of food I'm eating. Again, I'm being lazy and choosing easy things that do not keep me full. Gotta get back to having huge veggie portions. And meal prepping breakfast.
  • escapism. Similar to the "emotional" reason, instead of being brave I am avoiding thinking about the difficulties by playing games on my phone and smoking weed. As much as I pretend it doesn't, it takes all the time away from the things I would prefer to be doing. I also notice I'm not looking myself in the eye and stopping eating bad food before I start, like I was becoming able to do finally.

Anyone else backslide recently? I'm glad I'm catching it early, and I'm gonna try to drop this bullshit and get back to kicking ass :)

Thank you all for being there! This sub is helpful, thank you.

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CICO. When should I see results?

Hey there. I have about 15 pounds to lose and decided to do CICO and increase my exercise. I started tracking my CICO on December 31st.

I get between a 500 and 1000 cal deficit a day, but theres a little room for error as I'm not stressing over weighing my food or anything. I'm tracking using my Fitbit.

I also went from running 1 mile about 3x a week to running 3-4 miles per day. (I slowly increased distance over the last month).

I started at 128.5 lbs and dropped down to 125.0 within a couple weeks. Now I've been stuck between 125.0 and 125.5 for the last 2 weeks even though I am running longer than I ever have before and not increasing my calories, I've actually lowered them even further throughout the month.

I consume about 1300-1500 cals a day and burn between 2000-2300 (5ft 0in, female)

When should I expect to see further results? I weigh daily and I'm getting a little discouraged.

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After my a month of hard work, I’m worse off. Really bummed.

Brief as possible:

So I’ve been swimming 5 days a week and being relatively conscious of my diet before the new year. In January, I turned it all up.

I now swim 6 days a week, practice tai chi 2 days, and lift weights 4 days. I started intermittent fasting, have gone 90% vegetarian, and drink at least a gallon of water a day. Ive cut down my drinking to a couple drinks once a week from two pints of whiskey and a six pack.

So at my gym, they have an InBody machine that measures weight, fat, muscle, water etc. the last time I used it was August, when I was doing nothing for exercise and barely watching my diet at all.

Today, I take the measurements, and I’m worse off in every way. After a month of hard work, my body fat is up, muscle mass down, visceral fat unchanged. Wtf.

A month of hard work has left me worse off. I don’t know what to say. Do you? Any advice would be welcome.

EDIT: sorry I’m 32M 158 27%bodyfat

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Day 1? Starting your weight loss journey on Thursday, 31 January 2019? Start here!

Today is your Day 1?

Welcome to r/Loseit!

So you aren’t sure of how to start? Don’t worry! “How do I get started?” is our most asked question. r/Loseit has helped our users lose over 1,000,000 recorded pounds and these are the steps that we’ve found most useful for getting started.

Why you’re overweight

Our bodies are amazing (yes, yours too!). In order to survive before supermarkets, we had to be able to store energy to get us through lean times, we store this energy as adipose fat tissue. If you put more energy into your body than it needs, it stores it, for (potential) later use. When you put in less than it needs, it uses the stored energy. The more energy you have stored, the more overweight you are. The trick is to get your body to use the stored energy, which can only be done if you give it less energy than it needs, consistently.

Before You Start

The very first step is calculating your calorie needs. You can do that HERE. This will give you an approximation of your calorie needs for the day. The next step is to figure how quickly you want to lose the fat. One pound of fat is equal to 3500 calories. So to lose 1 pound of fat per week you will need to consume 500 calories less than your TDEE (daily calorie needs from the link above). 750 calories less will result in 1.5 pounds and 1000 calories is an aggressive 2 pounds per week.

Tracking

Here is where it begins to resemble work. The most efficient way to lose the weight you desire is to track your calorie intake. This has gotten much simpler over the years and today it can be done right from your smartphone or computer. r/loseit recommends an app like MyFitnessPal, Loseit! (unaffiliated), or Cronometer. Create an account and be honest with it about your current stats, activities, and goals. This is your tracker and no one else needs to see it so don’t cheat the numbers. You’ll find large user created databases that make logging and tracking your food and drinks easy with just the tap of the screen or the push of a button. We also highly recommend the use of a digital kitchen scale for accuracy. Knowing how much of what you're eating is more important than what you're eating. Why? This may explain it.

Creating Your Deficit

How do you create a deficit? This is up to you. r/loseit has a few recommendations but ultimately that decision is yours. There is no perfect diet for everyone. There is a perfect diet for you and you can create it. You can eat less of exactly what you eat now. If you like pizza you can have pizza. Have 2 slices instead of 4. You can try lower calorie replacements for calorie dense foods. Some of the communities favorites are cauliflower rice, zucchini noodles, spaghetti squash in place of their more calorie rich cousins. If it appeals to you an entire dietary change like Keto, Paleo, Vegetarian.

The most important thing to remember is that this selection of foods works for you. Sustainability is the key to long term weight management success. If you hate what you’re eating you won’t stick to it.

Exercise

Is NOT mandatory. You can lose fat and create a deficit through diet alone. There is no requirement of exercise to lose weight.

It has it’s own benefits though. You will burn extra calories. Exercise is shown to be beneficial to mental health and creates an endorphin rush as well. It makes people feel awesome and has been linked to higher rates of long term success when physical activity is included in lifestyle changes.

Crawl, Walk, Run

It can seem like one needs to make a 180 degree course correction to find success. That isn’t necessarily true. Many of our users find that creating small initial changes that build a foundation allows them to progress forward in even, sustained, increments.

Acceptance

You will struggle. We have all struggled. This is natural. There is no tip or trick to get through this though. We encourage you to recognize why you are struggling and forgive yourself for whatever reason that may be. If you overindulged at your last meal that is ok. You can resolve to make the next meal better.

Do not let the pursuit of perfect get in the way of progress. We don’t need perfect. We just want better.

Additional resources

Now you’re ready to do this. Here are more details, that may help you refine your plan.

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How to Boost DNA Repair with Produce

“In the light of strikingly consistent observations from many epidemiological [population-based] studies, there can be little doubt that the habitual consumption of diets high in fruits and vegetables helps to reduce the risk of development of degenerative diseases, including many types of cancers.” Not satisfied with merely telling people to eat their fruits and veggies, scientists want to know the mechanism. I discuss this topic in my Which Fruits and Vegetables Boost DNA Repair? video.

Not just vehicles for antioxidants, fruits and vegetables contain innumerable phytonutrients that can boost our detoxification enzymes, modulate gene expression, and even modulate DNA repair pathways. “Until fairly recently…it was generally assumed that functions as important as DNA repair were unlikely to be readily affected by nutrition,” but, if you compare identical twins to fraternal twins, only about half to three quarters of DNA repair function is genetically determined. We may be able to control the rest.

“It is estimated that, on average, there are 800 incidents of DNA damage [in our bodies] per hour,” which is about 19,000 hits to our DNA every day. What’s more, “that DNA damage can cause mutations and give rise to cancer, if not repaired.” Thankfully, “the regulation of [DNA] repair can be added to the list of biological processes that are influenced by what we eat—and, specifically, that this might constitute part of the explanation for the cancer-preventive effects of many plant-based foods.”

Any plants in particular? Nine fruits and vegetables were tested to find out which ones were better able to boost DNA repair: lemons, persimmons, strawberries, oranges, choy sum (which is like skinny bok choy), broccoli, celery, lettuce, and apples. Which ones made the cut? Lemons, persimmons, strawberries, broccoli, celery, and apples all conferred DNA protection at very low doses.

Lemons, for example, were found to cut DNA damage by about a third. Was it the vitamin C? No. Removing the vitamin C from the lemon extract did not remove the protective effect. However, if you first boiled the lemon for 30 minutes, the protective effect was lost.


If it’s not the vitamin C, what might it be? That’s the subject of my video Citrus Peels and Cancer: Zest for Life?

Surprised that the lemon benefit was abolished by cooking? Find out which vegetables it may be best to eat raw in Best Cooking Method.

What about cooked versus raw garlic? See my video Inhibiting Platelet Activation with Garlic and Onions.

For more on DNA protection and repair, see:

In health,
Michael Greger, M.D.

PS: If you haven’t yet, you can subscribe to my free videos here and watch my live, year-in-review presentations: