What has helped you the most while trying to lose weight ??

What has been the biggest thing that helped you lose the weight ?????

Replies

  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    Food scale and pre-logging I guess. When I was overweight I lost pretty easily, but as I neared a lower body fat % things got really hard and I am extremely thankful for my little family on here for their support and laughs.
  • jalisa3080
    jalisa3080 Posts: 19 Member
    Having at least one person that is also trying to lose weight and checking-in with each other daily to share what we're eating and our weight(weekly). Accountability is huge. Even if you go exercise with someone, you can share what your doing. It's something small that makes a huge difference.
  • pdxhak
    pdxhak Posts: 383 Member
    Patience and trusting the process
  • FindingLiz016
    FindingLiz016 Posts: 79 Member
    A great support system family and mfp friends :)
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    Weighing food and being more active. I'd never have lost the weight without exercising.
  • Savyna
    Savyna Posts: 789 Member
    Weighing food, not getting caught up in food splurges, looking at myself in the mirror and telling myself positive things (including not shaming the extra jiggle on my stomach or thighs, but thanking the muscles underneath it for getting me around and telling them that soon enough more of the muscle will show). Not obsessing about it. I know that I can't eat the same dinner year in and year out but finding a good medium with all kinds of foods makes life more interesting and much more happier.
  • glassofroses
    glassofroses Posts: 653 Member
    Pre-logging and having an open diary, being held accountable was a huge motivator for me. Pre-logging was great because it took the confusion out of the day. There were no chances to make bad food choices because I already knew what I was going to eat. Also discovering the difference between want and need. Want wants a specific kind of food and need is happy with anything. Eat when you need to, hold off when you want to.

    A lot of weightloss is retraining ourselves into better habits so start there and see how you go. :smiley:
  • Shana67
    Shana67 Posts: 680 Member
    Logging every single thing that I eat has been super helpful. And understanding that a bad day doesn't mean I'm done with my weight loss journey, and that has happened PLENTY. I just hop right back on the ol' proverbial horse and get going again.
  • nursecasg
    nursecasg Posts: 123 Member
    Two things. First is commitment and not just an interest in losing weight and second is moving more. I lost weight on mfp before with minimal exercise. this time I incorporated simple walking and the weight is falling off faster even though I am just fine with trusting the process and knowing it will take time.
  • kblkmw
    kblkmw Posts: 9 Member
    My mantra is, "it's better to waste it than to waist it." If I don't like something then I'm not going to continue to eat it.
    Also, by setting small goals for myself and breaking my weight loss into small increments. For instance, rather than looking at the forty pounds I had to lose, I first focused on losing 5% of body weight, then 10% and so on.
  • jahillegas_51
    jahillegas_51 Posts: 143 Member
    Using a eating structure that you can actually follow. There is a bunch out there vegan, vegetarian, paleo, clean, IIFYM, intermittent fasting, etc.

    All of them work for some people. The biggest thing, is learn which works best for you and go all chips all in. For me, I tried meal prep and eating "clean". BIG MISTAKE, for me. It lead to this nasty cycle of binge and punish for many many years. Affected tons of crap in my life, it all stemmed from lying to myself that this was working.

    You need to be constient with what you do and trust the process. The reason I like IIFYM so much, is because I can still make my inner fat kid self happy with a cookie or something like that while dieting. Its freaking awesome, I lost fat eating burgers, poptarts, and all sorts of goodies:)

    IIFYM, is not an excuse to everything, but it gives you flexibility to enjoy life in a day to day setting without losing your mind eating the same meal day after day. Its like budgeting, money:)

    For example, my current macros are P:190 C:270 F:70...so yes I can afford a "bad" treat. However, if my macros were something like this P:190 C:195 F:50 then well "spending" my intake on that poptart may not be worth it at that time.
  • Hornsby
    Hornsby Posts: 10,322 Member
    A bicycle
  • jahillegas_51
    jahillegas_51 Posts: 143 Member
    Ahhh another note, focus on fat loss not weight loss:) Losing weight is easy, stop drinking water and eating food. In doing this you achieve your goal of weight loss, in the short term. Often people like myself using this approach gain all the fat back plus some due to metabolic adaptions and other bodily functions.

    Instead make adjustments based on your progress, use the mirror along with the scale:)
  • Gallowmere1984
    Gallowmere1984 Posts: 6,626 Member
    Food scale, and being honest with myself. That last part can be hard for lifelong overeaters.
  • cbstewart88
    cbstewart88 Posts: 453 Member
    1. Logging in every bite.
    2. Being accountable - even if it is just to my computer LOL
    3. Eating more protein and "good" fats
    4. Weighing and measuring my food
    5. Realizing there are no "bad" foods. If I want an ounce of chips, I have them. I just make sure they are logged in full-well knowing that they're a lot of calories and I will have to cut back somewhere else.
    6. Working out. It keeps me positive, puts me in a good mood, and keeps my body humming and toned.
    7. Finally accepting that losing weight is a slow process. A one pound loss is joyous to me now, rather than depressing.
  • goldthistime
    goldthistime Posts: 3,213 Member
    The willingness to lose weight slowly.
  • Ahmee2034
    Ahmee2034 Posts: 1,330 Member
    edited June 2016
    Facing the fact that I can't make anymore excuses. Life is life. We deal with it. Hurting myself and overeating is temporary but the healthy me is going to be for the rest of my life. You can't build a house of a lifetime if your foundation isn't solid.

    Logging in REALLY helps me be accountable and making the right choices. I know, for me, I can't say, "Oh just one chip or one small piece of cake won't hurt." For me, that's like a drug for a drug addict. If I "JUST SAY NO!", I know I'm re-training my behavior for a healthier lifestyle.
  • ukexplorer
    ukexplorer Posts: 380 Member
    Tell you something, 4 days ago I had never logged a single meal, drink, snack etc... I'm hooked already, it helps so much to understand what's going in and whats needed to achieve each day. I'm understanding so much more in a short space, I recon this place and seeing how you guys and girls motivate and support each is my answer already.
    I was no stranger to the gym or food but had very little idea how to plan and record anything.
    Long may it last
  • BruinsGal_91
    BruinsGal_91 Posts: 1,400 Member
    1. Logging everything. And that includes the beer and pizza as well as the broccoli.
    2. Weighing daily and putting the results into a spreadsheet so I can watch the trend graph going downwards.
    3. Setting small incremental goals and getting a smiley face on my spreadsheet when I reach them (I'm such a numbers nerd).
    4. Joining the FitBit revolution. As I said I'm a numbers nerd and I love all the data I get from my FitBit.
    5. Getting back into running - I love my cardio, but I know I should try and add some strength training too.
    6. Knowing I don't need to cut anything completely from my diet. If I want pizza or ice-cream, I can have it as long as it fits into my daily calorie allowance.
    7. Understanding that slow and steady wins the race.

    And I must be doing something right, because I'm 25lbs down since I started on January 1st.
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,159 Member
    What has been the biggest thing that helped you lose the weight ?????

    Replacing all carbs over 50 grams daily with fats but leaving the protein about the same.