Anyone Lost Over 30 and kept it off for more than 5 years, who doesn't work in the fitness industry

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Replies

  • mjc614900
    mjc614900 Posts: 31 Member
    I am a year and a half. 5'1. Age 64. Lost 25 pounds. I am now 130.

    Weighed 155 for over 15 years (Okay since I got up to 165 and was there for about ten years).
  • padi82
    padi82 Posts: 4 Member
    I listen to the Half-Size Me podcast. Heather Robertson has kept off 170 lbs. for 11-12 years now. She's not in the fitness or appearance industry, just shares her very common sense approach and it has ended the diet drama for me. I am steadily losing and it's not a struggle, and what I'm doing now to lose the weight I can do for the rest of my life to maintain the loss.
  • jhjenkins4fit
    jhjenkins4fit Posts: 1 Member
    CICO works.
    CICO is not what makes you successful at doing CICO.
    Effectiveness of CICO and its effect on the body are driven largely by hormones. (as are nearly all bodily functions).

    You can just do CICO or you can do it and add other elements to leverage its impact and success.
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,612 Member
    Took me about a year to lose 25#, kept it off for 13 years now. It's not quite the 30# you're looking for, but considering I've also been an avid weightlifter during that time and I know I've added muscle, I'm sure the actual fat loss was over 30#. I work at a sedentary desk job, which until recently included midnight shifts where snacking runs rampant just to stay awake. But there are snacks (chips and soda), and there are snacks (red pepper slices, ice water with caffeine pill).
  • blackjade64
    blackjade64 Posts: 1 Member
    90 pounds kept off for about 9 years, but for the past 4 I am gaining and losing the same 20 pounds. Probably should say 70 pounds off for 9 years. Food tracking, walking, occasional periods of doing yoga, lazy low carb.
  • AnnofB
    AnnofB Posts: 3,589 Member
    Yes. Heaviest weight: 183 lbs. Current weight: 124.2. In fact, this month makes it 10 years since I reached my goal. Up until I found MFP in 2012, I had lost weight but would regain and would try again. Many, many times. I think I owe my Pals (one in particular joined the same month I did all those years ago) a lot of gratitude for being so helpful and encouraging over the years.

    Never worked in the fitness industry. I've been retired for a while. I worked mostly in the communication industry.
  • lpina2mi
    lpina2mi Posts: 425 Member
    Not quite there--but I did stop wt gain creep and kept a small handful of pounds off before and through the pandemic via MPF & IF and just all-around-sensible healthy nutrition. Lost my exercise routine during the pandemic, but am putting it back into my weeks.
    Also back with MFP adding Lumen measurements to my macro tracking and IF and I have lost another 10lbs since Memorial weekend.

    I will need the remainder of year of mirror your success stories. --Congrats to You ALL
  • Btt2020
    Btt2020 Posts: 2 Member
    At three years and plus 30lbs off. Now recommitting to getting another 10ths off. I don’t work in the fitness industry.
  • Sarkoptesmilbe
    Sarkoptesmilbe Posts: 1 Member
    I'm 34 and weighed 120kg at my peak, around 12 years ago. I've been hovering around 85kg since then. Not in any field where weight or appearance is relevant.
  • lisaschamus
    lisaschamus Posts: 1 Member
    Lost 35 pounds over the course of four years and have kept it off for another 5 or so. I love movement - so that is part of what keeps my weight down.
  • KarmaKamen
    KarmaKamen Posts: 42 Member
    I'm still losing weight (body fat) and I've been working on my health for about 2 years now. I stopped tracking CICO so rigorously for the past few months, but I was able to maintain. That gives me confidence I can keep the weight off long term. I think it's pretty well known how easy it is to regain lost weight, but if that starts to happen you can catch yourself. We are not powerless. Even if you regain it all back, I don't think you really ever start from square one because you have started to learn what works for you and what doesn't. My friend is in that situation right now, but we are not giving up. :)
  • ayalowich
    ayalowich Posts: 242 Member
    edited August 2022
    I'm down 23 off of a high of 184 back in 2013. It's not 30 as you asked, but I never needed to lose that much since I'm a tick over 6' tall. But I am over 9 years and while I work out daily the last 2, I lost most of my weight while working in an office as a professional in the accounting and tax industry. I lost 18-20 in the first 5 months after starting in July 2013 and have been in maintenance for the most part since then.

    In 2020 I joined an indoor rowing group, and to stay in the Lightweight category I have to be < 165 so it's been more focused on my #'s since the rather than just how my clothes fit. But I'm pretty consistent about staying below that # and to be safe I prefer being 161-162 just in case I have a few big eating days (which is rare).

    MFP works. The calorie credits is so simple and a great motivator. I love my commitment to my daily workouts (I row 4-5 times a week and run 2-3). Good luck.

    Edit-just checked and am at 3330 days consecutive logging in. I never want to give up my streak even though I am semi-retired and closing in on an age I never thought I'd reach.
  • janalford1954
    janalford1954 Posts: 11 Member
    edited August 2022
    Yes, 82 lbs and it has been off 6 years. I'm retired but generally active (walking). MFP has worked for me with portion control, eating correctly, and tracking my food in the journal for 1012 days as of today. I would have more days but 3 times I forgot to record numerous days on several holidays over the years (oh well).

    I have gotten a girlfriend to join me in MFP. She is working on it and trying her best.
  • jacquesd
    jacquesd Posts: 3 Member
    edited August 2022
    I lost nearly 50 lbs in 2017-2018. I have gained about 15 lbs back and am working on trying to lose about 10 lbs. It hasn't been easy maintaining, but it hasn't been impossible either. As I age (I'm nearing 65), it seems harder to lose 5 pounds than it was and easier to gain. The struggle continues...Been logging here for nearly 10 years now,
  • lsandy4
    lsandy4 Posts: 8 Member
    I began my journey in 2014 at 230 pounds. I reached my initial goal weight of 150 at Christmas time of 2016. I lost another 5 pounds before Easter. I have maintained 145 +/- two or three pounds since by keeping up with my exercise and using my portion control devices (kitchen scale and measuring cups/spoons) on a regular basis. I have not missed a day of calorie posting since I began this quest. Having a heart attack in 2015 just cemented my resolve to not gain any of this back. As for a career, I have retired from being a Clinical Laboratory Scientist just over two years ago. So I wasn't in a fitness/beauty focused job. Good Luck on your personal journey.
  • fraklein
    fraklein Posts: 62 Member
    Yes, I lost 70 pounds in 2014 after being diagnosed with T2 diabetes. I slowly gained back nearly 30 pounds of it over a couple of years, but I'm still maintaining most of the loss. I get very little exercise due to joint problems. I was very physically active up until about ten years ago, mostly hiking and folk dancing, but don't enjoy them any more due to pain and the advice of my orthopedist.
  • Lolinloggen
    Lolinloggen Posts: 466 Member
    I was just talking to my friend and realised that I have been in maintenance for 6 years at least.
    I still log, though not as precise as when loosing. I walk a lot and have built muscle to help (lifting weights)
    I see it as that the weight loss journey helped me to learn how to balance the energy balance. I approach it still as if it is a bank balance in reverse. Never more in than out
  • rightoncommander
    rightoncommander Posts: 114 Member
    beabria wrote: »
    Thank you all for sharing these experiences! We're so often told "it's not possible". (I was actually told that by a dietician...)

    A dietician should know better, really. Statistically most people do put weight back on, and statistically most people gain weight slowly throughout their lives, so as a broad sweep assumption at a population level it is not unreasonable. But you are not a population, you are an individual, and individuals can beat those odds.

    I lost around 30lbs in 2013, and have mostly stayed within +/- 5lbs of my end weight ever since without any particular effort. I know for a fact that this is possible. If you're interested in how, I'd sum it up as: exercise daily, don't snack after dinner.
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