"The most important thing you can do to lose weight"
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Missed this the first time around...science FTW.6
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I like this post and I'm bumping it back to the top of the boards so that others can find it. Carry on.2
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Oh, dear, the last lady! I'm afraid I laughed at her before sighing at her denial.
You laugh. I want to track down a mad scientist to graft a second head onto her shoulder so I can whack them together. My fear of losing it with all of the people out there just like her is why I don't post more often.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0x-fkSYDtUY2 -
Yep. You can lie to yourself all you want, but the truth is right there on the scale.5
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Awesomeness!1
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My metabolism's fine ... I just Really love food5
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Very cool! Thanks!!
Yes, by learning, listening, watching, weighing I know I have a heroic metabolism... It's a miracle I don't weigh 600 lbs & have my own TLC show!
And the science here is pretty compelling. It should make people feel better, no? It reminds me a lot of the breastfeeding stats... When Britain was under strict embargo in WWII I believe the breastfeeding failure rate dropped to almost nil. Simply no other options.
But yes... I guess there will always be those who want something beyond their control to blame. And while basic physiognomy such as bone structure, muscle mass, and some female fat depositing will remain genetic absolutes being overweight is not!0 -
rainbowbow wrote: »Oooh! I love doubly labeled water studies! Here's a few other ones by BBC-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGLwzbvx4S4
OMG ...how did she form that conclusion from what she was told?
This video is so MFP worthy
She read in magazines about slow metabolism hindering weight loss...2 -
I measure my food by cups and spoons I guess I'm going to get a food scale tomorrow7
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I know I tend to underestimate a bit too when logging but I think I overestimate on others like the oil I cook in and put in marinades (where you aren't actually ingesting all of it) I think it comes out in the wash for me cause I'm losing just fine
The only thing I really "fib" about sometimes on here is my alcohol consumption. Forget to log that third glass of wine lol6 -
Bumping for visibility.1 -
I measure my food by cups and spoons I guess I'm going to get a food scale tomorrow
I just did the same this week. You're going to be so surprised with the first few things you weigh versus measure. Im still a little weepy about how much rice I had always been over eating because i packed it into a measuring cup telling myself it was just one serving. Ha! Brutal honesty with oneself is literally everything.7 -
Juniper3411 wrote: »I know I tend to underestimate a bit too when logging but I think I overestimate on others like the oil I cook in and put in marinades (where you aren't actually ingesting all of it) I think it comes out in the wash for me cause I'm losing just fine
The only thing I really "fib" about sometimes on here is my alcohol consumption. Forget to log that third glass of wine lol
Hahaha! I decided to avoid this problem by logging the whole bottle last time I drank. ... just in case!
*I did not actually drink the whole bottle alone, but it was funny to see that it could fit in my daily allotment!*10 -
diannethegeek wrote: »I like this post and I'm bumping it back to the top of the boards so that others can find it. Carry on.
pppwppq0 -
I have a question then. I zero a scale to my bowl. I add 1 cup of cereal. The weight is 3.4 oz. Should i log the weight or the amount?1
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shannon_in_love wrote: »I have a question then. I zero a scale to my bowl. I add 1 cup of cereal. The weight is 3.4 oz. Should i log the weight or the amount?
@shannon_in_love It's best to use food entries that are measured in grams. Cups are very inaccurate when it comes to non-liquid food. Kind regards.2 -
shannon_in_love wrote: »I have a question then. I zero a scale to my bowl. I add 1 cup of cereal. The weight is 3.4 oz. Should i log the weight or the amount?
The weight. Density of things is variable whereas the weight always relates to the calorie content.1 -
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So, how exactly did she managed to be off by so much?0
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Just a bump for the New Year.2 -
rainbowbow wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »Oooh! I love doubly labeled water studies! Here's a few other ones by BBC-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGLwzbvx4S4
OMG ...how did she form that conclusion from what she was told?
This video is so MFP worthy
Yep! Glad someone got some enjoyment out of it.
Yes thanks for posting! I had forgotten that 2nd video, it had been some years since I've seen it.
I know people who struggle from hypothyroidism. It's not a problem that I want. You have to be on a pill for the rest of your life. And then maybe if your BMR was 1200 before now it's 1400 or something. It still doesn't let you just eat what you want.
The first video reminds me a LOT of people I know. "I don't eat that much!"
For me personally, I can easily EASILY eat 3k calories on a 'normal' day and not feel like I'm overeating. That's like 1k above my maintenance per day. Three and a half days later and that's a pound I've put on. All from only 3 days of not watching (or caring) what I'm eating. I've noticed on these all-day binge fests I often forget certain things that I've eaten. So maybe I'd like 2200 calories only to think it over and realize I left off another 500 in snacks here and there. And I'm someone who has used MFP a lot and is educated on logging. I can't imagine how easy it is to forget and underestimate when you haven't logged and weighed food before.4 -
I had a total thyroidectomy years ago and hypothyroid - trust me taking a pill once a day is a blessing considering the alternative. Hypothyroidism does not have the dramatic impact many think it does and only reduces metabolism by a small degree. Nothing that logging cannot resolve.6
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You don't want to lose weight, you want to lose fat! Losing weight is easy, losing fat is much harder.3
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Hi Friends,
I joined MFP this year and have been logging my meals for the past 30 days. First off, I have to say that MFP is a life changer for me. I'm 6'1", 171 lbs, ~23 BMI and I never cared about what I eat, did not do much exercise and was having 4 packets of sugar every morning with my small coffee. Yes, 4 packets. In the last 30 days, my eating habits have vastly improved (replaced 4 slices of wheat bread breakfast + cream cheese with oatmeal, replaced heavy white rice dinners with salad and fruits etc.) and I have been exercising at least 5 days each week, sometimes 6. My goal is to sustain portion control and exercise and the hope is that if I did it right, I will lose weight.
Question - In the first two weeks since using MFP, I lose 1.5 lbs. Since then, no further weight loss. This in spite of reducing my daily calorie goal from 1900 to 1700 and sticking to the new goal. I have a food scale and I count almost every single thing I eat...down to honey and sugar. So I don't think I'm grossly underestimating the calories consumed. Also, I don't overestimate exercise calories because Apple Watch supposedly gives me far more accurate calorie burned compared to the NordicTrack Elliptical on which I run, which supposedly inflate the numbers. Not sure what else I can do at this point than to keep going at it and see what happens in the coming weeks.
Can you guys look at my diary and tell me if you spot anything that I can fix? My diary is public.
Thanks!1 -
lunchpack2sixpack wrote: »Hi Friends,
I joined MFP this year and have been logging my meals for the past 30 days. First off, I have to say that MFP is a life changer for me. I'm 6'1", 171 lbs, ~23 BMI and I never cared about what I eat, did not do much exercise and was having 4 packets of sugar every morning with my small coffee. Yes, 4 packets. In the last 30 days, my eating habits have vastly improved (replaced 4 slices of wheat bread breakfast + cream cheese with oatmeal, replaced heavy white rice dinners with salad and fruits etc.) and I have been exercising at least 5 days each week, sometimes 6. My goal is to sustain portion control and exercise and the hope is that if I did it right, I will lose weight.
Question - In the first two weeks since using MFP, I lose 1.5 lbs. Since then, no further weight loss. This in spite of reducing my daily calorie goal from 1900 to 1700 and sticking to the new goal. I have a food scale and I count almost every single thing I eat...down to honey and sugar. So I don't think I'm grossly underestimating the calories consumed. Also, I don't overestimate exercise calories because Apple Watch supposedly gives me far more accurate calorie burned compared to the NordicTrack Elliptical on which I run, which supposedly inflate the numbers. Not sure what else I can do at this point than to keep going at it and see what happens in the coming weeks.
Can you guys look at my diary and tell me if you spot anything that I can fix? My diary is public.
Thanks!
When you choose "homemade" or "generic" items from the database, you're making the (very big) assumption that the person who created that entry prepared the item the same way you (or the person who cooked yours) did. Example: when I make potato salad, I use a little bit of mayonnaise. When my aunt makes it, she uses TONS. If I created an entry for potato salad and my aunt chose that to log her meals, she could be consuming 100s of calories more than I would be. We are both eating the same amount of potato salad -- but our recipe is very different.
You can greatly improve the accuracy of your logging by not using "homemade" or "generic" entries. Do you prepare your own food or do you have access to the recipe used to prepare your food? If so, use the MFP recipe builder to build the recipe. It's a much better way to understand the calories you're consuming.3 -
janejellyroll wrote: »When you choose "homemade" or "generic" items from the database, you're making the (very big) assumption that the person who created that entry prepared the item the same way you (or the person who cooked yours) did. Example: when I make potato salad, I use a little bit of mayonnaise. When my aunt makes it, she uses TONS. If I created an entry for potato salad and my aunt chose that to log her meals, she could be consuming 100s of calories more than I would be. We are both eating the same amount of potato salad -- but our recipe is very different.
You can greatly improve the accuracy of your logging by not using "homemade" or "generic" entries. Do you prepare your own food or do you have access to the recipe used to prepare your food? If so, use the MFP recipe builder to build the recipe. It's a much better way to understand the calories you're consuming.
I love the recipe builder. I wish it had better organization and sorting though, and that we could add photographs of our own recipes!
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I must confess I've never used the recipe builder.
When logging a new meal, I just log all the ingredients, then when I have it next time, they all come up in my recent/favourites.2 -
Bumping! I love this documentary the thing is great info! Btw pls add me!2
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