Need help and tips to lose 20 pounds :(
currie_boo
Posts: 4 Member
I have been working out to 30 day shred from Jillian and stay between 1200-1500 calorie count. Work out 20 mins a day and barely even have junk food. What should I do? I tried juice fasting for 3 weeks, lost 7 pounds, gained 5 right back. Should I try supplements to help me? Idk what to do. I'm 20 and 145 help
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Replies
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work out longer0
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Keep working out and eating enough and you will get there eventuelly.0
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It is down to calories in versus calories out. Are you weighing your food to be accurate, or just eyeballing it in "portions"?
Weighing it all, and keeping a log on MFP will keep you on track
Avoid supplements and fads, you are looking for a long term healthy food choices0 -
How tall are you? What's your goal weight?0
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don't be hard on yourself, just keep up the exercise, i still have a long way to go, but i know that getting there at a steady pace is better for your body0
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It all comes down to eating right and watching what you eat. You need to measure portions, rather than eyeballing it. More vegetables, more exercise. Juice fasting rarely works, in my experience. Typically, you gain it right back after you stop. It's going to take time, but if you stick with it, you'll get there. Good luck.0
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I'm 60 and just realized I've lost 20 lbs since Feb 20 2013. My husband has too. We just did it together slow and steady. We used the5:2 method but I think what every one says is true. We've had to watch carefully for 2 days a week everything we ate. We had each other but found our MFP friends a great encouragement too. It didn't happen overnight but if I can do it at 60 you can too.
I haven't finished yet.0 -
Forget juice fasting & quick fix diets, my suggestion is you stick with MFP & keep working out, its a slow steady process but you will keep it off better this way & sometimes we lose inches when the pounds don't seem to be falling off. Don't worry take body measurements once a month & weigh yourself each week, you may notice a difference then. Good luck0
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Apart from the usual advice you will get and some very good points made above, remember the following: The one thing I would say is to watch out the amount of weight training (circuit training) you do. You will burn fat calories but also build muscle. So your weight might not reflect actual good work done. Also, make sure your water and fibre intake is on the high side (it has helped me immensely).0
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I work out 20 minutes every day with an extra 50 minutes at the gym 3 times a week and restrict to between 1000 - 1300 depending on how hungry i am (sometimes i fall under 1000 in the 800-900 mark and make it up with nuts and dark chocolate) and drink lots of water and have been doing this for the past 2 weeks and have already lost 2 lbs, but some of that may be due to daily weight fluctuation.
Try not to go crazy on fasting and keep your eating to a around 1200 calorie minimum - you want to keep your metabolism as quick as possible because then you'll see results faster
(or at least this is what has worked for me)0 -
Eat more if you're exercising and don't juice.0
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I have been working out to 30 day shred from Jillian and stay between 1200-1500 calorie count. Work out 20 mins a day and barely even have junk food. What should I do? I tried juice fasting for 3 weeks, lost 7 pounds, gained 5 right back. Should I try supplements to help me? Idk what to do. I'm 20 and 145 help
first off, that whole 1200-1500 is a 80% deviation. get the eating under better control.0 -
Hi, are you taking measurements? With the 30 day shred some people don't loss a lot of weight but lose a lot of inches - which is great, because you are building muscle which in turn, burns more calories than fat. I think 1200-1500 is a perfectly reasonable amount to eat, really. Just make sure what you're eating is good for you! (With some treats from time to time, of course)0
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Apart from the usual advice you will get and some very good points made above, remember the following: The one thing I would say is to watch out the amount of weight training (circuit training) you do. You will burn fat calories but also build muscle. So your weight might not reflect actual good work done. Also, make sure your water and fibre intake is on the high side (it has helped me immensely).
This.0 -
Where to start?
Okay, first off how tall are you? 1200-1500 calories really doesn't sound like much. Gives us some figures and can give you some figures for resting energy expenditure. What sort of timescale do you want to achieve it in?
20lb in 6-10 weeks is 100% achievable with little rebound at the end (the rebound is typically body storing sugars + water in muscles that are depleted from too low calorie intake, for someone my size that can easily be 2+kg)
If you are exercising a lot, it sounds you're doing a reasonable amount, then the points about muscle gain are valid (and muscle is denser than fat) rather than relying on the scales get a tape measure and measure your wait about 1" under your belly button and track it (I like figures so daily suits me) try to measure same time each day i.e. first think in morning after rising (same with weighing yourself) Don't freak out about things moving in the wrong direction! use an app like "libra" or something else that records your values with a moving average, that way you can see the trend rather than worry about the absolute numbers. As long as the trend is moving the right way everything else is just noise! It also helps you correct as you go along.
Consider doing a 5:2 or 4:3 type diet (severe calorie restriction for 2 or 3 days a week, for you 500 calories on fast days) the feast days will boost your metabolism which could easily be on a go slow after juice diet and a long time with low calories. On your feast days shoot for plenty of protein (will boost metabolism). Try to stick to whole foods. Try to avoid highly processed foods.
As for supplements, I've literally spent £1000's over the years on them and apart from a few that are now banned most did nothing. Even when they did work the breakdown worked out something like this, 70% diet 29% exercise and 1% supplements. What you put in your mouth is really the number one thing. If your goals move on from weight loss to adding muscle the story is a little different but not much.
As I said earlier let us know how tall you are and then we can run some figures and see where you are at. The basics aren't hard in principle, they just take a while to "see" the results and if you aren't looking in the right place you can miss them
I've been messing around with my weight and strength training now for almost 26 years and some of these "truths" have only become apparent to me this year! Probably because I spent so long looking for a short cut that didn't exist!
Cheers,
Mike0 -
Obesity is a disease and it is also a modern day side effect from our modern day processed foods .
Food chemicals such as aspartame and high fructose corn syrups are damaging the health of the people.
Most of our inability today is caused by inflammation, processed foods cause inflammatory weight gain, this can be genetically passed on to children.
People are not losing weight cause of inflammation from processed foods. This can be reversed according to researchers with a diabetic styled diet for people without diabetes. It worked on people without diabetes to lose 20 pounds
just google SPIRIT HAPPY DIET0
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