How Wrong I Was! 600 Days of MFP. Lotsa pics.
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Congratulations! You did wonderful! Such wise advice you gave as well.0
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LOVED your story I too am NOT on a diet and as long as my macros allow I it I too eat everything but I do it in moderation.You look fabulous doll!!!!0
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You look great. ((of course you were great before, but you are *sparkling* now))
There was a LOT of valuable information in this post...so THANK YOU on that. I keep telling people they need to EAT and not starve themselves. When I sit down and eat a meal my sister says I can't be *dieting*...of course I tell her I'm NOT dieting...I'm changing my lifestyle. ((she doesn't get it))
Anyhow....AWESOME job and thank you so very much for posting this...all of it! :flowerforyou:0 -
Wow!! Best motivational post I've read so far. Thanks!0
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This is the second time I've read this and I hope one day to post something similar. Pics taken, calories going up, weights getting heavier.... fingers crossed.0
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YOU ARE AMAZING!!!! Such an inspiration. I took pictures last night, and they depressed me so much. But, I need to remember to keep moving forward and keep taking pictures. I'll start seeing the difference soon enough. Thank you for the encouragement and the examples. Again... you are such an inspiration.0
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Thanks, everybody! ::flowerforyou:Don't u have issues with ur breast shrinking. Am not that endowed breast wise and it's looking like fried eggs right now so am kind of scare lifting will make it disappear all together, lol. Am lifting now and heavy too anyways.
I never had much in the line of boobs. They're smaller than they were when I weighed 30 pounds more, but for the most part, I'm wearing the same bras, just with the straps shortened and the band on a different hook.Wow! You look great! You just gave me hope, because my butt looks like your first pic and I need to look like your 3rd after you started lifting! It looks soooo good!!! How did you get it to do that? Seriously, I want to know!!
Weight lifting. I'm currently doing Stronglifts 5x5. http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/4601-stronglifts-5x5-for-women
It's my first time following an actual program. I took photos after 2 weeks, and I'll be taking more tomorrow or Saturday at the end of 4 weeks. http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/761041-two-weeks-in0 -
awesome job!!:drinker: :drinker: :drinker: :drinker: :drinker: :drinker: :drinker:0
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As always, so inspirational! You should be life coach!0
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love this post! and the muscles!0
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I’ve been maintaining my weight for over a year now, within 10 pounds or so. It’s no different than when I was actively trying to lose. I have a little more wiggle room, and I don’t always log my food (and never on weekends or holidays), but I’m mindful of what I eat and still run three times a week, and lift weights two or three times a week. One or two weekend days are for rest. And now more than ever, the scale is meaningless. I’m up about 8 pounds from my low weight in October, but I can’t see any difference in photos and my clothes fit the same. Said it before, and I’ll say it again. Screw the scale.
The TL;DR version:
Don’t starve yourself.
Eat at an appropriate deficit for the amount you have to lose.
If you’re using MFP to calculate your calorie goal, eat most of your exercise calories.
Exercise regularly.
Lift heavy things.
Don’t stress over the scale.
Take pictures.
Love your body.
Have patience.
I'm going to print these out and hang them up! I started MFP 30 days ago but I've been yo-yoing for over 20 years. I keep watching the scale and it's driving me crazy. Even though I am losing weight - Wed. when I weighed in and saw a 2 lb. loss it just didn't feel right. My pants still fit the same and I had just gotten over a bad head cold. I expected a gain. I was one of those who thought that I had to maintain 900 calories to lose weight. Skip a couple meals and I'd be good to go.
And it use to work.... in my 20's and 30's. Not so much in my 40's. It's harder. Sooooo much harder. But I realized that I never really had any muscle. Never really was healthy, even when I weighed in the 120's and fit nicely in a pair of 3/4's.
Thank you so much for your post... and repost. And you are right - this is a lifestyle change and can't be just a quick fix and then go back to normal. Exercising and eating better has to be my new normal.
Thank you for sharing your journey. It has helped me realize how I can reach my goals and maintain a healthy lifestyle without feeling guilty.0 -
Best.Post.EVER. :flowerforyou:0
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You rock!0
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Thanks for the inspiration! It is truly inspiring to read about your successes and misconceptions, it helps me to put to rest some wrong ideas I have about my journey. Again, thank you!0
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Very insightful..great job! Love the same weight comparison pictures!
Thanks for your story. I am just starting todo a workout with weights routine0 -
Thanks for your post!!! You look amazing. Very inspiring.0
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Amazing work!!! I love your post0
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Wow! You are AWESOME! I'm so glad you kept such meticulous photographic records of your progress. So many folks just don't believe it until they can see it.
Well, lady, you brought the proof big time!
Thanks for sharing.
Ed.0 -
Thank you for posting this!! You are so motivating!!0
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You look amazing, congratulations! ; )0
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Wow.....you summed it up so well. Thanks for sharing your amazing story!!! That was the motivation that i needed!!0
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Very motivating. definately motivates me to use weights again.0
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Wow. So inspiring. You have a real gift for engaging writing too! Well done x0
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Wow. I've always lifted heavy, and like what I'm seeing with MFP. Today though, today is a tough day (not food/fitness-related), and this was a real pick-me-up. Thanks!0
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Beautiful progress pics and very intimidating!0
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Double holy crap... I never thought this thread would roll!!! But since it has, here's the first post.
Today marks day 640.Holy crap. I’ve logged into MFP for 600 days in a row. I actually registered on the site on December 20, 2010, so it’s actually 607 days that I’ve been here, but I didn’t start using it right away. In fact, when I signed up, I really didn’t think I’d lose weight at all. Every past attempt to lose weight failed miserably, or just plain left me miserable, so why would this be any different?
Let’s go into the Wayback Machine, Mr. Peabody.
congrats-u look amazing
Uh… maybe not that far back. But that’s me at age 11. I was a skinny kid. A very skinny kid. I’m pretty sure our dog Bandit outweighed me by a good 20 pounds. I stayed skinny through my teens and early 20s. Gained a little weight when I got a desk job, met my husband, and discovered Ranch dressing. On everything. Lost weight when I had a jaw joint problem and couldn’t chew. Gained it when my mouth worked normally again. Tried to lose by cutting calories too much and failed. Gained when depression and anxiety took a hold on me after losing both parents and my job within a year.
And that lands us in late 2010.
I knew I needed change. All I wanted to do was be healthy enough to run a 5k. I accepted my size and weight as fact, certain that I had a bad metabolism and that weight loss was just not going to happen, but I knew I could still be healthier. And I thought, if I can run a 5k, then I’d be healthy, no matter what the number was on the scale. I started Couch to 5k and MFP.
This is how I looked in July 2010. Not bad, but not as good as I wanted to look.
This is how I looked yesterday. A slight bit better, I’d say.
In more clothes…
So why did this work? Because I finally stopped following what I always believed to be true, and tried something different. I kept an open mind.
I used to think, “I’m just not a runner.” I was the kid picked last in gym class. I was a geek and a nerd, not an athlete. But… my brother and his kids were athletic. AND smart. I’m not so genetically different from them. Why can’t I learn to run?
Oh, hey… look at that. Little Miss Always Picked Last with my first gold medal in a 5k. I’ve since picked up another gold, plus a silver in a 10k.
I used to think losing weight was supposed to be uncomfortable. That it meant cutting calories, avoiding your favorite foods, being miserable. I remember my Mom dieting when I was a kid and eating ice cubes as a snack.
Now, I know that it doesn’t require major deprivation. Just eat less than the total number of calories you burn. So if I use about 2300 calories in a day, I don’t need to eat a half or third of that to lose. Just cut a little bit off. I ate a total of 1800-2000 calories the entire time I lost weight.
And I still ate food I loved. Like a post race donut. Pizza at least once a week. Pasta, garlic bread, potatoes. If it fits my macros, I’ll eat it. I aim for at least 100g of protein a day, but pretty much let the rest fall where they may.
I used to think the scale was the best way to track progress. Once I get to my goal weight, everything will be fine, right? Wrong. Keep muscle, lose fat, and you’ll reach your goal body before your goal weight.
Or to illustrate it further… these are the size 8 jeans I was so happy to fit into when I lost weight 5 years ago and got to 130 pounds. Eating under 1000 calories a day. And on top of them are the size 5 (in juniors… in misses, I’m a 2 or 4) jeans I’m wearing now. Eating twice as much.
And this is me those five years ago at 130 pounds, and me this Spring at 133 pounds.
Then, I still had double chins, back fat rolls, muffin top, ginormous thighs. I lost weight, but too much of it was muscle, so I was a big pile of Marshmallow Fluff.
Screw the scale. Track your progress through fitness goals (Woo! I can lift heavier! I can run further!), measurements, how clothes fit, and most satisfying… through photos. You won’t see changes in the mirror. You see yourself every day. It’s like watching grass grow. Put photos side by side, and you’ll see the difference.
I used to think of exercise as punishment for a slothful life. “Ugh… I gotta undo the damage I did! I hate my body! I have to get rid of this gut, these thighs, that *kitten*…”
Now, it’s something I enjoy. I realize that it’s a gift I’m giving my body. Something I do because I love myself and want to feel strong and beautiful. Well, to be honest, I don’t always enjoy it. Sometimes it’s not fun. But I consider it just part of my basic maintenance and grooming, like washing my hair, flossing my teeth, shaving my legs. I wouldn’t say, “I just don’t have the motivation to shower anymore.” You do it because it’s your routine.
And crossing that finish line always feels amazing.
Weight lifting. Ugh. I wasn’t afraid that lifting weights would turn me into Arnold Schwarzenegger in a push-up bra. I knew that the hugely muscled body builders did that professionally and I was in no danger of looking like that from casual use of weights. But I did think that weight lifting would make me lose my curves and look more boyish.
Huh. Wrong again.
I did have some concern that weight lifting would make my arms bigger. I hated when I would find a shirt I liked, and it would fit just fine, but the sleeves would feel binding and constrictive.
You guessed it. Wrong again. Strength training made my arms smaller and more shapely.
I used to hate my big thighs. Even look back at the first photo, of the super-skinny 11 year old. Even then, I had meat on my legs. When I was little, my mom used to have to add elastic to the back of my jeans because if it fit my legs and bum, it was huge in the waist. I still have that problem.
But now, I love my big thighs. They’re powerful. They can propel me up steep inclines when trail running. They can lift heavy things. They look good in a tight pair of jeans. Better in a short skirt. And better still in even less. I no longer think, “Oh, ****. These jeans are too small for my giant *kitten*.” I think, “My waist is tiny!” I’m curvy, strong, fit, and healthy. And there’s nothing wrong with that.
I used to think dieting was temporary. Eat less, lose weight, then go back to “normal.” I was right about that. Dieting is temporary. And so are the results. Eating right and exercising is for life. That doesn’t mean you have to kill yourself at the gym or eating perfect all the time. Just do an amount of exercise and eat in a way you can see yourself doing for the rest of your life.
I’ve been maintaining my weight for over a year now, within 10 pounds or so. It’s no different than when I was actively trying to lose. I have a little more wiggle room, and I don’t always log my food (and never on weekends or holidays), but I’m mindful of what I eat and still run three times a week, and lift weights two or three times a week. One or two weekend days are for rest. And now more than ever, the scale is meaningless. I’m up about 8 pounds from my low weight in October, but I can’t see any difference in photos and my clothes fit the same. Said it before, and I’ll say it again. Screw the scale.
The TL;DR version:
Don’t starve yourself.
Eat at an appropriate deficit for the amount you have to lose.
If you’re using MFP to calculate your calorie goal, eat most of your exercise calories.
Exercise regularly.
Lift heavy things.
Don’t stress over the scale.
Take pictures.
Love your body.
Have patience.
And a couple follow-ups.
Changes since hitting my goal weight: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/LorinaLynn/view/it-ain-t-over-when-you-hit-your-goal-423924
And just two months after starting free weights: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/744311-free-weights-vs-machines-holy-crap0 -
BUMP....lot's of motivation and dedication here!!! I wanna read this periodically :-)0
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I found this thread and and am so greatful I did! You're almost my twin! Those pictures could be me! They are very motivational & give me hope that if I continue to lift, I can get there. Thank you so much for sharing your pictures! Your wisdom gained by your experience is dead on. Congratulations & thank you again!0
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Job well done. You look amazing. Thanks for sharing.0
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Great dedication0
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