on a mission to lose 50lbs by 23rd of May this year and I need people to be accountable to
doyinFit
Posts: 8 Member
Please add me
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Replies
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Great goal..good luck0
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Good luck, that is a lot to lose in 18 weeks. I was to lose a similar amount but in 25 weeks.0
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If you're counting on others to lose weight, you're setting yourself for failure.0
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Sorry, but your goal is too aggressive. Is there a reason you want it off by then?0
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I agree that your goal is too aggressive. And if you want someone to be accountable to, just look in the mirror. That's the only way this works.
Good luck!0 -
its not a great goal. its unrealistic and youre setting yourself up for failure.
depending on what your stats are, you can TARGET .5- 2 lbs/ week loss IF you accurately weigh and log your food and are diligent (and only you can motivate you if you need external motivation, you don't really want to lose weight and again, are setting yourself up for failure).
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Look at my response on the other "Let's lose 50 lbs by June!!!" Is this an epidemic with the newbee's? All of them need to lose 50 Lbs by summer. Where were you guys last year? In a year it's possible. Sorry, but it's not going to happen in a healthy way. Set reasonable goals, and even then it takes dedication. Nobody wants you to fail.0
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Careful with such a high goal! I think most people abandon their workout and food plans when they aren't getting the results they think they should be.... It's frustrating and not very motivating! Start with a smaller goal and then work your way up... Set yourself up for something sustainable that will push toward success. You can do it!
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snowflake954 wrote: »Look at my response on the other "Let's lose 50 lbs by June!!!" Is this an epidemic with the newbee's? All of them need to lose 50 Lbs by summer. Where were you guys last year? In a year it's possible. Sorry, but it's not going to happen in a healthy way. Set reasonable goals, and even then it takes dedication. Nobody wants you to fail.
But the date is now May! Arg. I'm going to lose 50 by tomorrow and then I won't need to worry about it anymore.
Sorry for being snarky, but focus on losing the weight without the date. You will feel wonderful 20 pounds lighter by that date, which is a little more reasonable. Then you can spend the rest of the summer working on losing more.0 -
My plan is to build a time machine, go back in time, and lose 50 lbs by last May.0
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This is meant it jest... But it always seems like there's the 5 stages of MFP....
Stage 1. Unrealistic weight loss goal
Stage 2. Log indiscrimanately weight stays the same.. Come to conclusion you have a thyroid issue
Stage 3. Log consistently... Lose weight for 4 months and it stops... Blame "hitting the wall". Relent to buying a food scale on community advice.
Stage 4. You realize your portion sizes were ridiculous and start losing again.
Stage 5. You meet your goal weight at about 2-4x the time you initially wanted to get there but you're a lifetime believer now.
Obviously.... Many people quit well before getting to stage 5....0 -
If you have over 100 pounds to lose than 2 pounds per week is doable. If you only have the 50 pounds to lose than .5 to 1 pound per week is more likely.0
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I have 300 pounds to lose (literally!) to be at a healthy weight. I'm aware it's going to at least 2-3 years to get there. I've decided to ignore outcome goals ("losing X number of pounds") and focus on process goals instead ("I'll work out 4 days per week", "I'll eat 3 cups of vegetables per day", "I will log every single thing I eat into MFP", etc). For those with crazy, unrealistic short-term goals, I suggest googling "process goals vs. outcome goals" to learn the difference, then set up some new goals.0
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I have 300 pounds to lose (literally!) to be at a healthy weight. I'm aware it's going to at least 2-3 years to get there. I've decided to ignore outcome goals ("losing X number of pounds") and focus on process goals instead ("I'll work out 4 days per week", "I'll eat 3 cups of vegetables per day", "I will log every single thing I eat into MFP", etc). For those with crazy, unrealistic short-term goals, I suggest googling "process goals vs. outcome goals" to learn the difference, then set up some new goals.
You, sir, are intelligent.0 -
I have 300 pounds to lose (literally!) to be at a healthy weight. I'm aware it's going to at least 2-3 years to get there. I've decided to ignore outcome goals ("losing X number of pounds") and focus on process goals instead ("I'll work out 4 days per week", "I'll eat 3 cups of vegetables per day", "I will log every single thing I eat into MFP", etc). For those with crazy, unrealistic short-term goals, I suggest googling "process goals vs. outcome goals" to learn the difference, then set up some new goals.
Super ideas! I don't love outcome goals and I've been trying to avoid them as well. But process goals are fantastic! I'm a year in and have lost 50 (when I started last January I did have and outcome goal to lose 40, so I exceeded my goal! And without doing anything crazy!!)
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howeclectic wrote: »This is meant it jest... But it always seems like there's the 5 stages of MFP....
Stage 1. Unrealistic weight loss goal
Stage 2. Log indiscrimanately weight stays the same.. Come to conclusion you have a thyroid issue
Stage 3. Log consistently... Lose weight for 4 months and it stops... Blame "hitting the wall". Relent to buying a food scale on community advice.
Stage 4. You realize your portion sizes were ridiculous and start losing again.
Stage 5. You meet your goal weight at about 2-4x the time you initially wanted to get there but you're a lifetime believer now.
Obviously.... Many people quit well before getting to stage 5....
yeah, most quit around stage 2....0 -
I have 300 pounds to lose (literally!) to be at a healthy weight. I'm aware it's going to at least 2-3 years to get there. I've decided to ignore outcome goals ("losing X number of pounds") and focus on process goals instead ("I'll work out 4 days per week", "I'll eat 3 cups of vegetables per day", "I will log every single thing I eat into MFP", etc). For those with crazy, unrealistic short-term goals, I suggest googling "process goals vs. outcome goals" to learn the difference, then set up some new goals.
This is what worked for me. In the back of my mind I wanted to be near goal after about a year, but I wasn't that concerned about the specific date, and I focused on the things I could control and meeting my sensible calorie deficit.
So good plan! ;-) And good for you committing to a long-term plan.0 -
What's with the deadline?0
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Ditch the timed goal and set yourself some reasonable and realistic goals. Otherwise you're setting yourself up for failure.
Log consistently and accurately, trust the process and give it time.0 -
Unless you are 500 lbs or so, set more realistic goals.0
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howeclectic wrote: »This is meant it jest... But it always seems like there's the 5 stages of MFP....
Stage 1. Unrealistic weight loss goal
Stage 2. Log indiscrimanately weight stays the same.. Come to conclusion you have a thyroid issue
Stage 3. Log consistently... Lose weight for 4 months and it stops... Blame "hitting the wall". Relent to buying a food scale on community advice.
Stage 4. You realize your portion sizes were ridiculous and start losing again.
Stage 5. You meet your goal weight at about 2-4x the time you initially wanted to get there but you're a lifetime believer now.
Obviously.... Many people quit well before getting to stage 5....
well said0 -
Setting deadlines for aggressive weight loss goals is what makes people come back to weight loss every single January.
You only need to start losing weight whenever you're ready, accept that weight fluctuates and realize that weight loss can be a really slow process. It might take a year or more to lose even 50lbs, depending on the starting weight. No need for New Year's resolutions or "Oh no, I ate this forbidden item on my diet, better start again next month!"0 -
booksandchocolate12 wrote: »My plan is to build a time machine, go back in time, and lose 50 lbs by last May.
LOL
That is probably a more reasonable goal than the OP's
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How much do you weigh today? What is your TDEE? How many calories do you plan to eat per day?
at one pound per week you might lose 50 pounds by new years day 20170 -
Should have set this goal in August when you joined.
It took me 12 months to lose 18 pounds in 2015.
For 2016? I am hoping for 12.0 -
howeclectic wrote: »This is meant it jest... But it always seems like there's the 5 stages of MFP....
Stage 1. Unrealistic weight loss goal
Stage 2. Log indiscrimanately weight stays the same.. Come to conclusion you have a thyroid issue
Stage 3. Log consistently... Lose weight for 4 months and it stops... Blame "hitting the wall". Relent to buying a food scale on community advice.
Stage 4. You realize your portion sizes were ridiculous and start losing again.
Stage 5. You meet your goal weight at about 2-4x the time you initially wanted to get there but you're a lifetime believer now.
Obviously.... Many people quit well before getting to stage 5....
Haha - this is scarily accurate.0 -
I have 300 pounds to lose (literally!) to be at a healthy weight. I'm aware it's going to at least 2-3 years to get there. I've decided to ignore outcome goals ("losing X number of pounds") and focus on process goals instead ("I'll work out 4 days per week", "I'll eat 3 cups of vegetables per day", "I will log every single thing I eat into MFP", etc). For those with crazy, unrealistic short-term goals, I suggest googling "process goals vs. outcome goals" to learn the difference, then set up some new goals.
thanks for those very wise words.0
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