HELP HELP HELP :(
TripleOG92
Posts: 16
I'm stuck at the same weight. It will go down for a couple weeks then somehow I go right back up to 207 and my habits haven't changed. This is discouraging
I need HELP! I want to lose 30 lbs by my birthday October 19th, if not at least by Halloween.
What exercises should I be doing?
Diet ideas?
Do protein shakes help?
Help...I'll take any advice I can get
I'm at the point where I wanna cry whenever I look in the mirror......I feel like I look horrible and I"m tired of it
I need HELP! I want to lose 30 lbs by my birthday October 19th, if not at least by Halloween.
What exercises should I be doing?
Diet ideas?
Do protein shakes help?
Help...I'll take any advice I can get
I'm at the point where I wanna cry whenever I look in the mirror......I feel like I look horrible and I"m tired of it
0
Replies
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Can you make your diary public?
What is your calorie goal per day? (net)
How tall are you?
What is your exercise routine?0 -
I'm 5'8
Calorie goal 1200
I go to the gym for minimum 45 mins/3-4 times a week. Cardio for at least 20 of those minutes0 -
You could start by accurately logging your food.0
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you are not logging..problem solved0
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you are not logging..problem solved
^^This. Calories add up offensively and surprisingly fast.0 -
you are not logging..problem solved
This.
How do you know how much you're eating if you aren't tracking? Not everyone has to log, but if they aren't, and it's not working....start tracking your intake.0 -
you are not logging..problem solved
Read this OP: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1080242-a-guide-to-get-you-started-on-your-path-to-sexypants0 -
Absolutely start logging your food and exercise! Once you do that, you'll be able to see where you need to make adjustments.0
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If you don't log you don't know how many calories you are really eating.
A food scale and reading http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1234699-logging-accurately-step-by-step-guide will help you get started.0 -
Actually, I do keep track.
The app just isn't in my phone anymore.
I've cut out any liquids besides water and occasional skim milk with my cereal/oatmeal.
I eat fish and chicken. Don't really care for pork and red meat isn't a must
Lots of green veggies and fruits
One thing I know i'm doing wrong is not eating a bigger breakfast but I don't really get hungry in the mornings....
So back to the question besides not logging....what can I do0 -
Actually, I do keep track.
The app just isn't in my phone anymore.
so how are you keeping track then? and how accurately, it really really really matters!
One thing I know i'm doing wrong is not eating a bigger breakfast but I don't really get hungry in the mornings....
So back to the question besides not logging....what can I do
The only reason to worry about meal timing is if you feel more satisfied eating at certian times. Don't buy into the revs up your metabolism for the day type stuff.0 -
Actually, I do keep track.
The app just isn't in my phone anymore.
I've cut out any liquids besides water and occasional skim milk with my cereal/oatmeal.
I eat fish and chicken. Don't really care for pork and red meat isn't a must
Lots of green veggies and fruits
One thing I know i'm doing wrong is not eating a bigger breakfast but I don't really get hungry in the mornings....
So back to the question besides not logging....what can I do
Please read the links above.0 -
Exercise more.0
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OP, I can easily consume over 1,000 calories at dinner eating salmon, steamed veggies and sauteed veggies.
I do it on a regular basis (feel free to check out my every Monday night) but I save up my calories that day for it.
It really does matter that you weigh and log your food.
I never would've thought I was eating over 1,000 kcal of fish and veg if I weren't logging my recipes and oils and creams I use to cook it with.
ETA: I guess it's about 600-700 for my Monday night salmon dinners, but still. I never would've guessed salmon and veg was that much if I wasn't logging religiously.0 -
Are you changing up your workouts? You need to change things up every 3-4 weeks. Weight training? What about inches? There are a lot of factors here. Don't get discouraged. Look at your food intake and your workouts and make changes accordingly.0
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If you're not losing your not being accurate.
Also 30 pounds in 12 weeks is doable, not healthy but doable.
12-18 lbs in that time frame would not only be doable but much healthier and sustainable in the long run.
Stop lying to yourself, start logging correctly, make the changes necessary and everything will fall into place to where it should be.
Good luck.0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah0 -
well if you aren't logging on here. then are you at least keeping a food diary? I write in mine everyday all day. I weigh and I measure and I log everything I eat or drink. You cant just try and keep a running total in your head. You could stand to up that cardio to everyday. if you are truily eating at 1200 then you would be losing. Things add up. Try to add in a walk after dinners or first thing in the am. IT helps me to switch things up when my weight stays the same so I can kickstart it back again. don't get discouraged and start logging your food on mfp. do you use it on your home computer? I do. I don't even have one of those smart phones. the very least keep a food diary. I use a notebook I got from the dollar store. You can look at my food diary if you want -its public.0
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Actually, I do keep track.
The app just isn't in my phone anymore.
I've cut out any liquids besides water and occasional skim milk with my cereal/oatmeal.
I eat fish and chicken. Don't really care for pork and red meat isn't a must
Lots of green veggies and fruits
One thing I know i'm doing wrong is not eating a bigger breakfast but I don't really get hungry in the mornings....
So back to the question besides not logging....what can I do
It's not about what foods you eat/don't eat or when you eat them. It's about how much you eat. Weight loss is all about the calorie deficit.
If you're not tracking your food here, how are you keeping track of your intake? Do you use a food scale?
My advice is to start using the app to track your calories and read the links that have been posted for you. Unfortunately, we can't really offer specific advice if we don't have an accurate picture of your food intake.0 -
Are you changing up your workouts? You need to change things up every 3-4 weeks. Weight training? What about inches? There are a lot of factors here. Don't get discouraged. Look at your food intake and your workouts and make changes accordingly.
THIS is exactly where you need to put your focus on! Focus more on your why you want to lose weight. Is it to fit in certain clothes? Your actual scale weight is nothing compared to what the goals you want for yourself! Stop stressing and obsessing about the scale, and focus on the overall process. I bet you will see the inches melt away faster than the pounds on the scale!
Another big factor I read about is making sure to get enough sleep and water intake is crucial! It's recommended that you get half your weight in ounces of water a day!0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah
Cheating = doing something wrong.
Don’t have a cheat meal, cheat day, cheat anything. Make small changes daily that involve better choices this way your body, most importantly your mind has time to adapt. I'm all for massive action and making changes for the better by throwing away everything in your pantry that isn't healthy and boom no more that is it I'm done! The problem with this is a majority (not everyone) of people have trouble with relapse by doing this. Making lifestyle changes replace unhealthy habits with more healthy habits. Make your changes slowly over time. You didn’t get fat overnight you’re not going to get skinny that way either. The reason we relapse is because we try to do too much all at once and then we shut down and binge. Avoid that make small changes every day and before you know it, you’ll look in the mirror or at something you’ve just done and go “I don’t believe it.” But you should because that is the new you.0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah
Cheating = doing something wrong.
Don’t have a cheat meal, cheat day, cheat anything. Make small changes daily that involve better choices this way your body, most importantly your mind has time to adapt. I'm all for massive action and making changes for the better by throwing away everything in your pantry that isn't healthy and boom no more that is it I'm done! The problem with this is a majority (not everyone) of people have trouble with relapse by doing this. Making lifestyle changes replace unhealthy habits with more healthy habits. Make your changes slowly over time. You didn’t get fat overnight you’re not going to get skinny that way either. The reason we relapse is because we try to do too much all at once and then we shut down and binge. Avoid that make small changes every day and before you know it, you’ll look in the mirror or at something you’ve just done and go “I don’t believe it.” But you should because that is the new you.
I agree. I feel the key word here should be "moderation".
I have to admit, I've never heard of a body getting used to healthy food, and needing junk food to kickstart it into losing weight. :huh:0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah
Cheating = doing something wrong.
Don’t have a cheat meal, cheat day, cheat anything. Make small changes daily that involve better choices this way your body, most importantly your mind has time to adapt. I'm all for massive action and making changes for the better by throwing away everything in your pantry that isn't healthy and boom no more that is it I'm done! The problem with this is a majority (not everyone) of people have trouble with relapse by doing this. Making lifestyle changes replace unhealthy habits with more healthy habits. Make your changes slowly over time. You didn’t get fat overnight you’re not going to get skinny that way either. The reason we relapse is because we try to do too much all at once and then we shut down and binge. Avoid that make small changes every day and before you know it, you’ll look in the mirror or at something you’ve just done and go “I don’t believe it.” But you should because that is the new you.
I agree. I feel the key word here should be "moderation".
I have to admit, I've never heard of a body getting used to healthy food, and needing junk food to kickstart it into losing weight. :huh:
There is a bit of research about it reseting leptin levels ( a hormone ) but honestly I think that the poster posting that advice was joking at OP. Who knows.
There's no way to even know if OP's diet reflects what she described in the first place, and I'm inclined to believe it is not, because on a 1,200 kcal diet of all white meat and veggies while working out she should be losing a few pounds a week and she's not.0 -
Here are some tips that worked great for me while keeping a healthy diet:
Break up your meals/snacks into 5-6 per day to keep your metabolism fueled and your blood sugar levels from spiking, every 3 hours or so.
Reduce your portions and include a protein with the meals (3-4oz).
Drink min 8 glasses of water a day
Do a minimum 30min of cardio 4X a week, you should be sweating with effort by the 10 min mark. After 20 min is when you hit the fat burn mode and burn more efficiently.
Eat within 30min after a workout
Limit yourself to 1 protein shake a day (make sure it has low or no sugars).
Lots of veggies (broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, spinach, kale, asparagus - avoid potatoes, peas, corn, and carrots) and no more then 2 servings of fruit per day (mixed berries, 1/2 grapefruit or apple, no tree or tropical fruits in general as they have a higher sugar level) with a protein for snack.
Snacks: apple with 1 tbsp peanut butter, 1 apple sauce cup with 1 scoop vanilla protein mixed in, 1/2 cup dry curd with 1/4 mixed berries, 1/2 grapefruit with 1 plain or whole wheat rice cake
Good carbs: Rolled or steel cut oats or 2 slices wheat toast for breakfast / Meals: yams (1/2 cup), brown rice (1/2 cup cooked) X2 day and not after 3pm. Avoid white foods (rice, potatoes)
Breakfast: 1/2 cup rolled oats (unflavoured) with a protein shake, or 1/2 cup egg whites with spices and pepper
Condiments: no ketchup, mayo, soy sauce etc as they are high in sugars
Proteins: egg whites, chicken, lower fat fish, turkey, lean, low fat red meats max 2X a week, dry curd. No pork, no skin, trim fat.
Give yourself one cheat meal (in moderation) every week so you don't feel you are going without everything you love.
Hope this helps! Good luck!0 -
Here are some tips that worked great for me while keeping a healthy diet:
Break up your meals/snacks into 5-6 per day to keep your metabolism fueled and your blood sugar levels from spiking, every 3 hours or so.
Reduce your portions and include a protein with the meals (3-4oz).
Drink min 8 glasses of water a day
Do a minimum 30min of cardio 4X a week, you should be sweating with effort by the 10 min mark. After 20 min is when you hit the fat burn mode and burn more efficiently.
Eat within 30min after a workout
Limit yourself to 1 protein shake a day (make sure it has low or no sugars).
Lots of veggies (broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, spinach, kale, asparagus - avoid potatoes, peas, corn, and carrots) and no more then 2 servings of fruit per day (mixed berries, 1/2 grapefruit or apple, no tree or tropical fruits in general as they have a higher sugar level) with a protein for snack.
Snacks: apple with 1 tbsp peanut butter, 1 apple sauce cup with 1 scoop vanilla protein mixed in, 1/2 cup dry curd with 1/4 mixed berries, 1/2 grapefruit with 1 plain or whole wheat rice cake
Good carbs: Rolled or steel cut oats or 2 slices wheat toast for breakfast / Meals: yams (1/2 cup), brown rice (1/2 cup cooked) X2 day and not after 3pm. Avoid white foods (rice, potatoes)
Breakfast: 1/2 cup rolled oats (unflavoured) with a protein shake, or 1/2 cup egg whites with spices and pepper
Condiments: no ketchup, mayo, soy sauce etc as they are high in sugars
Proteins: egg whites, chicken, lower fat fish, turkey, lean, low fat red meats max 2X a week, dry curd. No pork, no skin, trim fat.
Give yourself one cheat meal (in moderation) every week so you don't feel you are going without everything you love.
Hope this helps! Good luck!
1. Meal timing is personal preference.
2. Your metabolism is always working..it is a 24 hour type of thing.
3. Exercise (all types) are good for fitness.
4. Sugar is not evil, it is a carb.
5. Fruit is awesome (even the tree kind)
6. Unless there is a medical condition, there is no reason to avoid certain foods.
7. Accurate logging does wonders...0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah
Cheating = doing something wrong.
Don’t have a cheat meal, cheat day, cheat anything. Make small changes daily that involve better choices this way your body, most importantly your mind has time to adapt. I'm all for massive action and making changes for the better by throwing away everything in your pantry that isn't healthy and boom no more that is it I'm done! The problem with this is a majority (not everyone) of people have trouble with relapse by doing this. Making lifestyle changes replace unhealthy habits with more healthy habits. Make your changes slowly over time. You didn’t get fat overnight you’re not going to get skinny that way either. The reason we relapse is because we try to do too much all at once and then we shut down and binge. Avoid that make small changes every day and before you know it, you’ll look in the mirror or at something you’ve just done and go “I don’t believe it.” But you should because that is the new you.
I agree. I feel the key word here should be "moderation".
I have to admit, I've never heard of a body getting used to healthy food, and needing junk food to kickstart it into losing weight. :huh:
It was more about the mindset. The body will do its best to process whatever you put into it to keep it going. Junk food is like water in gas, not good but the car will still go. However if you just put in good food its not going to instantaneously fix the problem. Time by putting in the good fuel will eventually fix it. However the Mindset and habits of eating junk food or having cravings is what kills people. Like when they eat that piece of cake and then go well I've messed up today now and then go on a binge of 2500 calories and then that triggers something where they fall back into old unhealthy patterns. You've got to eat the cake but say no to the ice cream that day, small changes. Or eat the cake and the ice cream at smaller portions. I feel having a cheat meal sets people up for failure. However if you eat it, log it and work hard every day to hit your daily goals. Don’t deprive yourself of things you enjoy because eventually it will catch up to you. Enjoy life it’s the only one you have. It’s not a ton of time each day to log your food but could help you save a lot of time on this earth.0 -
My first time dieting I lost 38 pounds in one Summer easily. I gained all if that back and more and this is my second time and i've lost 20 pounds atm and still going. My advice to you would be to have a cheat meal, it always always always helps me become unstuck. I think your body gets used to the healthy food you are putting into in and it makes it harder to loose pounds. If you have a cheat meal, your body will remember again that you're eating such healthy food and start to loose again. It always works for me.
-Savannah
Cheating = doing something wrong.
Don’t have a cheat meal, cheat day, cheat anything. Make small changes daily that involve better choices this way your body, most importantly your mind has time to adapt. I'm all for massive action and making changes for the better by throwing away everything in your pantry that isn't healthy and boom no more that is it I'm done! The problem with this is a majority (not everyone) of people have trouble with relapse by doing this. Making lifestyle changes replace unhealthy habits with more healthy habits. Make your changes slowly over time. You didn’t get fat overnight you’re not going to get skinny that way either. The reason we relapse is because we try to do too much all at once and then we shut down and binge. Avoid that make small changes every day and before you know it, you’ll look in the mirror or at something you’ve just done and go “I don’t believe it.” But you should because that is the new you.
I agree. I feel the key word here should be "moderation".
I have to admit, I've never heard of a body getting used to healthy food, and needing junk food to kickstart it into losing weight. :huh:
It was more about the mindset. The body will do its best to process whatever you put into it to keep it going. Junk food is like water in gas, not good but the car will still go. However if you just put in good food its not going to instantaneously fix the problem. Time by putting in the good fuel will eventually fix it. However the Mindset and habits of eating junk food or having cravings is what kills people. Like when they eat that piece of cake and then go well I've messed up today now and then go on a binge of 2500 calories and then that triggers something where they fall back into old unhealthy patterns. You've got to eat the cake but say no to the ice cream that day, small changes. Or eat the cake and the ice cream at smaller portions. I feel having a cheat meal sets people up for failure. However if you eat it, log it and work hard every day to hit your daily goals. Don’t deprive yourself of things you enjoy because eventually it will catch up to you. Enjoy life it’s the only one you have. It’s not a ton of time each day to log your food but could help you save a lot of time on this earth.
Again, not disagreeing with you at all. Moderation is something that both has to be practiced mentally and physically. Like you said "no to the ice cream that day, small changes. Or eat the cake and the ice cream at smaller portions." BAM. Moderation.0 -
I know it's off-topic, but you look much smaller than what you weigh. Must have a lot of lean mass.0
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Realize that controlling calorie intake is most important to controlling weight.
"Most weight loss occurs because of decreased caloric intake. However, evidence shows the only way to maintain weight loss is to be engaged in regular physical activity."
"To maintain your weight: work your way up to 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity, 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity aerobic activity, or an equivalent mix of the two each week."
(The page explains moderate & vigorous.)
http://www.cdc.gov/healthyweight/physical_activity/index.html
So start logging, measure your food intake accurately & honestly.
If you are at a calorie deficit, you will lose weight.I want to lose 30 lbs by my birthday October 19th, if not at least by Halloween.
What exercises should I be doing?
Diet ideas?
Do protein shakes help?
I'm 5'8, calorie goal 1200.
I go to the gym for minimum 45 mins/3-4 times a week. Cardio for at least 20 of those minutes.
At 5'8", the top end of a healthy BMI range is 160 lb. Here's a BMI chart: http://www.shapeup.org/bmi/bmi6.pdf
So to get there, you've got 47 lb to lose.
Going at a healthy rate of no more than 2 lb per week, that will take 24 weeks (6 months).
In 3 months you can reasonably expect to lose half that, or about 24 lb.
Don't go below 1200 cal per day unless you're supervised by a doctor, and actually that's probably way too low for you.
To maintain your current weight, you need 2070 cal.
To drop 1 lb per week, cut 500 cal = 1500 total intake.
To drop 2 lb per week, burn another 500 in exercise every day. To do that, you're going to need to up your cardio. Start with the recommended 30 minutes 5x per week & work up to at least 45 min, preferably an hour.
Don't eat back your exercise calories unless you're really hungry that day - don't make a habit of it - and then only eat 1/3 to 1/2 of what you burned. (MFP way overestimates calorie burn.)
Add or increase weightlifting. By itself it doesn't burn a lot of calories (compared to cardio), but it builds muscle and muscles burn several times what fat burns for the same mass. Note that when you add muscle and lose fat the scale may not change much, but your measurements will show it because fat is puffy and muscle is compact.
No, protein shakes probably won't help because they're usually loaded with sugar & also because for some strange reason our bodies don't register calories when we drink them like happens when we eat food, so you won't feel full.
Eat real food, whole food, as non-processed as you can, for the majority of your calories. If you want more protein, have eggs, fish, chicken, beans, hard cheese.
If you can exercise before breakfast, do it. You've been running on stored carbs (glycogen) all night, so you're closer to starting to burn fat than you would be after you've eaten something.0 -
And yes, when you eat, how much you eat when, does affect weight loss.
Have about half your calories for breakfast, and a small dinner, almost a snack.
I was never much of a breakfast person, but when I read these studies I changed how I eat & it's helping.
Breakfast for me is almost always a glass of milk + carnation instant breakfast + malted milk powder, a banana, and a slice of whole-wheat bread with peanut butter. That's 615 cal, which is a little below half my total cal for the day.
This study compared eating a small breakfast, medium lunch, and large dinner, [200, 500, 700 cal]
with eating a large breakfast, medium lunch, and small dinner [700, 500, 200 cal].
"The [large breakfast] group showed greater weight loss and waist circumference reduction ... fasting glucose, insulin [&] triglycerides ... decreased significantly to a greater extent in the [large breakfast] group."
In addition, hunger was less and satiety was greater.
Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23512957
Full text:
http://genetics.doctorsonly.co.il/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Jakubowicz-at-al-Obesity-2013-oby20460.pdf
"subjects assigned to high caloric intake during breakfast lost significantly more weight than those assigned to high caloric intake during the dinner"
Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24467926
Full text: http://www.tradewindsports.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Nutrient-Timing-and-Obesity-2014.pdf
"data suggest that a low-calorie Mediterranean diet with a higher amount of calories in the first part of the day could establish a greater reduction in fat mass and improved insulin sensitivity than a typical daily diet."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24809437
"Breakfast is associated with lower body weight ...
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/248982360
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