The Little Things That Helped Me Lose 135 Lbs
LosingLaurensWay
Posts: 86 Member
Whenever I talk to someone about my weight loss and I drop the big 135 number people always want to pick my brain. “How did you do it?” By far the number one question asked. Usually I go on about what sparked my journey, how I gained the sudden realization that I was worth it, but rarely have I ever talked about how I did it. The more I thought about it the more I realized there were little things I learned along the way that really pushed me beyond what I thought was possible. When I was overcome with doubt I relied on these mantras as my mental safety net.
Therapy
The biggest factor in my journey has been therapy. Without it I wouldn’t have the mental strength to have pushed so far for so long or past those nasty plateaus. It helped me realize my emotional connection to food and that I needed to find healthier ways to deal with stress and my head constantly buzzing. With a lot of work I replaced food with running, yoga and blogging.
Change How You Think
This basically goes hand in hand with therapy, but you need to address how you think about food. Before I started food was a comfort, now it is a fuel source for physical activity. Food now serves the purpose it is meant for.
Nutrient Dense Foods
There is a major difference between eating a croissant that has 300 calories and 300 calories worth of oatmeal for breakfast. One will keep you satisfied longer and provide more beneficial nutrients for your body and one is delicious… flaky…. buttery… totally not worth it in the long run.
Eat What You Crave
It’s a diet, not martyrdom. If you want that croissant then go for it. However, if you do know that you’ll probably be hungry within an hour. If you’re craving something that might really break the calorie bank, like say a Five Guys burger, then be prepared to spend extra time in the gym. You can eat what you want, but you have to balance it out.
Build Up to a New Lifestyle with Small Changes
When I started I was still eating at Burger King every day. Some of my first changes were proportion changes, so instead of a regular whopper with medium fries I got a whopper jr with small fries. In time I took away the cheese, then the fries. Eventually I had to skip BK all together, but it was a slow, gradual distancing. A year and a half later I rarely go in to a fast food restaurant, save for my saving grace the beautiful and wonderful Panera. It’s all about making gradual changes feel natural, so they become true habits.
Learn To Push Yourself
So this is one you have to learn through experience. There is a difference between giving up and accepting your limit. In the beginning I received the greatest advice regarding physical activity from my uncle who was a marathon runner, keep going until it hurts or is no longer fun, but still push your limit. When I started I struggled to walk for more than 15 minutes, now I run every day for 40 minutes. I didn’t just start running one day, I slowly conditioned myself to that point, running for 30 seconds walking for 2 minutes, slowly building my endurance. If your knees or muscles hurt or you are completely winded, walk, but never simply give up.
The Weight Loss Trifecta
Calorie reduction, cardio and weight training – this is your Holy Trinity when it comes to weight loss. I doubt many people would dispute the first two, but the sheer mention of weight training and women start running away. Fact of the matter is ladies unless you are training to bulk up, you won’t. Also the same weight routine month after month won’t do you any good either. You need to be proactive and find a new routine every few weeks. Don’t spend hours a week on the elliptical! Change it up! Try new machines, try classes at your gym, heck go for a run outside. Do whatever it takes to keep pushing yourself. At this point in my journey I can start to see all the hard work I’ve put in to my body. The more weight I lose the more my sculpted muscles start to peek through. Let me tell you what, it is the most rewarding feeling I’ve ever felt.
Keep It Up Even When You Doubt Yourself
I’ve been through at least six plateaus since I started, some lasted a few weeks, one lasted five months. In each case I kept up my hard work, I kept pushing and eventually those barriers broke down. Each one of these tips helped me maintain my drive and reminded me that I was living a new life, a healthy life.
If you are just starting out or if you’ve hit a wall I hope these little pieces of advice help you. If there are any you’d like me to elaborate on or if you have any questions feel free to ask! Also feel free to add me! I accept everyone
Therapy
The biggest factor in my journey has been therapy. Without it I wouldn’t have the mental strength to have pushed so far for so long or past those nasty plateaus. It helped me realize my emotional connection to food and that I needed to find healthier ways to deal with stress and my head constantly buzzing. With a lot of work I replaced food with running, yoga and blogging.
Change How You Think
This basically goes hand in hand with therapy, but you need to address how you think about food. Before I started food was a comfort, now it is a fuel source for physical activity. Food now serves the purpose it is meant for.
Nutrient Dense Foods
There is a major difference between eating a croissant that has 300 calories and 300 calories worth of oatmeal for breakfast. One will keep you satisfied longer and provide more beneficial nutrients for your body and one is delicious… flaky…. buttery… totally not worth it in the long run.
Eat What You Crave
It’s a diet, not martyrdom. If you want that croissant then go for it. However, if you do know that you’ll probably be hungry within an hour. If you’re craving something that might really break the calorie bank, like say a Five Guys burger, then be prepared to spend extra time in the gym. You can eat what you want, but you have to balance it out.
Build Up to a New Lifestyle with Small Changes
When I started I was still eating at Burger King every day. Some of my first changes were proportion changes, so instead of a regular whopper with medium fries I got a whopper jr with small fries. In time I took away the cheese, then the fries. Eventually I had to skip BK all together, but it was a slow, gradual distancing. A year and a half later I rarely go in to a fast food restaurant, save for my saving grace the beautiful and wonderful Panera. It’s all about making gradual changes feel natural, so they become true habits.
Learn To Push Yourself
So this is one you have to learn through experience. There is a difference between giving up and accepting your limit. In the beginning I received the greatest advice regarding physical activity from my uncle who was a marathon runner, keep going until it hurts or is no longer fun, but still push your limit. When I started I struggled to walk for more than 15 minutes, now I run every day for 40 minutes. I didn’t just start running one day, I slowly conditioned myself to that point, running for 30 seconds walking for 2 minutes, slowly building my endurance. If your knees or muscles hurt or you are completely winded, walk, but never simply give up.
The Weight Loss Trifecta
Calorie reduction, cardio and weight training – this is your Holy Trinity when it comes to weight loss. I doubt many people would dispute the first two, but the sheer mention of weight training and women start running away. Fact of the matter is ladies unless you are training to bulk up, you won’t. Also the same weight routine month after month won’t do you any good either. You need to be proactive and find a new routine every few weeks. Don’t spend hours a week on the elliptical! Change it up! Try new machines, try classes at your gym, heck go for a run outside. Do whatever it takes to keep pushing yourself. At this point in my journey I can start to see all the hard work I’ve put in to my body. The more weight I lose the more my sculpted muscles start to peek through. Let me tell you what, it is the most rewarding feeling I’ve ever felt.
Keep It Up Even When You Doubt Yourself
I’ve been through at least six plateaus since I started, some lasted a few weeks, one lasted five months. In each case I kept up my hard work, I kept pushing and eventually those barriers broke down. Each one of these tips helped me maintain my drive and reminded me that I was living a new life, a healthy life.
If you are just starting out or if you’ve hit a wall I hope these little pieces of advice help you. If there are any you’d like me to elaborate on or if you have any questions feel free to ask! Also feel free to add me! I accept everyone
0
Replies
-
Amazing work! Congratulations!0
-
Great job! I think that last piece is the hardest for sure, at least for me it has been. Plateaus knock me off my progress completely.0
-
Its awesome you lost so much0
-
Great job! I think that last piece is the hardest for sure, at least for me it has been. Plateaus knock me off my progress completely.
Oh yeah they are the HARDEST part of weight loss for sure. You lose that super high of the number creeping down and all of that validation. I just had to trust in myself and have huge amounts of hope to get through it. Without a positive mindset and hope it is near impossible to keep going.
0 -
Thank you0
-
Thank you for sharing this with us... there are things in there that I have picked up, at the start of my weight loss journey that I think will really help.
Mike0 -
Thank you for sharing and congrats on your amazing achievement.0
-
Talk about an inspiration - and it is so great to hear common sense, attainable guidelines! Thanks for sharing.0
-
TXRangersFan76 wrote: »Talk about an inspiration - and it is so great to hear common sense, attainable guidelines! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you! I believe the more you realize how simple it is the less overwhelming and all the more possible it will seem. Good luck on your journey!
0 -
Best, most sensible advice I have ever seen on the forums! Congratulations!0
-
Congratulations on your loss! Very impressive.0
-
that's great! Congrats!0
-
Thanks for sharing and congrats on your success! I definitely agree with these- esp. changing how I think about food- it is one of the biggest challenges for me, but the most important for long-term change.0
-
thats fantastic ! you shoould be proud of yourself...its a hard road...but worth it !
Congrats !!0 -
Thank you for sharing your journey. You truly are an inspieation.0
-
Awesome job on the weight loss! Thank you for sharing your advice and being an inspiration for others!0
-
Thank you so much for the good ideas:)0
-
Thank you so much for sharing, and Congrates on your awsome weight loss.0
-
You've done amazingly well, congratulations.
When you reached those plateaus, did you change anything - e.g. reduce calories, change the foods you were eating or increase exiercise - or did you just keep going as you were until you eventually started to lose again?0 -
All of this!0
-
Brownseabottles wrote: »You've done amazingly well, congratulations.
When you reached those plateaus, did you change anything - e.g. reduce calories, change the foods you were eating or increase exiercise - or did you just keep going as you were until you eventually started to lose again?
Usually when those plateaus came it was because I had either lost 20 lbs or I had fallen off the wagon. Ever 20 lbs I literally plateau for a week or two. So for those I just keep pushing. Usually I change my cardio and weight lifting routine and pump up the intensity just a tad.
70% of the time though it is because I became very relaxed about logging my food, I was eating out too much, I was eating back all of the calories I burned or I just didn't care and was eating whatever I wanted (ie binging). I never reduce my calories more than what MFP suggests. I just work harder, with more focus in other areas.
The key is trying not to get sucked in to the negatives of the plateau, rather focus on ways to fix it, critical problem solving. Plateaus are a huge part of weight loss, if you learn to overcome them then you are unstoppable.
Hope this helps! You can message me if you have more questions0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions