55-65 year old women's success?
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Hi Piano Run (and everyone else) I am a 67 year old woman who has lost 25 lbs since Sept. Believe it or not, it can be done. I don't have a regular exercise program, I don't really like to go to the gym. I have increased my daily activity level and try to get around 10K steps most days. I always wear my fitbit.
I have never had success like this before. I basically cut all wheat and sugar and feel so much better. I am planning on adding some weight exercise after the New Year. While I am within 5 lbs of goal, I am hoping to just maintain my weightloss until after the holidays.
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I too have be struggling to be 25-30 lbs I gained over past year. I was 7 lbs from goal a year ago. Self sabotage and now have this to lose. Looking for friends to support and encourage each other.0
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LaceyBirds wrote: »Howdy do, all of you. I think I've only contributed to this thread once or twice, but I read it faithfully and it always inspires me.
I'm so glad today to see some of you kind of "accepting" no or little loss for the holidays, and just maintaining if possible. I turned 60 in early November, and I have kind of changed my attitude a little bit since then, kind of along those same lines. I think this has to do with the fact that I have been doing this now for over a year, almost eight months on MFP, and have seen slow but fairly steady progress (with a few stalls), so that, even when I get frustrated, I know that what I am doing is actually working. So I decided to lighten up on myself a bit, and went on a four-day mini-vacation for my birthday, eating whatever I wanted, while still watching my intake a little. I accepted that I would gain some weight then, and just got right back on my program after.
On Thanksgiving morning, I hit another "decade" victory - down from 230 pounds to 170 pounds. I then decided to do the same "acceptance" thing with Thanksgiving, and now, a week later, I am back at the same weight I was that morning. I am going to "relax" for the holidays too - I'll follow my plan as usual, as well as I can, but I will also let myself enjoy the holidays the same way I have done for the last two, and I have the confidence that I will continue on my merry MFP way after they are over.
I guess that's the important part to me - that I have gained confidence in my ability to stick to this process or program, whatever you want to call it, and, even with setbacks and stalls, I have no doubts in my ability to lose the next 35 or so pounds.
Thanks to all of you who contribute to this thread, it is very helpful and inspirational. Happy holidays!
Wonderful and inspiring post. I agree that we can enjoy breaks from the low cal minimums we get when we are really watching it and the difference is we get right back with it when those occasions are over.
Let's enjoy our holidays and just not go crazy. We have all learned a lot in our older age. So actually you can teach an old dog new tricks. LOL
Merry Christmas to you and yours.
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There's a ton of inspiration here. Good on us! I'm 71, overweight since grade school, with many diets, ups and downs of poundage over the years. Many times joining/rejoining Weight Watchers and other "plans" over the years also. Ten years ago I finally reached my WW goal (which I had set at the top of the range for my height). Within three years I had put back on 40 pounds. I had just retired with time on my hands, so began once again focusing on my health. So, back to WW. I found that I could no longer lose weight consistently, so I bit the bullet and began an exercise program. I joined the YMCA, took group classes, got a Fitbit and walked more. I immediately began to see a consistent one pound of weight loss each week at WW, and reached my goal weight in about 15 months. I continued and added to my exercise program: it's now an important part of my daily routine -- and vital to my weight management. So, today, I am 20 lbs below my WW Lifetime goal weight and feel more fit and confident than I ever did. I highly recommend trying group exercise classes at your local YMCA if you have one. I am fortunate that my health insurance covers my membership, as part of the Silver Sneakers program. Good luck everyone!0
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this is great! I was beginning to think i would not be able to get back into shape at my age. Feel free to add me too! Thanks for the inspiration!0
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sbrownallison wrote: »So, today, I am 20 lbs below my WW Lifetime goal weight and feel more fit and confident than I ever did.
Wow! That is remarkable! (I know they don't make it easy to reach Lifetime; WW helps a lot of people, but they are, after all, a business.) Congrats on all your effort - very inspiring.
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I see there's a number of new people visiting this thread so here's some stuff to read to get you started:
community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10257474/starting-out-restarting-basics-inside/p10 -
sbrownallison wrote: »There's a ton of inspiration here. Good on us! I'm 71, overweight since grade school, with many diets, ups and downs of poundage over the years. Many times joining/rejoining Weight Watchers and other "plans" over the years also. Ten years ago I finally reached my WW goal (which I had set at the top of the range for my height). Within three years I had put back on 40 pounds. I had just retired with time on my hands, so began once again focusing on my health. So, back to WW. I found that I could no longer lose weight consistently, so I bit the bullet and began an exercise program. I joined the YMCA, took group classes, got a Fitbit and walked more. I immediately began to see a consistent one pound of weight loss each week at WW, and reached my goal weight in about 15 months. I continued and added to my exercise program: it's now an important part of my daily routine -- and vital to my weight management. So, today, I am 20 lbs below my WW Lifetime goal weight and feel more fit and confident than I ever did. I highly recommend trying group exercise classes at your local YMCA if you have one. I am fortunate that my health insurance covers my membership, as part of the Silver Sneakers program. Good luck everyone!
Congrats, I am a lifetime member but did it back in my 40s, I had found it didn't work for me either after I regained about 30 lbs.
I am having good results from Fitbit, Silver Sneakers classes, and logging. I was never good at logging so MFP helped a lot in that area. I have about 20 lbs. to go but since I started doing strength training, I am losing inches not pounds and loving the results of that. But I still want to get the scale heading downwards again.
Happy Hollies everyone!0 -
It is great to see so many new faces here. This thread is very non-threatening and non-judgmental!
@Triplestep, I have not tried the 21 Day Walk on Plan. I am more of a random person and enjoy the strength videos more since I walk, run and have my elliptical.
For me, exercise is the key. It boosts my metabolism (which was questionable a year or so ago) and I feel great! I went through all the holidays at 1300-1400 calories last year and survived. There are tons of recipes online that can help.
You can do this!!0 -
Love reading all the comments. I started last Christmas at 202 and currently weigh 138. My goal is a range of 117-127 so I'm getting there. I count, walk and just this week started strength training (oh my sore muscles!). I'm 62 by the way.0
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Love reading all the comments. I started last Christmas at 202 and currently weigh 138. My goal is a range of 117-127 so I'm getting there. I count, walk and just this week started strength training (oh my sore muscles!). I'm 62 by the way.
Great results. I love strength training, hope you fall for it too. It has changed my body in some positive ways and I am still just using dumbbells. Older ladies can lift stuff too (everyone has their own "heavy")0 -
Love reading all the comments. I started last Christmas at 202 and currently weigh 138. My goal is a range of 117-127 so I'm getting there. I count, walk and just this week started strength training (oh my sore muscles!). I'm 62 by the way.
Wow!!!! Wonderful!!! Any advice for a struggling 65 woman?? Gayle Minneapolis1 -
@alizesmom that's great progress! so impressive!!0
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sbrownallison wrote: »There's a ton of inspiration here. Good on us! I'm 71, overweight since grade school, with many diets, ups and downs of poundage over the years. Many times joining/rejoining Weight Watchers and other "plans" over the years also. Ten years ago I finally reached my WW goal (which I had set at the top of the range for my height). Within three years I had put back on 40 pounds. I had just retired with time on my hands, so began once again focusing on my health. So, back to WW. I found that I could no longer lose weight consistently, so I bit the bullet and began an exercise program. I joined the YMCA, took group classes, got a Fitbit and walked more. I immediately began to see a consistent one pound of weight loss each week at WW, and reached my goal weight in about 15 months. I continued and added to my exercise program: it's now an important part of my daily routine -- and vital to my weight management. So, today, I am 20 lbs below my WW Lifetime goal weight and feel more fit and confident than I ever did. I highly recommend trying group exercise classes at your local YMCA if you have one. I am fortunate that my health insurance covers my membership, as part of the Silver Sneakers program. Good luck everyone!
Like to show this to my dr. He claims after 55 you need to have surgery. Thanks your inspiration!! Gayle Minneapolis0 -
Love reading all the comments. I started last Christmas at 202 and currently weigh 138. My goal is a range of 117-127 so I'm getting there. I count, walk and just this week started strength training (oh my sore muscles!). I'm 62 by the way.
Wow!!!! Wonderful!!! Any advice for a struggling 65 woman?? Gayle Minneapolis
My best suggestion is to get one thing right at a time. I started with diet, added cardio and finally strength training. If I had tried to start all 3 at the same time I would have been overwhelmed.0 -
17761776 wrote:Like to show this to my dr. He claims after 55 you need to have surgery. Thanks your inspiration!! Gayle Minneapolis
Time for a new doctor. Surgery is a valid choice, but it's one among many.My best suggestion is to get one thing right at a time. I started with diet, added cardio and finally strength training. If I had tried to start all 3 at the same time I would have been overwhelmed.
I second this advice for adding a bit at a time. I started with weight training, which motivated me to really look at what I was eating and logging here. That, in turn, motivated me to move more and ramp up the cardio to burn more calories. I'm not very far into this, but I'm sticking with it in a way I have not before, recovering from mis-steps faster and being much more consistent. I always told myself not to make drastic changes all at once - that it would fail ultimately - but somehow that is what I was doing anyway!
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@alizesmom, I too, started with diet. Added walking and other cardio pretty quickly. Strength came after several months. Lost lots of weight and actually have some muscles to show for all this! Am 57.0
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I also started with diet then began exercising, walking and biking (slowly). After a several lost pounds I wanted to pick up the pace so I joined a gym. Began with cardio and added weight resistance almost simultaneously. Cut back on the cardio and kept working with the weights. I have muscles showing now and the weights reshaped me all over. I still walk and ride my bike on off gym days. Love the walking and weights the best.0
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Everyone has been quiet. I'm curious how everyone is handling or plans to handle the barrage of holiday treats?0
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Quiet? LOL...eating mixed nuts and checking to see how many calories I have left for the day. I've been logging, but just barely staying close to my goal. Motivation is not very strong just now. I keep thinking a fresh New Year start will be good....BUT...I don't want to lose the same pounds over again. That's too discouraging!0
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The holiday food has arrived at the workplace I made it through day one of a gigantic treat tray, only to indulge in the chocolates that someone gave me over the weekend. I'm logging truthfully through it all and just keep walking everyday to try to maintain my loss. When it comes to sugar I am weak, but hanging on... Thankfully my house is full of righteous food0
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No worries, I even brought my lunch (protein bar & apple) to the mall while Christmas shopping. Just added a cup of coffee!0
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Things are going great. Have actually lost an extra lb in the last 30 days. I am now 11 lbs below my goal weight.
I do indulge a little here and there but keep it within my daily goals.
I keep my calorie goal about 1300 on days with no parties and about 1500 for days with parties.
But I am on maintenance now so I have a few more calories to work with.
Also I eat back some of my exercise calories now. I don't want to lose any more weight. Just maintain here.
I have a two week vacation in Florida in January so knowing I will be putting on a swimsuit keeps me motivated.
Good luck everyone. And Merry Christmas.0 -
I'm at or close to maintenance now (5'5", around 129), and my plans are to stay fairly steady weight over the holidays. I'll eat more at celebrations/events, but likely cut a bit on days before/after to even out somewhat, maybe add some activity if opportunity presents. I may try to lose another 5 pounds or so afterwards; haven't decided.
Everything gets logged, always; many of the celebrations have to be estimated (because I didn't cook the food), and I try to estimate on the high side.
I have no intention of giving up eating a bit extra on celebratory occasions for the rest of my life, so I'm using the present as an experiment/learning opportunity about how to work them in successfully. Worse case scenario - not preferred scenario - I'll have to re-lose a little bit. But no worries: I know how.0 -
Life is good. Am holding steady on maintenance. Woo hoo! Life is good. This time last year was starting my journey and survived. This year am doing fine. Log everything! It works and we can do it, ladies!0
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Too busy, eating lots of Chinese. Not baking this year0
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Last year I baked a lot of cookies and ate and sampled way too many! I did log it all though, so I did not gain. This year I am baking cookies again, but I put them in tupperware containers and out of sight because sugar is such a trigger food for me. Once I start I can't seem to get enough. I have to watch my blood sugar. Last time when I went to the doctor my A1C was 5.3 and I want to keep it there. I hosted a Christmas party at my house, but did not eat any of the cookies. I enjoyed the company and the visiting and had a great time. I want to prove to myself that celebrating is not all about the sweets and desserts! It's about the relationships and love!0
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I have been following this thread for a while now. I have lost 55 pounds in the past 18 months, but before the holidays the weight had started creeping up. I have gained 10 pounds back. I am cutting calories and going to get that 10 pounds off, even if it is the holidays. There is always some excuse and right now I am done with excuses.1
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