What was your first?

mellyboobear
mellyboobear Posts: 117 Member
edited February 28 in Motivation and Support
What was the first thing you changed in your lifestyle change? What has been the hardest to maintain? Are you having success?

Replies

  • Meerataila
    Meerataila Posts: 1,885 Member
    This will sound awful, but the first thing I gave up was soda. Not all soda, just a two liter a day habit.
  • The first thing I changed was logging what I eat accurately. Lately the hardest thing for me has been logging accurately.
  • BombshellPhoenix
    BombshellPhoenix Posts: 1,693 Member
    The first thing I gave up was giving up. I've lost weight before. 40 lbs. I treated my weight loss like a punishment. I denied myself things I enjoyed, picked an exercise I loathed because I thought it was the only way. This time, I changed my attitude and I changed my life for the better. 53 lbs down, in love with weightlifting and never giving up on myself again.
    The logging accurately thing is a good one too ;)
  • Lelah77
    Lelah77 Posts: 177 Member
    My first "sacrifice" was portions. Like, I forced myself to start weighing and measuring portions. I didn't change the foods much at first, just how much I was allowing myself to eat. Then, if I was still hungry, I subbed a "better" option rather than a second portion of the yummy fattening things (read: pizza! I adore pizza... nom nom nom)

    Since then I have shifted my eating almost completely. My diet is filled with high fiber, lean protein, & lots of veggies n fruit. I still love pizza, though, so if I splurge its no big deal.

    The hardest thing to maintain has been my exercise routine. I aim for 2.5 hrs of exercise a week - - 3 workouts is ideal but sometimes I have to do it over 5-6 days in smaller chunks. My schedule is chaotic at best, so if I squeeze in a 15 min walk I give myself a fat pat on the back. If I can binge and do an hour or an hour-15 at the gym I am psyched. Some weeks I get only 1 workout in. I try not to beat myself up about it, but I need to beat myself a little to keep the habit alive.
  • williams969
    williams969 Posts: 2,528 Member
    First: Portion control (a food scale works wonders to actually "see" what 1 serving should be). Wow, that's like, not enough food. I'm STARVING---Wahhhh!

    Second: Determined I *like* volumes of food. In order to stay satiated (and 1 slice of pizza and one sliver of garlic bread wasn't doin' it), learned to love fresh produce (WOW! I can eat a spinach salad as big as my head? Yes, please! I'll take two, lol). Well, I still eat pizza and burgers and tacos, just not every single meal every day of the week.

    Third: Found the MFP community and my path to success!
  • Swiftlet66
    Swiftlet66 Posts: 729 Member
    Adding exercise... I started jogging outside. That was definitely my first change. It's also the hardest to maintain. I'm naturally a lazy/quite inconsistent girl. Unless I really like a certain activity, I won't do it for long. But even if I like something, I get bored of it eventually. Even if it's a food I like, I won't care for it either if I eat it too much. In fact, sometimes I do get tired of food itself! Such a fickle nature... So in terms of success?? I'm mainly losing because of food deficit, not exercise. Lol.
  • melissaw78
    melissaw78 Posts: 214 Member
    The first thing that I did was drink more water.

    The second thing was to start logging everything ruthlessly. That one hurt because I wasn't doing as well with my calories as I thought.

    Next, I got more intentional with my exercise and overall activity level.
  • mmd575
    mmd575 Posts: 88 Member
    In my case it was cutting portion sizes and starting exercise. Those two changes made the biggest impact on my weight loss and my health.
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    First thing I changed is irrelevant because I had it all wrong.

    After a while it really isn't hard to maintain because everything becomes a habit.

    I have success through being accurate, being reasonable (half a pound a week), doing things I love (lifting) and not giving up something completely (I'd fail if I cut out the yummy stuff).
  • George_Baileys_Ghost
    George_Baileys_Ghost Posts: 1,524 Member
    I started eating primal and became a cardio bunny. After that didn't pan out, I learned moderation, macro-tracking, and a more balanced cardio/strength training routine. That's when I managed to not only lose weight, but keep in off in a fairly painless way.
  • SunofaBeach14
    SunofaBeach14 Posts: 4,899 Member
    I think I stopped eating white rice, which didn't really matter because I didn't eat it anyway. But, I gave that **** up.
  • AlysaN
    AlysaN Posts: 11
    I gave up pop or soda or whatever you want to call it. It was hard for me because I come from a family of pop drinkers. I had always had it. It was hard at first but now I don't even like it. The closest thing I get to a pop now is occasionally/rarely a cherry limeade.
  • FatFreeFrolicking
    FatFreeFrolicking Posts: 4,252 Member
    First thing I changed- portion control.

    Hardest to maintain- lower carb intake.
  • riffraff2112
    riffraff2112 Posts: 1,756 Member
    overeating.
  • kstar0327
    kstar0327 Posts: 54 Member
    I gave up all form of junk food........................it hasn't been easy but almost a month and no junk food
  • aedreana
    aedreana Posts: 979 Member
    I turned vegan, for ethical reasons. The only difficult part is the iron deficiency anemia/B-12 deficiency anemia that is because I live in rock-bottom poverty and thus can neither afford vegan supplements nor nutritious vegan foods-- having to subsist on potato chips or, having to go hungry without food to eat.
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