130lbs and counting...
thepawn1
Posts: 39 Member
TL;DR - I'm still going, more work to do, but so far I've dropped 130lbs and feel fantstic. Lower heart rate, better sleep, easier clothes shopping, no more snoring, it's been awesome.
On May 23, 2015 I woke up feeling a bit tired. Giving a groan and getting dressed, I noticed that once again my clothes were getting “snug.” Did I really get that much bigger again? How did I let it happen? This couldn’t go on and on that day I decided to make permanent change. Here’s the story...
Since my early teen years, I have always had a battle with my love of carbohydrates. Not the chocolate, candy, table sugar variety - but the starches and grains type. Combine this with a love of cheese and I can gain weight as if an olympic sport. Give me bread, pasta, crackers, potatoes and I’m a happy man. Give me a block of cheese and it’s a meal! At age 14, as a freshman in high school, I was over 220 pounds. There was a time shortly after my 28th birthday where I made a similar journey, losing 157lbs and keeping it off for about 3 years before I let work travel and my love of food exploration get the better of me. Over the next almost decade I gained back everything I’d lost at the rate of about 25lbs a year with some yo-yo weight in between.
To counter this some, I would update my wardrobe over time to attempt to keep better fitting clothes and can let you in on something - the big and tall market is a racket. They know you have few choices and the clothes easily end up costing 25-50% more then “regular” sizes if you can even find them. JCPenny would be about the only saving grace in this area - they were still a bit affordable, but that’s where you suffer - clothing choice, there’s only so much you can do fashion wise at that size.
With being big, I had constant nagging fears about possible health issues that come with the territory - joint pains, type-2 diabetes, enlarged heart, high blood pressure. I would blood test annually and everything thankfully constantly came back great - no high blood pressure, no pre-diabetes, nothing, I was just obese. The only time I ran into a joint problem was a long recovery with an ITB tendon injury from a trip while hiking in New Hampshire that would have gone quicker if I weighed less.
Don’t get me wrong, being blood healthy is great, but there’s other quality of life factors that start to become “inconvenient” when you get as big as I was. For example, seats become a challenge - in airplanes, in restaurants, just about anywhere. I can easily recall in detail the tinge of embarrassment felt when I had to ask for my first “seatbelt extender” on a domestic economy flight, and the pity I felt for folks who had to sit next to me. I could no longer comfortably fit into booths in many restaurants and could not fit into the seating on many of the roller coasters I love to ride.
Having been through similar journey already, I have learned what works for me, what I needed to do and how to do it safely. While slightly different and with the desire to make permanent change I’ve once again gone with the classic path - diet/calorie control and exercise. I’ve limited myself to not losing more then 2.5-3lbs a week as a safe pace for loss.
The computer geek and nerd that I am, exercise had never been a friend to me as I spend most of the day in a chair. This time around, I’ve worked on making being active part of my life, not part of the task. I’ve once again learned the right sized portions for someone of my activity level and genetics, and I’ve taken to cooking my own food at home the majority of the time with “cleaner” foods. Things are going great, and with this milestone I’m about two thirds of the way along my current plan and I’m enjoying it. Owing a brewery had presented its own challenge, but I have made it work still. Seats have become vastly more comfortable in airlines, I can fit into booths easily, I’ve lost two sizes, I can find some clothes already in regular stores and I’m not achy when I wake - it’s been fantastic.
Current stats:
May 23, 2015 - 372lbs. Chest 56”. Waist 59”. Hips 52”. Neck 18.5”.
Feb 13, 2016 - 272lbs. Chest 48”. Waist 51”. Hips 44”. Neck 16”.
Jun 8, 2016 - 241lbs. Chest 46". Waist 45". Hips 39". Next 15.5"
There’s been so many family and friends that have been supportive or a huge influence and inspiration - I thank you and my health thanks you, really - thank you.
I look forward to sharing more about the rest of the journey over the continuing months.
On May 23, 2015 I woke up feeling a bit tired. Giving a groan and getting dressed, I noticed that once again my clothes were getting “snug.” Did I really get that much bigger again? How did I let it happen? This couldn’t go on and on that day I decided to make permanent change. Here’s the story...
Since my early teen years, I have always had a battle with my love of carbohydrates. Not the chocolate, candy, table sugar variety - but the starches and grains type. Combine this with a love of cheese and I can gain weight as if an olympic sport. Give me bread, pasta, crackers, potatoes and I’m a happy man. Give me a block of cheese and it’s a meal! At age 14, as a freshman in high school, I was over 220 pounds. There was a time shortly after my 28th birthday where I made a similar journey, losing 157lbs and keeping it off for about 3 years before I let work travel and my love of food exploration get the better of me. Over the next almost decade I gained back everything I’d lost at the rate of about 25lbs a year with some yo-yo weight in between.
To counter this some, I would update my wardrobe over time to attempt to keep better fitting clothes and can let you in on something - the big and tall market is a racket. They know you have few choices and the clothes easily end up costing 25-50% more then “regular” sizes if you can even find them. JCPenny would be about the only saving grace in this area - they were still a bit affordable, but that’s where you suffer - clothing choice, there’s only so much you can do fashion wise at that size.
With being big, I had constant nagging fears about possible health issues that come with the territory - joint pains, type-2 diabetes, enlarged heart, high blood pressure. I would blood test annually and everything thankfully constantly came back great - no high blood pressure, no pre-diabetes, nothing, I was just obese. The only time I ran into a joint problem was a long recovery with an ITB tendon injury from a trip while hiking in New Hampshire that would have gone quicker if I weighed less.
Don’t get me wrong, being blood healthy is great, but there’s other quality of life factors that start to become “inconvenient” when you get as big as I was. For example, seats become a challenge - in airplanes, in restaurants, just about anywhere. I can easily recall in detail the tinge of embarrassment felt when I had to ask for my first “seatbelt extender” on a domestic economy flight, and the pity I felt for folks who had to sit next to me. I could no longer comfortably fit into booths in many restaurants and could not fit into the seating on many of the roller coasters I love to ride.
Having been through similar journey already, I have learned what works for me, what I needed to do and how to do it safely. While slightly different and with the desire to make permanent change I’ve once again gone with the classic path - diet/calorie control and exercise. I’ve limited myself to not losing more then 2.5-3lbs a week as a safe pace for loss.
The computer geek and nerd that I am, exercise had never been a friend to me as I spend most of the day in a chair. This time around, I’ve worked on making being active part of my life, not part of the task. I’ve once again learned the right sized portions for someone of my activity level and genetics, and I’ve taken to cooking my own food at home the majority of the time with “cleaner” foods. Things are going great, and with this milestone I’m about two thirds of the way along my current plan and I’m enjoying it. Owing a brewery had presented its own challenge, but I have made it work still. Seats have become vastly more comfortable in airlines, I can fit into booths easily, I’ve lost two sizes, I can find some clothes already in regular stores and I’m not achy when I wake - it’s been fantastic.
Current stats:
May 23, 2015 - 372lbs. Chest 56”. Waist 59”. Hips 52”. Neck 18.5”.
Feb 13, 2016 - 272lbs. Chest 48”. Waist 51”. Hips 44”. Neck 16”.
Jun 8, 2016 - 241lbs. Chest 46". Waist 45". Hips 39". Next 15.5"
There’s been so many family and friends that have been supportive or a huge influence and inspiration - I thank you and my health thanks you, really - thank you.
I look forward to sharing more about the rest of the journey over the continuing months.
61
Replies
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Hooray! I also was 220 at 14 and a Freshman in high school. I also ballooned up at 20-25 lb per year. I got my big clothes at Brooks Brothers. The journey downward with the power of knowledge is easy, isn't it?2
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Great job! Thank you for the inspiration.1
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What a great success story! Congratulations to you!!! Wish you all the best as you continue on your journey. Thank you for sharing.1
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My goodness, you look fantastic! You have lost over a 1/3 of your May 2015 body weight! Looking forward to seeing your progress!2
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Well, DANG! Looking good, congrats on the hard work paying off!1
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Wonderful progress! You look so much happier and stronger now1
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Thanks everyone0
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Super job! I love reading posts like this, it's so inspiring.1
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Thanks!0
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Looking good. An inspiration to a number of us guys on a similar journey2
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Nice work!!1
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Keep it up, I've really enjoyed the journey and love working out now ...0
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Just got rid of all my previous big clothes, I'm in my smallest sizes yet, quite a cathartic experience.2
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Great job!!!1
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Wow, So Awesome and exciting! Great job!! I bet it feels so wonderful1
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wow, that's seriously awesome! great job!1
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Nice job--you look fantastic!1
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Awesome! Your story reminds me so much of myself. I began here on MFP at 367. I'd had recent blood work and everything can came in normal range, praise God, but was still very obese and in need of changes or I'd risk health complications. I'm now down 100 and everything you write about it can relate to. Though I last flew when I'd only lost about 5 lbs, so I'm looking forward to my next flight to see how much easier it is.4
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Awesome!!! You look great!!1
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Congrats great work1
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Thanks! Down another 5lbs, looking forward to this last goal set! Feel fantastic and really now enjoy working out. It's been such an awesome journey.2
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Great story - so many NSR and weight successes! Keep up the great work.2
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Awesome job, man! I'm pretty much you--sorta. My highest was 427 I think, and I'm now just under 350. 250 is my first goal, so hopefully in a year I can just copy/paste part of your post1
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rldeclercq4 wrote: »Awesome! Your story reminds me so much of myself. I began here on MFP at 367. I'd had recent blood work and everything can came in normal range, praise God, but was still very obese and in need of changes or I'd risk health complications. I'm now down 100 and everything you write about it can relate to. Though I last flew when I'd only lost about 5 lbs, so I'm looking forward to my next flight to see how much easier it is.
I've got some flights coming up now and I am anxious to see how it feels. I've gone from a 52in pant size to a 38in pant size.0 -
Awesome job, man! I'm pretty much you--sorta. My highest was 427 I think, and I'm now just under 350. 250 is my first goal, so hopefully in a year I can just copy/paste part of your post
I wish you much success! Great effort there. My first 3-4 months and 30-40lbs was mostly all diet control, I didn't bring a lot of exercise in until after. I was eating so much calorie dense food it was easy to rack up 4000+ calories a day. Reducing my cheese intake was a huge starter, I'm such a cheese addict. lol.0 -
Holy moley! Good job! I have 85lbs to lose and just started my journey. Thanks for the inspiration!1
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Thanks and welcome to the journey! I turned 41 this year, was glad age didn't keep me back. Lol0
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Congratulations! How inspirational! I understand the difficulty of sticking to a plan with work travel, but I am learning to do it as well.1
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WOW, you look completely different! You must feel so proud by what you have accomplished, I 'm following your footsteps this year1
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