Tips for losing weight when you work in an office 730am - 5pm
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This seems to be a hot topic these days. People with normal day jobs that can't find time in their schedule. I don't really understand the problem as I've always worked this schedule and found it the most convenient to make time to work out.0
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I work from 730 - 330 with an hour and a half commute each way - so I feel you! I have started to bring my own lunch, all weighed and measured, to keep track of what I am eating. I try to have a 0 calorie coke to boost me in the afternoon, and I always budget for chocolate in the afternoon - either a small bar or some malteaser (malteasers are 10 calories each, so it's easy to budget them out!!).
What I do now, is I walk part of my commute, which doesn't sound like an option for you. I drink a lot of water at work, which makes me pee - so I go to the bathroom on a different floor / different bathroom every time, to get a little bit of walking in.
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Such great suggestions in here!
Though these may have been mentioned before, here's what I've found helpful in my 6:30am-3:00pm, M-F gig:
- I use my two 15-minute breaks to go outside and walk.
- I walk to the printer often, instead of letting documents pile up and picking them up all at once.
- I sneak in squats and lunges while waiting for my food to heat up or walking to the bathroom.
- I moved all my files from my desk so that I have to walk to a cabinet across my office to get one.
- I drink a pot (3-4 cups) of unsweetened green tea every morning before lunch, and sometimes again after. Though, i'll probably be substituting lemon water as the weather warms up (i'm in So Cal).
And I totally feel you on that 3:30 craving - such a pain in the butt!
I'm currently struggling with my "after work diet". I eat super well while at work, but as soon as I get home, I attack the fridge I've been pre-making myself 'snack packs' for this very reason - containers of raw veggies (I like broccoli, baby rainbow carrots and mini sweet peppers) and Lavash flatbread to eat with hummus. It fills me up just enough so that I can focus on a nutritious dinner, rather than stuff whatever's around in my mouth. They're super portable too, so you can bring them to work for those 3:30 cravings. You can throw in some fruit too, if it's the sugar that's getting you.
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Take your toddler to the mall after work. Spend an hour chasing your toddler, saying "Where are you going?" "Hey, don't touch that!" etc etc. Best workout ever, especially if you pause and pick your child up over your head ever so many yards. As your child grows, so do your biceps. Plus it's quality time with your kiddo!
I'm mostly kidding- I only do this with toddlers that I borrow from time to time. It might not be a sustainable exercise plan long time.
But maybe you can find some room to exercise at home- Get some exercise bands, yoga videos, (there are Mommy Yoga and Pilates vids that incorporate play with your child into them!), hula hoops, kettle bells, fitness balls- whatever looks fun to you- and take twenty minutes after dinner to get moving a little.
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I would get a Fitbit or some other activity monitor - then you can see where you're at and work your way up. I remember barely getting 500 steps in some days. Then I saw on a couple different shows, that you shoul get up every 45-60 minutes. So, I started getting up once an hour and taking a lap or two around the office....started getting more like 2000 steps in before I'd leave work, depending on the day. I have two kids too, and understand the sleepless nights.0
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I have two kids , five and two, and I work full time. I wake up at 4:30am to get in 45 mins of cardio. I can do 60mins on weekends. I log like a mad woman but I don't own a scale. My weight loss is steady. I was struggling with my eating and snacking at night, mainly bc getting home with the kids and getting through the feeding, bathing, homework, bedtime routine is so exhaust ing that I would you food as a stress relief. When the kids went to bed I would use food to wind down. Now I feed myself dinner early ... As soon as I get home actually. And I find other ways to relax, such as drinking tea or sipping on coffee
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I agree . . . the Fitbit is great for tracking and being accountable. I try to get 2000 + steps before leaving for work in the mornings and my goal is to leave work with at least 6000 steps. It's easy to get the remaining 4000 steps to reach 10,000 because you run around like a knucklehead when you get home from work.0
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I get up at 4:30am and leave the house at 5:30am, arrive at work at 6:30am. I don't leave until 3:30pm and get home around 5:00pm. I have a 3 year old at home as well. First thing I do is focus on cooking dinner and making sure I have a lunch packed for the next day. I might sneak in some exercise but to be honest it doesn't happen much because I feel drained by then.
So if you don't have time to exercise, what do you do? Control your diet. Watch what you eat very carefully and eat more vegetables and little sweets. I get my exercise time in on the weekends where I'll go shopping and walk around the mall a lot, or I'll take my toddler for a long walk. When we go out we also park far away from the doors so it gives us more steps. I could do better by going for a walk at lunch which I'll try today.
Do you have access to a gym during your lunch hour?0 -
Even if you can't exercise often, 75%-80% of weight loss is based on your diet. So try to eat more protein, fruits, and vegetables than carbs while following your suggested calorie intake. Good luck!0
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Diet is losing weight, exercise is for the cellulite. Focus on the weight loss first. Pre-log your meals in advance and drink lots of water.0
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I work 6am-2pm daily with a 2 and 3 year old at home. I had to start getting up earlier to go to the gym as when I get home I'm stuck there for the night. So I'm up at 4am and at Planet fitness 3 days out of the week and work out all weekend. If this isn't an option for you can always try to keep healthy snacks at your desk. Meal plan your breakfast and lunches and either work out at home or during your breaks. Best of luck but remember where there is a will there is a way!0
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My "babies" are now 6 and 9, and this past summer I decided it is DEFINITELY time to get my butt in gear. I've lost 25 lbs of baby fat since midsummer and have another 15 to go. I work full-time in an office, and know how difficult it can be to fit in exercise. But keep in mind, as you face the stressful office environment, you need some mechanisms to de-stress in order to cope and ultimately be a more effective worker (with less impact on the business health care plan, which makes you more valuable in another way). I work in a 7-story building, and one of the most effective things I have found for a "quick burn" is just to walk up and down the stairs for 10 -15 minutes on a break to clear my head. Most people are using the elevators and escalators, so I don't get too many odd looks in the stairwell. Depending on your weight, this is roughly 100 calories per 10 minutes. I also try to get in a half an hour walk outside on warm days; this is about 110 calories for me. Each of these is great for offsetting that chocolate, which is also a healthy treat if you are eating dark chocolate with a high cacao %. As many posters point out, walking or doing stairs while carrying a 2-year-old are significant workouts in themselves, and you get to cuddle instead of dumping your baby off at the gym after being separated all day. Another great workout is riding your bike while pulling a baby trailer. Good luck with whatever approach you take!0
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I work 8 am - 7 pm or later. Very sedentary job, so I have having issues figuring out when/how to work in some exercise. I'm tough to get out of bed earlier in the morning, but I'm trying to get up earlier. Any suggestions are great.0
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I also wear a Garmin VivoFit and have trouble getting over 5000 steps a day. If it's quiet at night or weekends, I do laps around the waiting room and 2 hallways, but I can't stray too far from my desk or phone.0
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OP, I feel you - for many years I had this schedule, brought work home, took lunch at my desk, etc. If you work in a service-based job, the expectations and competing priorities can make even taking a bathroom break hard to manage.
Do you take conference calls? My office relies heavily on them as we are scattered around in different locations. Sometimes we get take them on our cell phones and walk while on the call.
Can you get up any earlier than you do now? There are 10 minute workouts on youtube; maybe start with a 10 minute workout, then see if you can add more. (In your shoes, I'd collapse after my child was in bed, but waking up earlier might be an option.)
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If you predictably crave something sweet every afternoon, don't restrict yourself from having that- portion it in to your calories. Planning an all-salad-and-chicken-all-the-time diet is all well and good, but if you wind up going over your allotment by eating a candy bar every day, at some point you have to say "okay, I know I'm going to eat 200 calories of chocolate every day at 3:30, I need to trim 200 calories elsewhere to account for it or I will never lose this weight."
Likewise exercise- which is helpful but not mandatory for weight loss- if you can't reliably go to a gym or bring yourself to get up half an hour earlier (and I empathize, because there is no force in the world that will make me an early-morning exerciser), and you want to exercise, you need to figure out some way to incorporate it realistically in to your day. Take a walk around the block with your kiddo when you get home, climb the stairs ten times, park at the farthest end of every parking lot- walking is a much better exercise than most people give it credit for, and if all you're looking to do is up your calorie burn to increase your deficit, not create a chiseled physique, increasing your daily number of steps will do that just as well as fitting in a formal workout.0 -
Addressing the weight loss, for me it was just consistency. Most important was to keep healthy snacks on hand at work. Almonds, peanut butter, cottage cheese, fruit, and cheeses. Helps keep me away from the snack machine.
For getting through the 3:30 crash, I found a few things which helped me out.
1) Eating every 2-3 hours. That kept my body running consistently through the day. Lunch was about the same size as the in between snacks.
2) Increasing the protein and fat intake during the lunch. Someone suggested it, and it seemed to help.
3) Be sure you are getting enough potassium. I found when I increased my potassium before the mid day crash that I felt much better throughout the afternoon.
Chu k0 -
Go to the gym when you get off of work. Or go before work. Lots of nice Gyms have great dressing areas and you can easily take your change of clothes and be ready to start the day or after work is great.0
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