One Year of Barbells and Ice-Cream: My Story…So Far (pics)
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You're a dude so everyone just assumes you take some roids, look at yourself in the mirror at the gym, and boom you're jacked. Also: no fat pics and too many Y chromosomes.0
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Wow, I know the original post is old but I am really inspired by reading this one! Thanks for posting!!0
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Yea, it was long but a GREAT story. You look great for a 25 year old--forget 45 year old. Congrats!!0
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Yea, it was long but a GREAT story. You look great for a 25 year old--forget 45 year old. Congrats!!
She really does. Sara is kind of my hero.0 -
Loved it... Posted in on my Facebook for all the non-believers of females lifting weights.0
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Yep. Show it off! As if weight loss and getting fit isn't hard enough, you also overcame great adversity. Congrats to you!0
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:happy: inspiration!0
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wow very inspirational story thanks for sharing it0
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" " awesome results, glad I read your post today, cheers for sharing! :drinker:0
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Soo close to rolling.
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Yea, it was long but a GREAT story. You look great for a 25 year old--forget 45 year old. Congrats!!
She really does. Sara is kind of my hero.
Thank you :flowerforyou:
And thank you to everyone who has commented.0 -
:flowerforyou:0
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Your amazing !!!! Did you lift everyday and have special exercises or just do all the circuits
Thanks0 -
Your amazing !!!! Did you lift everyday and have special exercises or just do all the circuits
Thanks
Hi and thank you! I lifted about 4 times a week. My routine was based around the big compound lifts - squats, deadlifts, bench press and overhead press in the lower rep range (1 - 5) with assistance work (compound and isolation exercises) in the slightly higher rep range (6 - 15). I still lift this way now.0 -
I have been friends with you for a while now and have thoroughly enjoyed learning from you in the Eat, Train, Progress group, but I had not actually read your story before. You are one amazing and inspiring lady with an incredible body and enviable strength!!! Keep spreading your knowledge and encouraging people to really think about the crap they come across when it comes to nutrition and exercise.
Thanks!0 -
Wow Sara, Great Job!0
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*love* your story... am hoping to have one of my own in a year's time0
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In for the roll!
Sara you are awesome and you've totally inspired me - I constantly learn from your posts. I hope one day my stomach looks as crazy strong as yours!! :flowerforyou:0 -
Go girl!! You are amazing!0
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Inspirational!!0
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You look amazing! This post has been going FOREVER! hahha0
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I love this as an example of how not to get hung up about numbers on a scale. Did everyone catch how this fantastic body weighs nearly 150 pounds?
A millions times over I'd rather be 150 and look like that than 130 and flabby.0 -
Bump.0
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Wow, you look fantastic!! Congratulations!!!0
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Wow, you look fantastic!! Congratulations!!!
500 posts, inspired by utter awesomeness! Great job, Sara!!!0 -
~ Quoted from OP~
NOTE: This is SaraUK2sf's story... not mine!
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/user/sarauk2sf/status
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So, this is incredibly nerve wracking for me…no, I am not always a confident bish! This is the first time I am posting ‘before’ pics as I could not find any until recently…partly because I did not allow my picture to be taken very often as I hated seeing how big I got, and partly because I did not look very hard for the very same reason. Fortunately/unfortunately I recently ran across some pictures that were taken while on vacation a couple of weeks before I started on here…when I saw them I was shocked and to be honest, completely embarrassed as to how large I actually was. The timing however was a bit fortuitous as I was coming up to my one year anniversary on MFP and I wanted to post a success, or rather progress, thread on my anniversary. So, here it is!
Anyway, here is my story so far, which some of you already know, so please feel free to go the TL;DR bit at the end.
I grew up in England and moved to the States a little over 14 years ago. When I lived in England I was always relatively lean - but had never set foot in a gym. When I moved to the States, however, I slowly gained weight. So after a few years and a few increases in pant sizes, I decided enough was enough and I started tracking calories, joined a gym, and started weight training. After a few trainers, I found one that I really liked and started consistently going to the gym, did the usual 15 rep iso lifts for a while and really enjoyed it. I got down to about 18 - 20% BF with really good muscle mass and was very happy with where I was. I continued lifting but ate intuitively at that point.
Unfortunately, 5 years ago, I suffered from a double cerebral aneurysm, one of which ruptured. I was incredibly lucky to survive, let alone come out of it with no permanent damage from the aneurysm. However, while I was in hospital, I got a very bad staph infection, which in turn lead to an infection in my upper spine (osteomyelitis). So, with the stay in ICU, the treatment and recovery from the staph infection, I was not ambulatory for about 2 months and was under-eating for quite a while longer than that. As a result, I lost a significant amount of LBM.
Due to lower muscle mass, lack of energy and inattention, I put on quite a bit (read, a lot) of weight over the following years and topped out somewhere in the 190’s. Before joining MFP, I lost some of that weight in a couple of 'spurts'.
I joined MFP exactly a year ago, this coming Tuesday, when I was 185lbs., a US size 12/14 and with a body fat percentage of goodness knows what – but in hindsight, and looking at my pics, I estimate I was in the mid to high 30’s % as you can see from the pics:
At first I just used the calorie tracking part of this site and then discovered the forums. I lurked for a while and I worked out who were the people that knew their *kitten* and could support their assertions. Pro tip: figure out who knows what they are talking about and listen to them, but some of the folks that show time and time again that they know what they are talking about, and can back up what they say, are SideSteel, Acg and Tigersword. I learnt a tremendous amount from these people, and their posts got me interested in fitness and nutrition and made me understand the importance of having a healthy skepticism and of researching claims and sniffing out BS. They also made my life a whole lot easier and enjoyable by helping me to realize that losing weight is really not that complicated and should not be purgatory. Another thing I discovered was my enthusiasm for weight lifting (and ice-cream). Not the high-rep lifting I had been doing years before, but lifting heavy arsed weights with a focus on strength. I find strength training incredibly empowering. Also, since I started lifting again, I no longer have any back pain from the osteomyelitis that I used to continually suffer from.
When I first joined I did not put any, then current, pics up and did not want to take any progress pics while I was so big. I regret that now as it would have been very interesting to see my progression at that time. So, the first pics I put up were taken on my 45th birthday, some of which are below. I was about 165lb then and probably in a US size 8 or 10:
So, here I am now, a year into dieting and training, and I have hit my goal BF%. I am currently 37lb lighter at 148lb, a US size 6 and, per a hydrostatic test I had done a few days ago, 17.5% body fat (which may well be a couple of percentage points on the low side). Based on my hydrostatic tests and estimates of body fat, I have maintained all of my LBM during this time, a fact I am very happy about. These current pics were taken this week:
You will notice a progression…as I lost my weight, I also lost my clothes in my pics…it came with increased confidence. Some may not ‘get it’, but going from someone who was too embarrassed to post a pic of herself at all, to someone confident enough to post pics showing skin is a huge deal for me.
How I did it is pretty simple really, no restrictions on foods or food groups, no special ‘diets’ – not necessarily easy, but simple:
- Ate at a reasonable caloric deficit – my average intake was probably about 1,900 – 2,000 calories, which baked in my exercise, and my deficit was generally 200 – 500 cals a week.
- Took a diet/training break every now and again
- Ate food that is mainly nutrient dense but also included treats (pop tart ice cream sammiches are da bomb.com)
- Worked out the macros appropriate to me and hit them (1g protein per lb LBM and 0.35g fats per lb body weight as minimums)
- Ate ice-cream every day
- Strength trained
So, what next? Now I have hit goal I am starting to reverse diet up to maintenance and then will do bulk/cut cycles to try to regain some of the LBM I lost when I was ill. I am one of those strange women who likes to weigh a lot (assuming a low body fat of course!). Now that part will probably be harder than losing the weight in the first place as doing an intentional bulk is new territory for me. Another challenge that *may* be next is to start doing powerlifting competitions – just small amateur stuff and for fun.
In closing, I would like to send my hugs and kisses (and the occasional sneaky grope) to all my friends on here and to all the people who have supported, encouraged and empowered me, whether they are on my FL or not. At the risk of looking like I am about to accept and Oscar, I also want to give a shout out to some peeps who have helped me along the way in certain areas. This is not to say that others on my FL have not been total rockstars, or have not helped or motivated me, but I wanted to take the opportunity to thank some peeps for very specific reasons.
So, smooches to SideSteel for being my ‘partner in crime’ in our group, for being there to bounce ideas off, for bringing sanity back when I was at risk of going bat crazy and for being one of the main people who got me interested in nutrition in the first place – basically for being a really good friend. I absolutely would not have got where I have without him and it would not have been nearly as much fun doing so.
Muah’s to MoreBean for being my MFP bestie (yes, I am 45 year old and I called her ‘bestie’ – deal with it!). She knows why she is being mentioned here.
I also want to give a special thank you to love4fitnesslove4food and the ladies of the group I joined when I was first on here for making sure I was on the right path and answering all my newbie questions.
Big hugs to Sublog for being my friend, here and IRL, and for being there to share the ups and downs of my lifting sessions and progress as well as a slew of other reasons. <333’s to all the lifters on my FL who answer my questions and provide input, but especially to taso for his total unabashed enthusiasm for lifting. And I am not sure whether to kiss or kick Acg for all things food related and for turning me into a total ice-cream snob.
TL;DR
I got fat, got thin, got ill, got fat and got thin again…oh, and I love lifting and ice-cream!
Ermegherd…that’s long!0 -
In...
...for part 2.
:drinker:0 -
I supposed I better be in.
The timing is really funny. It has now been 1 year (plus 3 days) since posting my 1 year success thread. I was going to post a 2 year thread over the weekend, which will be pretty different as my goals have changed quite a bit from then. My first year was very much focused on losing weight (and lifting and eating ice cream). This last year has been about body composition and performance related progress. The lifting and eating ice cream bit has not changed however!1 -
Wow, great inspiration! My goal is to lower percentage body fat and I love ice cream so I' happy to know that I can do both. This recomp-building lean body mass is a new concept that I've never done before, so let's see how it goes.0
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