WHy are the first 5lbs the harded??
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after taking a quick peak at your diary i dont think I saw one thing that wasnt processed or packaged. even your small serving of fruit was packaged... you need to weigh alternatives to find the best options for optimal weight loss, packaged food isnt the best. im a hypocrite for saying that, but at least i work the F out after eating something i shouldn't and still lose start tracking your sodium. im guessing your way over. and whats all the quick adds that are in the 1000's? just curious. im guessing this is why you havent seen more progress.0
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Looks like you have a lot of quick added calories in your diary. Maybe you are under estimating the amout of calories you are eating. Also I would keep track of your sodium intake. Maybe you have lost weight but are retaining so much water that you can't tell.
Everyone is different and their bodies react differently. I generally will lose a lot early on. You may have to adjust what you are doing untill you find out what works best for you and then that may change in a few months. Try not to get discouraged. If this were an easy process we would all be thin already. Good luck!!!0 -
Don't compare yourself to others. A pound a week is good. 5-10 lbs in one week is water weight, or serious illness.
I must point out that Zaphod and I are in complete agreement. I've lost over 5lbs in a week before, but it was fluid I had been retaining because of a serious illness. Seriously, l pound a week is super healthy.
Oh, and you're doing yourself a disservice if you're sitting on the couch eating processed food all day.0 -
I feel your pain. I've lost *maybe* 3 lbs. To the point where in the 6 weeks I've been doing MFP it's not even clear to me that I've lost weight at all (since as you know, your body will fluctuate up down by so many pounds on a regular basis). What others have said about water weight and weightloss not being linear is totally true. Most people who suddenly start losing weight after upping/lowering their calories are probably just finally getting their body to shift water weight. We women can hang on to a LOT of water weight. It can mask actual fat loss going on. It's true the more you have to lose the easier it will be. It's also true that if you've been dieting recently or maybe have been doing some working out over the last couple months, your body won't be so "surprised" by your new diet/exercise so you won't see the early easy weight loss that many on this site do.
Exercise - technically you don't NEED exercise to lose weight. And the more you need to lose, the less you really "need" it. Weight is lost in the kitchen not the gym as they say. I feel your pain here as well. I wanted to start a running program and was working full time while in school part time. I was never able to stick with and get serious with it until I was done with school. So the people who say "you make the time" I get that it's not always easy. And I couldn't make the time until those aspects of my life lined up. But it doesn't have to be running. Walking is probably my favorite exercise for weight loss. I try to walk just here and there for five minutes or whatever on a break at work. Maybe you could try to add more walking inbetween classes or on breaks and that sort of thing. And I totally get not being in safe place, I actually go drive most nights to where I run, so I can be in a safe place when I am running. Seems counterintuitive to go drive somewhere to run somewhere, but I figure what helps it get done is more important :happy: Also highly HIGHLY recommend weight lifting. If you don't have weights, plenty of body resistance exercises you can do (squats, lunges, pushups, can look up online good beginner routines). The reason exercise is so highly recommended is not because it's so essential for weight loss, but because it really helps with FAT loss. And you want to lose fat, not fat AND muscle. Good luck.0 -
No need to get defensive about it. 3 lbs is great. If you don't have time to exercise as long or as hard as someone else, then just do the best you can. But, you asked why some are losing weight faster.
I looked at a couple of days of your diary. It looks like you are eating a lot of processed food. Maybe try to shift away from high salt processed foods and shift to more fresh vegetables. It isn't that hard. If you can't swing fresh, try frozen vegetables, and stay away from lean cuisines, and Sargento snacks. They aren't that good for you and relative to the calories you are consuming, the aren't very satisfying. Second, I see that there are mystery meals. Are you sure you are accurately estimating how many calories you are consuming?
None of this is criticism. Even 1 lb a week is about 36 lbs in a year.
I completely see what you're talking about. But as for the "mystery foods". That was just two days, because over the weekend I was at cook-outs and wasn't able to track exactly what I was eating. Yes they are pretty accurate, I did make sure, and I did my homeowrk on that. As for the lean cuisines, it's easier to eat for lunch, and that is the only time I eat them, is for lunch. Like I said, I work all day, and am busy during the weekends, that I cannot prepare my foods for the week ahead most of the time. I do look at the nutritional facts on the lean cuisines also. As for the sargento snacks, that was one for last night - a cheese stick. One is not going to hurt me. Sorry I am a college student, that I do go from my job to class, and I don't have time to sit down and eat a proper meal in between the time. And by the time I get home from class, which is late, I'm not that hungry and prefer not to eat a big meal right before sleep.
I am not getting defensive, I am simply stating my facts about my life.
The last time I lost a lot of weight, I learned that preparing lunch and bringing it with me was one of the biggest factors in maintaining weight loss. Preparing a healthy diet friendly lunch that isn't processed junk isn't time consuming. Some days, my wife would do it before she went to work, other days, I did it myself. It could be as simple as a turkey, tuna, or roast beef on whole grain, an apple, celery or carrot sticks, and a low fat yogurt.
Second, a lot of supermarkets and other retailers like Trader Joes have pre made individual salads. If you don't have time to make your own, buy those and take them with you.
Third, I thought I saw Sargento snacks in more than one diary. I can relate. I love Doritos and other salty spicy crunchy snacks. I haven't had one in 9 weeks. My son still eatst that junk, but it isn't for me anymore. While one packet of salty junk food won't blow the diet, I fear that you might be setting yourself up to fail. Seriously, try to go a week, two weeks, a month, without eating salty junk food snacks. You might be surprised how your body responds.0 -
One lb per week is good. What do you have your Goals set at? A few tips that hve helped me TREMENDOUSLY:
1) Measure and weigh everything, or at minimum, absolutely as much as you can. You may be eyeballing it and you might be off.
2) On any plate, in any meal - 1/2 vegetables/fruit, 1/4 meat-protein, 1/4 starch. Making a plate of spaghettit seems like it is low-cal, but you will be amazed at how much better you feel if you keep your pasta/rice/potato/bread to 1 serving (2 oz of Egg Noodles is enough for my husband and I to split, as a side dish) - also - make your starches count! Whole grains!!
3) Do NOT rely on MFP's calorie-burn numbers for exercise. Get yourself a heart rate monitor. A LOT of people have complained about using the MFP estimate, eating back their cals, only to find that they were actually going over because MFP's estimates were too high.
4) Water, water, water.
5) Frozen meals are hard to avoid, for some people. They are sometimes an easy way to keep portion control and calorie count. HOWEVER, a) They are frequently packed with sodium and b) Can sometimes leave you feeling hungry in no time. Consider packing a lunch and including a lot of lower calorie foods. You said you are starving when you get home, maybe eating more at lunch will help you control your evening eating, if you think that might be problematic for you.
Everyone is busy and has a lot on their plate. But, planning and prepping ahead of time will take you miles further. Relying on frozen meals and packaged snacks, as a convenience, is not the same as learning how to eat healthy and in moderation. Maybe try getting your food brain in complete order before trying to fit exercise in right now. Sometimes, making too many changes at once is a recipe for failure. Baby steps... Find a rhythm with your meals and snacks, and then incorporate fitness.
All of the above are what worked for me (including ditching the pre-packaged, pre-portioned stuff) and I lose 7-8 pounds per month. Slow and steady can be frustrating, for sure, but time is going to pass whether you do something or not. Better to look back at what you've accomplished, instead of what you COULD HAVE accomplished, with patience and persistence.0 -
3 lbs is fantastic! I know what you're thinking... if it's a pound a week, it will take forever... but before you know it, you will lose 25 and if you keep up a pound a week for a year (which no one really does that ... you'll probably go through a plateau or two), that would be like 52 pounds! That's a lot of weight.
If you lose it slowly, it's best... this means that you are maintaining lean body mass (muscle)... if you lose weight too weight too fast (especially by depriving yourself), you'll lose muscle mass and it will be harder and harder to maintain your weight-loss and you'll have more loose skin and flabbiness than you would if you lost it slowly and maintained more of your muscle.
Just think of it this way... you want to lose the right kind of weight... you want to lose mostly fat, not mostly muscle. It takes food and calories (the right kinds) to maintain muscle mass and to lose fat.0 -
I really do appreciate everyone advice, or concerns.
Though, I am NOT making excuses. If I were, I wouldn't be trying to do anything. As for though, who say I need to change my eating habits entirely and looked at my food diary, obviously you are ONLY looking at the past few days. Like I said in the past, I was at a cook-out and I wasn't able to track my entire food that day. I did my research and the calories are roughly the same. Also, I've had a rough week, so no I haven't exercised since Thursday night, but everyone would see my regualy eating habits if they would have went back a week or two. I plan to exercise tonight, but please do not slam me for just looking at example from the past couple of days. Two days do not show someones life style to be able to critize it.
Like I said before, I do appreciate everyones opinion, and everyone has the right to their opinion. But please do not say hateful things to me, when I am simply asking for advice, and not for those to slam my lifestyle.0 -
GIRL! It's not hateful....it's called TRUTH! It's totally ok if you aren't in a place to do the work........but don't get offfended when you ASK for advice and then get called on your bad habits.
"I'm not making excuse BUT I CANT EAT GOOD BECAUSE OF XYZ AND I CANT WORK OUT BECAUSE OF XYZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Oh my word..........
How about you stick around for 3 months, and tell me how much you lose by then? Seriously. Add me as a friend and let's see your progress. Because if your excuses work for you, I'm TOTALLY changing how I do things. For reals. I could stand to stop "neglecting" my kids and sit around eating packed food with them all day.0 -
I really do appreciate everyone advice, or concerns.
Though, I am NOT making excuses. If I were, I wouldn't be trying to do anything. As for though, who say I need to change my eating habits entirely and looked at my food diary, obviously you are ONLY looking at the past few days. Like I said in the past, I was at a cook-out and I wasn't able to track my entire food that day. I did my research and the calories are roughly the same. Also, I've had a rough week, so no I haven't exercised since Thursday night, but everyone would see my regualy eating habits if they would have went back a week or two. I plan to exercise tonight, but please do not slam me for just looking at example from the past couple of days. Two days do not show someones life style to be able to critize it.
Like I said before, I do appreciate everyones opinion, and everyone has the right to their opinion. But please do not say hateful things to me, when I am simply asking for advice, and not for those to slam my lifestyle.
I actually haven't seen anything hatefull here. I've seen people trying to give advice, which you admit you asked for.
Bottom line is that you have to be ready and willing to make changes. The power is in your hands to decide to make changes or to continue looking for an easy way.
My advice, for whatever it's worth, is that you need to pick ONE thing to change. Just one. For example: commit to packing yourself a healthy mid-afternoon snack every day. If you want to continue with the frozen lunches, fine. But pack some fresh veggies or fruit for your afternoon snack. Do this every day for 2 weeks. Make it a habbit.
Once this has become your routine and you just do it without thinking about it anymore, then pick another thing to change. start carrying a large bottle of water everywhere you go. Seriously! Everywhere! You will get to a point where you will feel weird not having your water with you. Make it routine.
When the healthy snack and water become part of your routine and you no longer think about doing it, then add packing a healthier lunch to your routine. You're already packing the snack, so might as well throw the lunch in there with it!
These are just suggestions, do them in any order that works for you.
When you are ready to commit to making your health a priority and ready to make changes, then take control, take charge, and just do it!0 -
I really do appreciate everyone advice, or concerns.
Though, I am NOT making excuses. If I were, I wouldn't be trying to do anything. As for though, who say I need to change my eating habits entirely and looked at my food diary, obviously you are ONLY looking at the past few days. Like I said in the past, I was at a cook-out and I wasn't able to track my entire food that day. I did my research and the calories are roughly the same. Also, I've had a rough week, so no I haven't exercised since Thursday night, but everyone would see my regualy eating habits if they would have went back a week or two. I plan to exercise tonight, but please do not slam me for just looking at example from the past couple of days. Two days do not show someones life style to be able to critize it.
Like I said before, I do appreciate everyones opinion, and everyone has the right to their opinion. But please do not say hateful things to me, when I am simply asking for advice, and not for those to slam my lifestyle.
If folks seem to be hard on you, it is because to some extent, we have all been there. We all have bad days, bad months, or even bad years. But put it behind you and make what positive changes you can.
BTW, I did read a few of your food diaries from a couple of weeks ago. The last two days isn't an abberation, but rather typical, IMO. Do what you can, and try to be consistent.0 -
There's a lot of good advice already, some of it brutally honest and perhaps perceived by you as a little harsh. So be it, I agree with everything they've said. You have a busy life we all do, but if you are serious about getting healthy and losing weight, it has to be a priority. Some things that have been successful for me are::
-Buy a digital scale and ensure you have a measuring cup and spoons.
-If it goes in your body you should weigh or measure it first and log everything.
-Always pack a lunch and healthy snacks for work/school. When we get overly hungry we make bad choices
-Eat as much clean non-processed food as you can, sometimes easier said than done, but still always try to stay away from processed food. Also, eat more protein, you're probably not eating enough, I know I wasn't. Lean meats (chicken, turkey, fish, certain beef cuts), black beans, cottage cheese, edamame beans, protein shakes, etc.
-Get 45-60 minutes of cardio exercise 5-6 times a week or more if you can do it. If all you can do is walk your puppy, well that works, but it shouldn't be a stroll in the park, you should be walking or work up to walking like you are late for a meeting.
-Buy a heart rate monitor so you know when you get your heart rate up, there's lots of information on here and other sites about them.
-Strength training 3-4 days a week is important as well, many of the successful women I've seen on MFP lift weights regularly and have muscles. Being strong is good, muscle burns more calories than fat.
-Take photos and body measurements regularly, in the event the scale lies and as a reminder of how far you've comes.
-Don't expect miracles, it took a long time to put the weight on, it could take a while to take it off. My goal from the start this spring has been to lose a pound a week, the fact that for whatever reason I've done better than that is a bonus.
-The more you log and exercise and lose, the more it will motivate you and drive you; so stick with it!
-If you know you are going out for dinner, well first off plan accordingly, and make sure you get in a good cardio workout to make room calorically and then make healthy choices. Having said that, I love pizza, and I still eat pizza to this day and I've averaged eating it every week or two since I started, but I always bust my butt in the gym to allow for it.
-Drink lots of water, its good for you and keeps your body running efficiently.
-Lastly, if you have a bad day, try not to, but if you do, so what stuff happens, make sure it's only a bad day, not a bad week, or bad month. We all fall down now and then, the trick is getting back up quickly.0 -
"I'm not making excuse BUT I CANT EAT GOOD BECAUSE OF XYZ AND I CANT WORK OUT BECAUSE OF XYZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
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As I said, we have all been there. I think I avoided the scale for the last couple of years because I didn't want to come face to face with my own excuses. Too much work, Too tired. Not enough time to eat a healthy lunch or get to the gym. I don't really overeat like my late obese father used to. I can still get into my old suits so I must not be gaining weight(used that one until I couldn't get the pants on).0 -
"I just wanted to post something about what to expect during the phases of weight loss.
Overview (why I'm posting this)
Over the course of about 7 months on here, I have seen many people suceed, I have also seen some drop off the map. I expect this is because some succumb to the demon that is temptation, and some to the devil that is dissapointment. I wanted to give a few "heads up"s to both new commers and vetrans to the site. Some may know already, some may not. But either way, if this helps anyone to set more realistic goals in their own head, I feel like it has done it's job.
Phase 1. The start of a brand new day! (or week, or month, or year)
Expectations are sky high, usually so is motivation and intentions. This is where most people lose the most weight. At the start it's not uncommon to see 4 to 8 lb losses per week. The reasons for this are mostly (sorry to disappoint) water weight. You drop excess water quickly, and you can have up to 5 lbs of water weight. The next biggest reason is the fat that is right next to the blood vessels, the stuff that you put on in the last month or three, it will melt like butter usually.
Phase 2. Reality setting in.
At about week 3 to a month or so, people suddenly realize that they are no longer dropping 8, 6, or even 4 lbs a week. This is a crutial phase in your journey. Expect this, it is natural. You have shocked your body by changing both eating habits and exercise routine. Now it has had a little while to become used to the new lifestyle, it's going to compensate. Your body still doesn't believe it's permenant yet, so it will still try to store some fat, so now that it knows how to regulate it's new metabolic levels, it tryies to store fat in earnest. It's not uncommon for people to hit a wall here, no loss for weeks. Expect this as well.
Phase 3. The routine.
At about 2 months or so, your routine is pretty much set, your body is beginning to believe that you really want to STAY the way you are going now. You will start to see more consistant (but lower, usually 1 to 2 lbs a week) loss, also, you should start seeing some muscle tone (depending on how much you had to lose in the first place). If you stop to think, you should realize that you have improved dramatically in your exercise levels. If you do cardio, you should notice how much longer and harder you can work. This is important to realize as it is just as big of an indicator as weight loss. Also, by now you may notice that your clothes no longer fit right. This is also very important. The weight may not be falling off anymore, but you are becomming a smaller person. Weight is arbitrary, if you are building muscle (which your body is doing at a furious pace by now) you won't notice huge losses, but you will notice wholesale changes in the mirror!
Phase 4. Really digging in.
This is where the second wall can happen. You're probably at between 3 and 4 months by now, and if you have gone this far, you feel like you have already suceeded. This is where many people stumble. they are tired of the routine, tired of eating different things from all their friends, limiting their alcohol intake. Basically the shine has worn off. this is when your really need to plant your feet. Maybe change up your exercise routine, make a concentrated effort to find different, but still nutritional food. Talk to people. And examine how far you have come. At this point, no matter how much external motivation you receive, it's all about believing in yourself!
Phase 5. End game.
5 or 6 months in you are probably working on that "last 10 pounds". This can be discouraging for many as it is a slow burn. Remember, your body probably feels like it is where it needs to be, your brain might think you need to lose 10 more, but your body is quite proud of itself now, it feels like it has "Done enough" and it wants to stay RIGHT HERE. The body LIKES to have a little fat around just in case, especially for the ladies (sorry girls, it's just human physiology). If you feel like you still need to lose it, prepare yourself for some guerrila warfare against your body. Design an exercise regimen that is very dynamic, forget the "same thing every day". Make a plan that challenges you both physically and mentally. Make sure you give yourself a day off here and there to just veg. And by all means, remember, muscle burns fat at rest. So get some weight or resistance training involved.
The last 10 may take 3 to 6 months to lose. I know nobody wants to hear that, but it's true. And forget the idea of increasing your calorie deficite, healthy bodies need good nutrition, your body no longer has the fat reserves to handle the large deficites you could when you were 30 40 or 50 pounds overweight. Better to make it a 3 or 400 calorie deficite (NET, please count your exercise calories too!). It may take a bit longer, but your body will like you for it. Plus it feeds those new muscles and keeps them burning fat, keeps your skin healthy (elasticity is important when you want those places that were stretched out to "snap back") and keeps you from getting head aches and depressed.
Conclusion:
This is what I have learned, not just from my journey, but from others as well on here. It saddens me sometimes to see people hit one of these stages and not recognize it for what it is, a part of the process. If we all can have realistic expectations, then we are more prone to win the fight and stay healthy in the long run. Note that some people will hit these stages harder then others, some may take longer, but for the most part, this is the rule that the exceptions will come from."0 -
I lost my first 11lbs in three weeks, which I guess equals out to more than 3lbs a week.
I just went total cold turkey on everything bad for me, and put 110% into working out and eating clean. I absolutely did not cheat once in that first month, I worked out ever single day for at least an hour, I cut alcohol, cut junk food and sugar (with the exception of fruit a few times a week). I actually found the first 25-30lbs the easiest to lose....I'm down to the last 10lbs now and I'm finding that to be the hardest and slowest. I think when you have a lot of excess fat, it can be easy to burn off if you really commit to doing it.
I lost my first 8 in a week .. I gave up everything bad pretty much ...watched calories...no sodas... and cardio 5 times a week ...0 -
Hey everyone. I have been struggling wtih my weight for the longest time and this time I am really serious. I've been using this site for about 3 weeks now and have only lost about 3lbs. I mean a pound a week isn't bad, but I see others losing 5lbs a week too. I just wish I knew the secret to all this.
What did everyone do their first month to drop that first 5-10lbs??
i started September 11th this year...so i just started week 3, the first week i dropped 5 lbs and the second week 2.4 lbs....my profile is set to lose 1 lb per week...but i think for me, the reason why so far, that its came off so fast...is because i went from drinking mostly coffee and very little to no water, to drinking 72 oz of water every single day...every one is different..just keep at it!0 -
It may be voodoo, but I cut out all meat (except seafood) the first 2 months of my workout plan. I lost alot of weight - now i incorporate chicken and turkey in - and now ive been at my current weight for a week. I say change the diet change the body!0
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secret: list your sodium(salt) and sugars as well, and try to stay below those numbers as well as calories.0
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Hi!
Congrats on the first 3lbs!
You should change things up though. I've been here just over 3 weeks and I'm down 12lbs. I was a crap eater for a while before I switched over to here. I hardly exercise (changing that up tonight - 30 day shred + treadmill each night) and I still lost.
If you want my suggestions - drop the frozen dinners. Whole, home-made lunches are better, more satisfying and cheaper!
Add protein in the morning
Eat all (or damn close to) your calories!!
Sure there can be other changes in there, but for now, if you make those changes, you'll see a difference, I'm sure!
You can add me as well, if you like!!0 -
The first 5 pounds were the easiest for me. I'd never gotten regular exercise before then, and once I started running 3-4 days a week, that first chunk of weight came right off! I've never had that much success by just dieting.0
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GIRL! It's not hateful....it's called TRUTH! It's totally ok if you aren't in a place to do the work........but don't get offfended when you ASK for advice and then get called on your bad habits.
"I'm not making excuse BUT I CANT EAT GOOD BECAUSE OF XYZ AND I CANT WORK OUT BECAUSE OF XYZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Word.
It's tough to hear, but the truth often is. I remember being in a similar mind set and wanting to not be fat anymore, but not being prepared to truly commit to the work. I talked to people about wanting to lose, but I wasn't taking the necessary steps to do it. When I got the same advice you're getting here, I reacted in the same way, as though I were being attacked. I couldn't see the excuses I was making, nor was I fortunate enough to have somebody tell me point blank: you're making excuses. Often, people will just nod and say "you'll get there" to change the subject because they don't know how to deal with your reaction. Take these "harsh truths" as a blessing - you'll get there quicker the more self aware you are, and sometimes that takes a big push. It took me years to "get it," you have an opportunity to turn that around much more quickly.
When you REALLY want to do it (which means also wanting to do the work to get there), you will look for opportunities to eat healthier and exercise, rather than look for reasons why you can't. (ie, instead of reacting with "I can't, because..." your paradigm will shift to "I will find a way" or even "here's my schedule, help me find opportunities" etc.) Nobody is judging you for not being there yet, you've already taken the first step of signing up on MFP and tracking what you eat, and that's a lot farther than many other people have gotten.0 -
If you're short on time to prepare foods try cooking in large batches. The recipe function here on MFP is awesome, I usually cook meals in batches of 8 servings and box them up and in my bag they go for lunch, dinner, or snack.
Even more short on time? Get yourself a crock-pot or other slow cooker. One-pot meals can be really good when you're controlling the ingredients and portion sizes. Toss everything in before leaving for the day and come home to a house that smells awesome!! Take the mystery out of what you eat, make lots of food at once with little effort, save money and stress. I'm rotating through 5 sets of left overs at the moment to make sure things don't get too boring. I probably spend 1 hour every 3 days cooking and can produce tons of food to keep me rolling.0 -
If you're short on time to prepare foods try cooking in large batches. The recipe function here on MFP is awesome, I usually cook meals in batches of 8 servings and box them up and in my bag they go for lunch, dinner, or snack.
Even more short on time? Get yourself a crock-pot or other slow cooker. One-pot meals can be really good when you're controlling the ingredients and portion sizes. Toss everything in before leaving for the day and come home to a house that smells awesome!! Take the mystery out of what you eat, make lots of food at once with little effort, save money and stress. I'm rotating through 5 sets of left overs at the moment to make sure things don't get too boring. I probably spend 1 hour every 3 days cooking and can produce tons of food to keep me rolling.
I really do love to use my crock pot and make
Stuff on the weekends. But because I have a small
Kitchen and keep the puppy in their during the day he likes to jump up on the counter and get everything. So during the day while I'm away cooking food in the crock pot isn't going to be a good idea unless I wanna come home to a puppy covered in food with a mess of a floor.0 -
Try to move two times a day for 30-40 minutes once early in the morning and then again early evening that way your metabolism will be at it's best that should work0
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I really do love to use my crock pot and make
Stuff on the weekends. But because I have a small
Kitchen and keep the puppy in their during the day he likes to jump up on the counter and get everything. So during the day while I'm away cooking food in the crock pot isn't going to be a good idea unless I wanna come home to a puppy covered in food with a mess of a floor.
Then put the crockpot in the bathroom and close the door so the puppy can't get it.
(opportunities vs. excuses)0 -
Bump for later0
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I really do love to use my crock pot and make
Stuff on the weekends. But because I have a small
Kitchen and keep the puppy in their during the day he likes to jump up on the counter and get everything. So during the day while I'm away cooking food in the crock pot isn't going to be a good idea unless I wanna come home to a puppy covered in food with a mess of a floor.
Then put the crockpot in the bathroom and close the door so the puppy can't get it.
(opportunities vs. excuses)
Yup.0 -
Hey Anie. I understand. I am working full time, married and have a fur baby to I raised my dog from 7 weeks old so I know what you are going to. You say that it gets dark by the time he gets home and he is an inside dog. Mine is to and I have a similar situation. What are you doing in the mornings? Do you have class and work super early? If you have it about 7 or 8, is there any way you can wake up earlier maybe like 530 or 6 and go maybe jogging instead of just walking. Even if its just 30 mins, so you can get better cardio in that has your heart rate faster than just walking, unless you are walking at a very brisk pace. It is very wise to incorporate your workout walk/jog with your pup with your schedule for sure. Thats what I am having to do I have to wake up an hour earlier to jog with my dog instead of doing the cardio at night. That way you can take him out at night but your not worried about your workout.. just getting him to poop. And of coarse what everybody said about healthy eating. There is a saying that what you weight is about 20% what you excercise and 80% in the kitchen and what you eat. I hope this helps maybe.. this is what I do I understand about the importance of your animals0
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Drink lots of water. It seems like the "quick add" could cover a multitude of indiscretions. If you are eating out a lot a high amount of daily sodium may be keeping you from dropping that initial water weight loss that many of us experienced. If you are under estimating your "quick add" you aren't doing yourself any favors. Try to be very thorough and meticulous about your food diary for a while to see what you are really eating. There is a HUGE food database. If you can't find it in the database you can add it or enter something that is most similar to what you ate. Also, you might consider adding sodium to the components you are tracking.
Don't give up. MFP has all the tools you need to lose weight. All you have to do is enter everything you eat, move and be patient.0 -
Thanks everyone.
For exercise, I try to take my puppy for a walk for atleast 30-45 mins, but sometimes it hard because by the time I get home from work, it's almost dark, and we don't have the best of a neighborhood to walk around at night, plus when I get home, I have to get my puppy outside, get changed, eat dinner because I am starving by then, and get some other things done.
I like to use the xbox Kinect I boyfriend has. I recently just bought the Zumba Rush game and a workout game for it. We also have Kinect sports, the MIchael Jackson game and Dance Central 2. When I play the games, I try to play them for atleast an hour.
I am trying the best I can, but sometimes I can't cut somethings out since I have such a hectic life.
I'm a single mom working two jobs with three kids (and two dogs too). It's about priorities. You either prioritize making the time to make yourself healthy.......or your don't. Ask yourself.....is your health and being fit worth an hour a day to you?
You're my hero!! lol I have one kid, one dog, work full time, and I'm going back to college in the spring. I'm a single Mom during the week, my husband is on the road Monday thru Friday. I do really well with food choices, but I struggle with the motivation to work out.
To the OP, for me it fell off in the beginning. I lost like 6 pounds the first week I think. But I was a huge soda drinker. I think just cutting that back is what dropped the weight off initially. Recently my weight loss stalled. I was struggling with the same pound for about two weeks. I started watching my carbs more closely. I have been under my goal everyday this week, and have lost about two pounds. So maybe that is something to look at.0
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