List what works for you in losing weight

laDOLCEvita7
laDOLCEvita7 Posts: 191
edited September 22 in Motivation and Support
I thought it may be a good idea make a topic of a list of 5-10 peices of advice that you can list on what has been successful for you in losing weight. That way, that advice can help others who may be struggling.

Here's my list:
1. Drink lots of Water
2. Instead of driving out for lunch break, take a 30 minute walk, and then eat your healthy lunch at your desk
3. Track all your food, even if its a small amount
4. Find work out buddies to keep you accountable
5.Eat small amounts every 2-3 hours to keep yourself from going into major hunger mode and eating more than you planned.

Replies

  • Schula03
    Schula03 Posts: 171 Member
    Be Consistent!!!!!!
  • RaeN81
    RaeN81 Posts: 534 Member
    1. Eating breakfast.
    2. Eating frequent, small meals.
    3. Allowing myself all the foods I love and at least one treat everyday.
    4. Going to a non profit weight loss support group called TOPS (I'm very competitive and they have been sooo encouraging.)
    5. Being clear about my motivation (to honor God with my body)
  • romzana
    romzana Posts: 86 Member
    1. Weigh yourself and chart it. Each morning, weigh yourself on a digital scale and log it immediately. Your weight, of course, will fluctuate from day-to-day, and your sense of accomplishment or disappointment shouldn’t hinge on your daily weight. However, your weight can be used as a useful feedback system to see what you’re doing right and to motivate you. I’d recommend using the trend-oriented spreadsheet used in the Hacker’s Diet.

    2. Plan your meals. This is probably the No. 1 thing you can do to lose weight. First, use a calorie calculator to estimate how many calories you need to maintain your current weight. Now, if you want to lose a pound a week, you’ll want to cut that total by 500 calories per day to hit that goal (3,500 calories equals a pound of fat). If you want to lose weight slower, you can cut your total daily calories by less. I wouldn’t recommend more than a pound a week (which is about 50 pounds a year).

    Once you have your target calories per day, you want to allocate them throughout the day. For example, if your target is 2,000 calories, you could allocate 400 calories per meal for 4 meals (7 a.m., 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. for example) with two 200-calorie snacks. How you allocate your calories is completely up to you — you might want to experiment to find the best distribution.

    Now plan each meal so that you fit within the calorie limit for that meal. This might take some time to calculate (try FitDay), but once you have your favorite meals planned, this isn’t too hard. You can have a listing of 400-calorie meals and 200-calorie snacks that are interchangeable. The key, of course, is sticking to the meal plan — don’t let yourself deviate. You’ll get used to it after a few days.

    3. Plan healthy snacks. Just as you plan your meals, you should plan your snacks. See the above item on allocating your daily calories to snacks. Instead of just snacking on whatever’s available, or rushing to a vending machine or convenience store when you get really hungry, you should plan to have healthy snacks in between meals. Fruit, veggies, yogurt, dried fruit and similar snacks are all good choices.

    Be sure to plan some unhealthy snacks sometimes too. You don’t want to completely deprive yourself — make it a fun thing. Some dark chocolate on one day, some berries on another, and an occasional binge work for me.

    4. Find lower-fat alternatives. Take your favorite foods and find lower-fat alternatives. If you love burgers, for example, you can make turkey burgers or soy burgers (there are some good ones, trust me). If you like French fries, make your own and bake them. Bake chicken instead of frying it. Get low-fat milk and yogurt instead of the higher-fat versions. Baked chips instead of greasy ones. While you shouldn’t give up fat completely, and in fact some types of fat are good for you in moderation, it’s important to remember that fat is high in calories (more than twice as calorie-dense as protein or carbs), and lowering your fat intake to a more moderate amount will also lower your calorie intake. Adding fruits and veggies is another good way to lower fat intake, as they take up a lot of space in your stomach without adding too many calories or fat.

    5. Eat slowly, and then wait 20 minutes. If you scarf down your meals, you are probably overeating because of it. I know, because I have to slow myself down a lot. The thing is, it takes awhile for our brains to get the message that we’re full. So if we eat quickly, we will actually eat past fullness. You’ve probably had that painful, “I’ve eaten way too much!” feeling, and it’s because of fast eating. The trick is to teach yourself to eat slowly. You’ll get full on less food.

    Another trick is to eat a sensible serving (a moderate plate, not stacked up is a good rule of thumb) without eating seconds right away. If you’re still a little hungry, wait for at least 20 minutes before eating any more. Often your hunger will go away.

    6. Think long term. You won’t lose weight overnight. Well, you could lose weight quickly, but you don’t want to — it’ll come back just as quickly. What you want is gradual weight loss that stays lost. A pound a week is a good rate — again, that’s 500 calories a day less than you need to maintain your current weight, and it’s about 50 pounds a year. Both are achievable, and both are sustainable. Of course, you’ll need to make adjustments as you go along, in case you’re taking in too little or too many calories, but the main thing is not to try for immediate and quick weight loss, but long-term loss. Don’t worry about the ups and downs every day, but look at trends over weeks and months. It’ll happen, if you stick with it and do it moderately.

    7. Stop drinking calories. Calories in soda, coffee, tea, alcohol, juice and other beverages are very sneaky, because you don’t realize how many calories you drink a day. Juice, for example, seems healthy, but really you’re getting none of the fiber of fruit and all of the calories. Eating an orange would give you the same benefits, and make you more full.

    Instead, drink water. Lots of it, all day long. Water makes you full, without giving you calories. It’s the perfect weight-loss drink, available at your local tap.

    8. Read about weight loss. This might seem like a weird tip, but I’ve found it to be true. If you keep your focus on your goal, you will most likely achieve it. But if you lose focus, you’ll lose motivation, and soon you’ll stop any progress. What you should do is read about weight loss — success stories, tips, etc. — to return you to that focus and motivation. Any time you’re losing motivation, read some articles about weight loss or exercise or eating healthy.

    9. Exercise for just 5 minutes. In the grand scheme of things, eating fewer calories is much more effective than trying to burn the calories through exercise. For example, you could burn a few hundred calories with 30 minutes of hard exercise, but you could easily gain those back with a bowl of cereal or some other snack. So if you really want weight loss, you’ll have to focus on what you eat.

    However, exercise does help. Burning even 200 calories a day can add up (an extra couple of pounds a month), and you don’t need to exercise too long to do that. And even better, exercise makes you feel good, and feel like you’re getting in shape. It makes you healthier, of course, and will get you toned.

    My recommendation is to start with just 5 minutes a day. That won’t get you to 200 calories, but it’s a start, and that’s what’s important. Just do 5 minutes a day for the first week. Any kind of exercise will do — try a few pushups, a few crunches, a few jumping jacks, and a couple minutes of running in place. After a week, increase it by 2 minutes. Do that for a couple of months, and soon you’re doing 20-25 minutes a day. That’s about all you need.

    10. Just get through a tough 3 days. If you reduce your caloric intake, as per Item #2 above, you will feel hungry at first. And that’s not easy. Hunger makes us want to give in. But just tell yourself that it’s just for 3 days. After that, it will start to get easier. You’ll get used to it, and it won’t seem like deprivation.
  • mzenzer
    mzenzer Posts: 503 Member
    1. I track all my foods.
    2. I told MFP I wanted to lose 1 pound per week so it figures in a 500 calorie deficit.
    3. I exercise, then eat back nearly all my exercise calories.
    4. I eat regular meals but include at least 3 snakes.
  • kaymd
    kaymd Posts: 470 Member
    1. Def. drink lots of water
    2. Track EVERYTHING you eat
    3. Watch your sodium
    4. Get some sort of motivation and support (that's why I am on here. I need lots of it)
    5. Exercise, even if its a walk (everything counts)
  • 1harleygal
    1harleygal Posts: 226 Member
    :wink:

    1. Drink lots of water
    2. Walk at breaks and lunch at work almost every day
    3. Juicing with fresh veggies and some fruit to sweeten it
    4. Eat like a queen at breakfast, princess at lunch and pauper at dinner
    5. Vary my workouts & work out at least 3 times a week
    6. If I crave something eat a small portion to keep from gorging on it later
    7. Use my George Foreman
    8. Prepare my meals ahead of time
    9. Eat fish, pork chops and chicken and limit the beef
    10. Eat fresh veggies for dinner with my protein
    11. Be honest when inputting my foods eaten on My Fitness Pal every day
    12. Eat some of my excercise calories

    :wink:
  • Keep it simple!!!!!!!!! Calories in vs. calories out.
  • Evarell
    Evarell Posts: 143 Member
    4. I eat regular meals but include at least 3 snakes.

    Tell me- how do you prepare those snakes? :tongue:
  • Aamilah
    Aamilah Posts: 62 Member
    FIRST, I AGREE WITH Schula03 (BE CONSISTENT)

    SECONDLY** (1) I EXERCISE 2 TIMES A DAY (2 HOURS)
    (2) EATING MORE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
    (3) BECOME A PECITARIAN (ONLY EAT SEAFOOD)
    (4)MOTIVATION FROM OTHERS/SEEING THE HUGE CHANGE
    WITH IN MYSELF,THAT MOTIVATES ME TO PUSH EVEN MORE
    IN EXERCISING AND EATING HEALTHY.
    (5) LAST BUT NOT LEASE COUNTING CALORIES (SO IMPORTANT)

    THIRDLY** THIS IS WHAT I DO TO LOSE WEIGHT SUCCESSFULLY .
  • AggieCass09
    AggieCass09 Posts: 1,867 Member
    1. Write down EVERYTHING I eat no matter how small/large
    2. Drink lots of water
    3. Stick to my 5x a week work outs
    4. Reward myself after dropping every 5 lbs
  • Great advice everyone, thanks for sharing :)
  • mzenzer
    mzenzer Posts: 503 Member
    4. I eat regular meals but include at least 3 snakes.

    Tell me- how do you prepare those snakes? :tongue:

    Battered in a garlic-basil sauce and slow cooked in a little olive oil, how else? :-)
  • katbass
    katbass Posts: 351 Member
    Love these! Great thread idea :)

    1. Drink water...I stick to a goal of 64 oz, but really pat myself on the back when I go over :)

    2. Exercise...I dont feel like Ive had a successful workout if I havent burned at LEAST 300 calories. As busy as life gets, I CAN find 30 minutes to devote to my health.

    3. Take pictures to show progress. The "Before" pics are hard to look at, but knowing that I am going to have "After" pics to compare makes it worth the sweat :)

    4. Set realistic short term goals in order to reach my long term goal of being healthy. I may not lose weight every week, but if Im not gaining weight, Im gonna call that a success :)

    5. EAT! EAT! EAT! Never dip below my personal calorie goal (somedays its hard...something I NEVER imagined) and try to keep most of my foods as natural/unprocessed as possible. I starved my metabolism and lost weight before....only to gain it all back, PLUS more!

    Looking forward to reading more!
  • MzBug
    MzBug Posts: 2,173 Member
    4. I eat regular meals but include at least 3 snakes.

    Tell me- how do you prepare those snakes? :tongue:

    Battered in a garlic-basil sauce and slow cooked in a little olive oil, how else? :-)


    Tastes like chicken!
  • Great tips! I think all of us have some similar things that work for us! Some things that work for me are:

    1. Drink lots of water
    2. Plan my meals. If I get hungry for something not planned, I will drink water or chew gum.
    3. Exercise (typically 5x week)
    4. To prevent myself from eating late at night, I will chew gum, drink tea, or do some push ups. Usually this helps ease the "hunger" I am feeling.
    5. Track everything I eat... even if I know it was not a good food choice. I used to think if no one saw me do it or I didn't write it down, then it didn't happen. I hate to add it to MFP, but I know if I slip up, I still have to track it.
    6. Avoid boredom! My biggest issue is sitting at home and eating out of boredom. I keep myself busy to avoid this problem.
  • tessjordan88
    tessjordan88 Posts: 201 Member
    1. Water, water, and more water! (I drink about 5 half-litre bottles per day which equals about 10 glasses.)
    2. Cut out sweetened drinks. Replace them with more water. (This one was hard for this Dr. Pepper addict.) Reward yourself with one on the weekend.
    3. Eat small, low calorie, frequent meals, including a healthy breakfast. This keeps your metabolism burning.
    4. Stop eating about 4-5 hours before bed.
    5. Vegetables & fruits... learn to LOVE them! They are nutrient rich, and low calorie... just leave off (or use just half) the butter and cheese.
    6. Shop for leaner cuts of meat. Remove the skin from chicken... that's where most of the fat is.
    7. Get out and WALK, run, jog, roller skate, just MOVE IT!! (I started at a half mile per day, & moved up to about 2 miles). Breaking news: Excercise BURNS CALORIES!! And roller skating is fun & a HUGE calorie burn!
    8. Use this website! Log EVERYTHING! Even cleaning is excercise... yes, it's on there!
    9. Lower sodium, but don't cut it out completely. I re-set mine to 2000, which is 500 under the default setting. Much more and I will experience some swelling.
    10. Get an accountability partner to walk with you... you will keep each other motivated.
    11. Remember, you can eat just about anything you want, just keep the portions in control. I like to taste EVERYTHING! Yes, I ate breakfast, a few small snacks, beef stew for lunch, chili for dinner, & triple chocolate fudge cake for desert tonight and still stayed within my calorie range. Eat everything in moderation.... and
    12. Learn when to stop eating. If a 200 calorie snack doesn't tide you over until the next meal, drink more water.


    P.S. I try to stay away from the snakes... LOL!
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