What are the top 5 things you recomend to do to lose weight?
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bump0
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1. Honestly record everything you eat or drink.
2. Don't drink your calories
3. Move more, move more, move more, move more- get a dog to walk if you need a reason to move more, just move more
4. Pre plan meals and snacks as much as humanly possible. Go to restaurant websites and decide what you are going to order before you go out.
5. Explain to the people in your life why you need them to be supportive and what they can do to help you- repeat this exercise often.0 -
1. Never refer to your weight loss as a "journey".
2. Measure and account for everything that you put in your mouth.
3. Adopt a strength training routine that incorporates progressive overload training with heavy lifting to preserve muscle during weight loss.
4. Don't adopt a nutrition plan that has you eliminating foods because you've been told they're not good for you. Do your research about nutrition and understand that what really matters is the macronutrient breakdown of your total daily intake as well as your fiber, and micronutrient intake.
5. Eat the foods you love, without going over your calorie goal, make sure you reach your protein, fat, and fiber minimums every day
Why can't you call it a "journey"? I'm just curious.0 -
1. make love in the morning
2. make love after lunch
3. make love before bed
4. poop a lot
5. take frequent naps0 -
This is great. Thanks all!
BUMP0 -
1. don't drink your calories
2. don't eat in a way that you are not prepared to do for your whole life
3. occasional short fasts are helpful for hunger reset and for you to better understand when you are actually hungry, not just craving something or bored.
4. you can't out exercise a bad diet, but exercise can change the way you look at food, the kinds of foods you eat, etc..
5. eat nutrient dense foods as much as you can, including more protein, but don't beat yourself up or self sabotage over the occasional indulgence.0 -
Bump..nice advice everyone0
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1. Log everything, even "cheats" or screw ups.
2. Drink lots of water.
3. Plan ahead for difficult times (road trips, vacation, eating out).
4. Limit "special occasions". Your birthday? Yes, have cake. Your child's friend's birthday? No.
5. Add exercise.0 -
*bump*
I'll post later when I've got time0 -
bump0
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1. play the long game - focus on changing your mindset, first and foremost, rome wasn't built in a day
2. no cheating - and if you do cheat, remember that you're only cheating yourself
3. exercise - it does wonders for your body
4. no starvation diets - they make absolutely no sense
5. enjoy the process, your new body and your new life - you deserve it!0 -
Great!! Bump!0
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Whenever someone asks how I lost all the weight, I always give them my 3 point weight loss plan,
1. Eat Less
2. Move More
3. Lift heavy things
But I guess I can come up with 2 more:
4. BE PATIENT (all caps cuz its just that important)
5. Find a workout you enjoy, otherwise you won't keep it up.0 -
Only a few months on MFP but I hear these work delightfully
1) raspberry ketones
2) no fat. Or carbs. Or sugar. Or food.
3) Dr. Oz
4) super unsupportive friends and family
5) < 1200 calories0 -
This may be bad advice (re: working out), but it is working very well for me. I'm on step 4.
1. Fix the mental problem first. Everyone obese has one... fixing it can be difficult, but it is practically essential...
Of these, #1 is by far the most important. I think 99% of weight loss is your state of mind...
My mental block was a big one... which, in a way, made it easy to find and hard to acknowledge.
Yes, yes, upvoted to all of this. I think the only reason I'm sticking with this now is because I did (and am doing) the heavy lifting psychologically.
My tips:
1. As above- work on your head first. If you can get that worked out- through reading, talking with friends, seeing a therapist- everything else is going to be much easier.
2. Write everything down and be honest.
3. Start slow. Make small changes that you think you can live with. Then see if you can live with them.
4. Drink as few of your calories as possible.
5. Be as kind and steady and patient with yourself as you know how. You are going to fail, at some point, because we all do. Do not let that failure be the end of things- pick yourself up, put on a few band-aids, cry a little if you need to. Then do it again. The only way you lose is if you never come back.0 -
Lazy - I just copied this from my profile.
My four pillars of weight-loss.
1) Years of therapy. I acknowledge that not all chubbitude is sourced in depression, but mine sure was.
2) Log EVERYTHING - I document every gram of everything I eat or drink. I've found that if I don't journal, my eating goes on autopilot. An autopilot programmed by Augustus Gloop. Documenting everything helps keep me aware.
3) Reduce refined foods. Sugar and flour in all of their many guises are the enemy - though I still indulge on occasion.
4) Kettlebell workouts. Most workouts leave me bored stupid. So. Lame. Kettlebells have been the one thing that has kept my interest. Been doing them since March 20120 -
comment for future reference0
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This is a life choice so dont be in such a hurry when you really have no reason to rush. Enjoy life, it goes by fast enough already.0
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Track it
Make healthy choices a habit (nutrition and exercise)
The fewer rules the better, keep it simple and sustainable
It's not a sprint
Enjoy the process, we are incredibly lucky to be alive0 -
Bump0
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2) Log EVERYTHING - I document every gram of everything I eat or drink. I've found that if I don't journal, my eating goes on autopilot. An autopilot programmed by Augustus Gloop. Documenting everything helps keep me aware.
THIS!!!!!
(I love the Willy Wonka reference!)0 -
1. Never refer to your weight loss as a "journey".
2. Measure and account for everything that you put in your mouth.
3. Adopt a strength training routine that incorporates progressive overload training with heavy lifting to preserve muscle during weight loss.
4. Don't adopt a nutrition plan that has you eliminating foods because you've been told they're not good for you. Do your research about nutrition and understand that what really matters is the macronutrient breakdown of your total daily intake as well as your fiber, and micronutrient intake.
5. Eat the foods you love, without going over your calorie goal, make sure you reach your protein, fat, and fiber minimums every day
Why can't you call it a "journey"? I'm just curious.
I did not put the rule up, but I completely agree. This is not a journey. There is no desination. Good health is a way of life that does not end when you reach a number on a scale, or BMI chart, or body fat %. If I call it a journey I am telling myself this way of life will be over at some point and then I can go back to not moving enough and eating too much. That is not the case. I plan to live healthy for the rest of my life. I believe it is a lifestyle not a journey.0 -
1. Never refer to your weight loss as a "journey".
2. Measure and account for everything that you put in your mouth.
3. Adopt a strength training routine that incorporates progressive overload training with heavy lifting to preserve muscle during weight loss.
4. Don't adopt a nutrition plan that has you eliminating foods because you've been told they're not good for you. Do your research about nutrition and understand that what really matters is the macronutrient breakdown of your total daily intake as well as your fiber, and micronutrient intake.
5. Eat the foods you love, without going over your calorie goal, make sure you reach your protein, fat, and fiber minimums every day
Why can't you call it a "journey"? I'm just curious.
I did not put the rule up, but I completely agree. This is not a journey. There is no desination. Good health is a way of life that does not end when you reach a number on a scale, or BMI chart, or body fat %. If I call it a journey I am telling myself this way of life will be over at some point and then I can go back to not moving enough and eating too much. That is not the case. I plan to live healthy for the rest of my life. I believe it is a lifestyle not a journey.
I guess I don't see the point either. But maybe it's how people view life. I personally view life as a journey....so I view health as a journey too. It doesn't have to have an end.0 -
Only a few months on MFP but I hear these work delightfully
1) raspberry ketones
2) no fat. Or carbs. Or sugar. Or food.
3) Dr. Oz
4) super unsupportive friends and family
5) < 1200 calories
Hahahah! So right!! Dr. Oz is like God!!0 -
1. It starts with motivation. When your motivation is right, failure is not an option. Missteps may occur, but a misstep is not failure.
2. If you have an end point in mind, you are doing it wrong. The journey is the end point. Goals are nothing more than waypoints.
3. Plan for hardship. What are you going to do on days you don't feel like working out? How will you respond to difficult diet situations? Be prepared. One of my rules that I have NEVER broken, if I have a planned workout, I do something, even if nothing more than a token effort of couple minutes walking on the treadmill; staying in the pattern and cultivating habits is the most important thing you can do long term.
4. Don't overcomplicate things, always keep things as simple as possible. Losing weight is easy. It just takes time and consistency.
5. Losing weight is easy, maintaining that loss is hard. Once loss is occurring, you can pretty much turn all your attention to how you are going to maintain your loss once you have nothing left to lose. It takes a long term plan, and sticking to that plan. It takes years for new habits to become ingrained.0 -
Number 1 is to record EVERYTHING you eat.
So many of us eat a little mindlesly. Usually healthy, but without paying too much attention to portion size or total calories. It's easy to think you're on track because everything you're eating is "good for me", when the calories are actually adding up. Being mindful and aware of what you're eating is super important. That means measuring and weighing most things. You'd be surprised how small 100 grams of greek yogurt actually is! And pay attention to the nutritional break down.
2. When you're at a bit of a plateau try a few days of higher protein. OR, try a couple of days of eating at a higher calorie level. Then back to the usual. Seems to work for me. Don't freak out when you hit a plateau.
3. Stick with it even if you can't be perfect. Don't let the occasional lapse throw you off. My moto is "anything worth doing, is worth doing badly". A bad day on myfitnesspal is better than a day off it. Again, don't freak out.
4. Exercise! But remember that sore muscles retain water so you may weigh a bit more the day after an intense workout. Don't freak out if that happens.
5. Build a support group of friends on the same journey.0 -
eat less.
move more.
Really..thats all there is to it.
This is exactly what I tell people when they ask me how I did it!0 -
bump for later0
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Don't deprive yourself of food you like.
Swim
Don't let yourself get "bored"
Swim
Figure out a way to hold yourself accountable, as opposed to relying on others for accountability. (even though I have nothing against group accountability, it's always good to be able to hold yourself accountable)0 -
2. Never skip breakfast or you will want to eat more at lunch and dinner.5. Never eat just before bed.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0
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