let's hear it for maintainenance

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  • yorkieII
    yorkieII Posts: 93 Member
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    thank you all for sharing .. very helpful!!
  • CoderGal
    CoderGal Posts: 6,800 Member
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    I use to dance 9 times a week and stopped and started going back to school. I went through a bad breakup and was on my way to gaining 30lbs in less then a year, avoiding pictures like the plague. I have 0 pics of me at my largest. It wasn't good weight, it was sedentary, blob squish weight. I was thin my whole life. In fact, I was 90lbs in grade 10 (danced 9 times a week plus other activities). Mom wouldn't let me buy my favorite clothes because I looked sickly thin and pump food into me, I just couldn't gain weight. I use to win eating contests with friends from school and was ironically accused of being anorexic (I'm the skinny leg one):
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    So I gained all this weight, and my resting heart rate spiked to 110. I felt like crap. So then I came here without knowing anything and set myself up to lose 1lb a week (not knowing if that was allot) and it gave me 1200 calories. I felt starving but got use to it. I have a tendency of looking into things so looked into the math required to lose weight. Eventually I set my calories to netting 1700 calories and I still lost a lb a week and felt a whole lot better (and my hair stopped appearing on the shower walls). If you're taller, or not very over weight, I highly recommend a smaller deficit to keep as much nutrition as possible. You well still lose, probably faster then you think if you stick to it. This is me on my way to my goal:
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    I lost 30lbs being mostly sedentary. By the time I lost all the weight I didn't have much muscle mass since I did it all with dieting.
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    I started exercising and eating more and maintained for about 7 months. This is me a month after the first pics after I started hiking:
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    As of late, I was still disappointing that I lost all my muscle mass, so for the past few months I've purposely gained 10lbs (since you cannot gain muscle on a calorie deficit) . I also took up a weight routine since hiking on cliffs during this weather is kind of unreasonable. I have a bad back, arthritis, and a frigged up heart so it's a lot more pathetic compared to what most people can do, but I've been feeling pretty good about it! Now, of course I've gained fat with this, but I intend on losing it in a few months. Sorry for such a large pic, it's the only one I have that's recent (taken yesterday):

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  • DVMcGhie
    DVMcGhie Posts: 8 Member
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    Interested in reading all the info on this post. Thanks for the question. Maintenance is critical and I too fear losing the 10 lbs I planned to lose initially on this program. I'm just sooo surprised it works to journal what you eat. I run marathons and regularly go to the gym but never thought to limit my food intake. Now I see the difference but don't know how long I can sustain the eating journals.
  • LisaDunn01
    LisaDunn01 Posts: 173 Member
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    Maintenance has everything to do with LIFESTYLE. For example, part of my life is exercising 3 times a week for an hour each time no matter what. I stopped dieting and just made better choices that stay with me to this day. For example, I don't eat sugar, breads, pastas, grains, etc. I eat WHOLE FOODS: protein, vegetables, fruit, nuts and good fats. My only "vice" is having organic half-and-half in my organic coffee. Other than that, I stay away from dairy products. Sometimes I eat more protein, sometimes less. Sometimes I eat more of my foods raw and sometimes I need more cooked foods (especially when it gets cold outside). Sometimes I eat a lot in a day and other days I'm not as hungry. As a result, I stay between 110-113 pounds and wear a size 2.... All at age 47! (My top weight was 145 pounds. I'm 5'3.5".) I just feed my body correctly and exercise and it does the rest!
  • cmdoiy
    cmdoiy Posts: 122 Member
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    Bump! Someday I'll get here.
  • npca06
    npca06 Posts: 14 Member
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    bump
  • ab_shutterbug
    ab_shutterbug Posts: 203 Member
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    I've been maintaining for the past year -hovering at about 37-40 pounds loss. I would still like to lose about 10 more #. Trying to lose that last bit will require more exercise and less food, so I have to accept that and make it happen! Wish me luck.
    :drinker:
  • NomiS6
    NomiS6 Posts: 67 Member
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    Went into maintenance mode when working away starting mid-September last year. Had no scales for weighing food or myself but just tried to keep all portions small, had no control over the food either as the chief would do his own thing even though I was his Captain. When I left my ship and arrived home on New Year’s Eve I had only put on 6 lbs., so very happy.
  • MrTwilightZone
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    There is a fifth dimension, beyond that which is known to man. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition.
    -I'm Rod Serling Thank You
  • msteresao
    msteresao Posts: 114 Member
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    bump
  • jimmacdonald
    jimmacdonald Posts: 93 Member
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    It has been a year since we hit our goal, 65 lbs of weight loss.

    Great year, I was able to ride two bike centuries (100 miles in a day) in Sept and Oct. During training I gain back 15 lbs of miuscle.
    When your riding 150 miles a week on a bike you get to eat more calories.

    Our first Maintainenance Thanksgiving, Christmas and Winter ( no outdoor biking) has added 10 lbs). O how easy it is to go back to bad habbits, and a see food diet.

    We are both back on MFP logging, I find after 35 years of being together if I gain, she gains. We both have to log and remind each other it is a life change and dont want to go back to fat.

    I want to lose 15 or 20 before spring. In spring I want to find the under 200 lbs mark again. Goal this year is 195.

    Can't wait till spring, to hit the bike again. Goal is three centuries all under 6.5 hours. That takes alot of time on bike, lots of miles per week training.

    I found that 1500 cal is what I need to maintain with our exercise. What a shock that was.

    Remember it is a life change not a diet. You will never get to eat like you use to if you want to fit into skinny jeans.

    Good luck in your life happyness.

    Cheers
    Jim
  • hippie_spirit
    hippie_spirit Posts: 104 Member
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    bump for later
  • Gerald_King
    Gerald_King Posts: 2,031 Member
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    Bump for later
  • CalJur
    CalJur Posts: 627 Member
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    Maintaining! Can't rest on your *kitten* or laurels.
  • giggitygoo
    giggitygoo Posts: 1,978 Member
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    Bumping to read later.

    I'm supposed to be maintaining but what that actually translates to is losing and then gaining back about 5 pounds.
  • Ely82010
    Ely82010 Posts: 1,998 Member
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    In maintenance for 2 years. Lost some more weight at the beginning of 2011 but I put it back because It was too low. I didn't have much to lose so I don't know if that made any difference.

    I am now between 100.5 and 102.5 lb (I am barely 5 feet and small boned). I do strength training 2 to 3 times a week, Pilates twice a week, Yoga an Ballet once a week, and very light cardio (walking, Arc fitness, stationary rowing, treadmill, etc.). I workout 5 times a week, and most of the time I take the weekends off. So far, this schedule is working for me.

    My daily calories, as determined by MFP, are 1210, and I do eat now most of my exercise calories and sometimes I go over, specially when I don't exercise. My macros are 40/35/25, but I try to keep my carbs around or below 150.

    Edit to add that I still log every day and faithfully complete my food and exercise diaries every day. OCD I guess!
  • khlesnick
    khlesnick Posts: 20 Member
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    This is a great thread! I got down to my goal weight of 140 lbs (I'm a little over 5'7) about a year ago. Then I finished a triathlon and gave myself a week break.... and gained it all back so fast (Up to 154!). Now I'm on my way down again and this time I'll be sticking with it. The goal is to get a little below 140 so fluctuations don't push me over and just focus on staying fit! Keeping up with Triathlons, and constantly pushing myself to new goals and longer distances. Building muscle and staying fit will be the goal, and weight maintenance should come wiht it easily.
  • kge0891
    kge0891 Posts: 276 Member
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    bump!
  • runningfataway
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    I lost 95 pounds in 20 months and have been maintaining for 16 months. This is my 3rd MFP anniversary.

    I'm 5'6", I weigh between 145 and 149 and I'm about to turn 61.

    I track what I eat every day faithfully as I eat it. I either run, swim, bike or elliptical every day for at least an hour.

    How you maintain has a lot to do with how you gained weight in the first place. I can only speak for myself - I started gaining weight when I was in high school and I spent the next forty years at an unhealthy and obese BMI. There were some significant weight loss diets in there where I got down to where I am now and there were equal weight gains which took me back.

    I'm not that careful about my exact calories but I keep to between 1800 - 2200. I weigh myself daily but I only record it once a week. It fluctuates within this four pound range. When I'm at the top of it, I'm extra careful about what I eat and I try to say "no" more often.

    I'd love to lose another five pounds - I did this summer when I was in training for a sprint triathalon. I figure I'll probably lose it again next summer when I go back into training.

    Maintenance is harder than losing because:

    1. You exercise all the same self-restraint that you do when losing and it doesn't get much easier to do;

    2. You don't get any of the thrills of losing - no lower numbers, no smaller clothes, no excited compliments. You and everybody else get used to the way you look. Life becomes normal.

    3. There is skin sagging somewhere on your body.

    4. Life has the same hard/sad/devastating moments that it always has. You can't comfort eat your way through them anymore so you have to find new strengths.

    On the other hand,

    1. You never look in the mirror, see a photo, catch a glimpse of your reflection and have that automatic cringe response. Lots and lots of times, you have a "looking good!" response.

    2. You feel great physically. Your doctor loves you. You can read every article on "how to eat healthily" and think, "Yup. Got that one." You have bursts of joy when you run/bike/swim or just move. You don't get out of breath unless you want to get out of breath. You start taking up activities that never even crossed your mind before just to see if you'd enjoy them.

    3. You have deep down pride in yourself. You're living life the way it is meant to be lived. You start applying what you learned about yourself to your other problems. You start owning your life.

    To have those last three, I'll log every bite I eat and work out every day for the rest of my life. With a song in my heart.

    Jeanne

    Jeanne, I love you too.
  • JosieJo2000
    JosieJo2000 Posts: 162 Member
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    I find maintenance really tricky. I have yo-yoed before, but have made some life changes (completely revamped my diet and exercise most days) and I haven't put any on for awhile. Ironically, sometimes I find that I start to lose too much weight. I'm scared of putting weight back on so I still eat like I had to when I was losing, it's hard to up the calories again. If I drop below my current weight (115lbs / 52kg 5'2" or 158cm small frame) I start to look old and a bit fugly so it's a difficult balancing act.
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