What Other Factors (Besides Nutrition) Help You Succeed?
Options
Replies
-
Food scale.3
-
Realizing that I had the ability to make myself happy all along that I just needed to get up and do it2
-
A lot of yoga! Mental health is part of anything you need to conquer.5
-
Small goals, it can be running a certain distance. A shirt that you would love to wear, pants etc! small items of clothes spurred me on along with setting certain goals of weight lifting in the gym etc!2
-
Realizing there is hope for me, letting go of the past, and striving to live the happiest life possible.
Forcing myself to socialize with people I have interests and passions in common with.
Striving for goals that don't involve just losing weight.
All of this was vital because I learned two years ago, when I hit my lowest weight and was in great shape, that there is no point in being lean and healthy if you're still isolated, bored, and directionless. I needed to have an amazing life to lose before I could really experience the crushing terror of being morbidly obese and virtually housebound again.6 -
Knowing my own lack of self control.. I will not buy and bring home more than 1 serving size of anything that will require self control to keep to correct portions (ie cheese, cookies, sausage, etc.).8
-
Being consistent whether it be in training or diet, no one will reach their goals if they are not consistant2
-
Finding motivation from fitness youtubers. Gives you a great insight into some meals you can make that are healthy and kill cravings1
-
My biggest step in the direction of my fitness goals is removing all the bad junk food from my house, this way eating very poorly isnt even an option !5
-
Accountability Buddies and my vivosmart HR tracker.1
-
This post-it sits on my desk....
HABITS THAT HELP ME MOVE TOWARD MY GOAL....
- Prep my food the night before
- Eat 8-10 portions of fruit and veg each day
- Eat protein at every meal
- Reduce dairy to 2 portions each day
- Plan in dessert
- Take my supplements each day
- Drink 8 glasses water each day
- Achieve daily 10,000 step target
- Intense exercise for 30 mins x 3 per week
- Take part in activities I enjoy - tennis and skiing
- Do bodyweight exercises daily
- Log calories during the week
- Stick to routine during the week
- Get 7 hours sleep each night
- Plan my food for the week in advance
- Batch cook and freeze meals
- Have healthier snacks available in the freezer
- At time of high stress do daily meditations
- Plan evening activities to avoid snacking/tv habit7 -
1. Sticking with myfitnesspal has been the main focus point to my success, logging my food and drink intake daily for 35 dates in a row and lost 35 pounds.
2. The support of my wife and family.
3. Researching diet and signing up for health-related daily emails delivered to my inbox to educate me on diet.
4. Monitoring and lowering Calorie intake to about 400 or 500 calories below daily recommended is better than hard workout for losing weight. at first but if you are trying to muscle up it is just fine. but you will not lose as much weight.
5. Drink plenty of good clean water "I get Zephyrhills Natural Spring Water from Florida of the United States delivered to my house and I drink about 64 ounces a day. I started drinking that amount because of the amount of medication I take and friend of mine had a kidney replacement and his doctor told him to drink that amount of water each day so I thought it would be a good amount.
6. I totally stopped drinking Sodas of any kind and juices and now I only drink a couple cups of coffee in the morning and maybe 1 cup at night and pure water the rest of the day. I feel cleaner for doing it.
4 -
Trying to find the will and energy to put my health above my husband's.
7 years ago he had a major stroke and became permanently disabled. His life changed, but so did mine. I lost the love of all things I enjoyed, like reading and listening to music...all love gone. There have been so many things that I have had to give up and what happens when you give up stuff you love? You replace it with food. From 2010 to 2015 I gained 80 lbs. I eat and eat and sit. He can't leave the house except to get to Dr.s appointments, so I pretty much go to work, come home, and sit. I still do that most of the time, but In Jan 2015 Dr wrote me a prescription for diabetes meds. Scared me to death! Did some research, found Keto and MFP and here I am, 100 lbs lighter.
Keys for my success
Do it every. single. day. Log!!!
Music...yes! I only listen to it when I am walking, but it keeps me going even when I want to quit!! Listen to whatever the hell makes you want to move..even that cheesy song from the cartoon movie 10 years ago!
Find your zone and keep others out!!!! My hub is always offering me cakes or cookies, I had to learn to zone him out!!! AKA just walk away.
Celebrate every victory, but NOT with food.
Make the change lifelong and you will live a long life
23 -
Meal prepping and strength training, getting that protein in and supplementing calcium, vitamin D and Magnesium and Iron, zinc, vitamin C has helped with faster recovery, I've had issues with recovery and my legs have been killing me up until the point when I supplemented calcium and made sure to get enough of those animal protein sourced amino acids. I'm paleo/keto (right now keto soley) and these two diets have been great to my health!3
-
Started out Jan. 20, 2016 at 259 pounds and fairly sedentary. I ran my first race on July 4th, it was a four miler. Over the summer I ran a couple 5k races, and logged over a hundred miles. In early September I ran my first 10k, coming in first in my age bracket. I'm currently training for a half-marathon in April. So . . .
In 12 months, I've lost 74 pounds. I work out five to six days a week -- alternating runs, circuits, and weight training. I eat a lot of veggies and proteins without a bunch of sauces and stuff. I can't remember the last time I ate at a fast food place. I used to eat fast food three or four times a week. I use MFP to log every single work out, and every single calorie, (no matter how bad I blow it on my off days, haha!) I try to keep a 450-600 calorie deficit at the end of the day, and that seems to result in one to two pounds of weight loss a week -- although now that I'm lighter, it's getting tougher to lose weight and also build muscle mass, so I'm at a bit of a plateau, but I'm kind of in maintenance, so it's not a huge deal.
I started out walking, using MapMyWalk and MFP. Then I downloaded MapMyFitness and a third-party 5k trainer, and that's when things really started popping. All of the programs talk to each other, and it's pretty flawless. I received a fancy-shmancy running watch as a gift, and that was easy to get integrated with the whole suite of apps.
I think I could have done this without the apps and stuff, but being able to track and keep track of my efforts certainly helped, and the community of people on MFP is very supportive. I love the new, fit me! (Oh, and so does my wife, haha!)12 -
Logging all food and drink consistently. Sticking with it everyday even if it's a bad day.
Mutually supportive friends. One way support which is all take and no give just does not work.2 -
Planning helps me.
I have 6 days planned ahead. I don't have to worry about portion control during the week because it's all in pre-measured, sorted containers now. Grab one meat, one veggie, one fruit and one carb per meal. And have snacks as needed. Since I don't buy what I won't like, it's like garanimals for meals! Remember garanimals!?
I put together a water schedule. Finish a 16.9 oz bottle by certain times to drink 6 bottles per day.
No longer trying to lose weight. Just stick to the planning.8 -
A) Not obsessing over the scale - I weigh in no more than once a month. My emotional health seemed to be tied to the number on the scale for much of my life. No more!
Not having any taboo foods. - This was major gor me because in the past, I'd cut out carbs, fats, desserts, snacks, etc. and feel so deprived. This would lead to binging on "taboo foods" and then feeling like a failure, which led to more overeating. It was a vicious, never-ending cycle that led to gaining, not losing, weight.
C) Logging on MFP every day - no matter what my day is like.
D) Moving more. HUGE issue for me! Until I was 53 yrs. old, I hated exercising. After losing weight, I began to have more energy and started to slowly add in different exercises to my everyday routine. Now I go to the Sr. Center 3 to 4 times per week for yoga, Tai Chi, and Silver Sneakers Aerobics classes. Not only have these classes given me far more flexibility and energy, but they've allowed me to socialize a bit more. I never realized just how much I missed socializing until I started these classes.
Wishing all of my dear MFP family health, happiness, and peace.8 -
Just cutting out the unnecessary eating between meals and doing more exercise has certainly helped loads. Helps sticking to calorie intake.2
-
Being patient with myself was my best quality when losing weight. I had to learn to forgive myself for gaining the pounds but be stern and honest with my goals. Pushing myself too hard could cause burn out, or worse an injury. This was realistic and an accepting view that I could tolerate. Daily, I would remind myself of my boundaries. This was my motivation.
I've come to think that maybe each person has their own levels of motivation. A half mile walk might be unacceptable to someone with higher endurance and confidence, but for me...that mile six years ago began my journey to losing over fifty pounds. I had no coach, gym, or friends to help me. Because I couldn't afford it. I was by myself.
Months later, my walking gradually grew longer. I decided to change my diet after doing some research. An online article recommended different free apps and I chose Myfitness Pal. I'm glad I did because it taught me to look at the details of my diet. This changed my view of my unhealthy habits and I could no longer deny them.
My ideas on dieting have changed many times and I only fell-off-the-wagon once. Closing my account years ago and gaining twenty pounds. I came back later and I've since lost that weight. So, yes patience with myself truly was a life lesson that saved me from future troubles.6
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 392.1K Introduce Yourself
- 43.6K Getting Started
- 259.9K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.7K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.4K Fitness and Exercise
- 403 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.4K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.8K Motivation and Support
- 7.9K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.4K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.4K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions
Do you Love MyFitnessPal? Have you crushed a goal or improved your life through better nutrition using MyFitnessPal?
Share your success and inspire others. Leave us a review on Apple Or Google Play stores!
Share your success and inspire others. Leave us a review on Apple Or Google Play stores!