The Do's and Don'ts of Long-Term Weight Loss
Russellb97
Posts: 1,057 Member
There are many ways to lose weight but to do it long-term there are some definite do's and don'ts.
The Do's:
*Be patient, enjoy your journey and take one day at a time.
*Do find a way to eat what you love, get in tune with your body.
*Do educate yourself on nutrition and how your body metabolizes food.
*Do listen to others, especially those who have succeeded and be open-minded.
*Do customize your weight loss plan to you and make sure you can continue it as a long-term lifestyle.
The Don'ts:
*Don't deprive yourself
*Don't kill yourself at the gym by believing that "more is better" or "no pain no gain"
*Don't focus on the scale or losing weight as quickly as possible
*Do NOT allow guilt or shame into your journey.
One more very important don't,
Don't give up!
If you never give up you can't lose. Well, you can lose weight but you know what I mean.
I found some pictures that I thought like my weight, were lost forever.
It's cool to look back and remember the some of the key moments of my journey.
100lbs lost in 11 months and another 35lbs lost in the past 12 years.
The Do's:
*Be patient, enjoy your journey and take one day at a time.
*Do find a way to eat what you love, get in tune with your body.
*Do educate yourself on nutrition and how your body metabolizes food.
*Do listen to others, especially those who have succeeded and be open-minded.
*Do customize your weight loss plan to you and make sure you can continue it as a long-term lifestyle.
The Don'ts:
*Don't deprive yourself
*Don't kill yourself at the gym by believing that "more is better" or "no pain no gain"
*Don't focus on the scale or losing weight as quickly as possible
*Do NOT allow guilt or shame into your journey.
One more very important don't,
Don't give up!
If you never give up you can't lose. Well, you can lose weight but you know what I mean.
I found some pictures that I thought like my weight, were lost forever.
It's cool to look back and remember the some of the key moments of my journey.
100lbs lost in 11 months and another 35lbs lost in the past 12 years.
63
Replies
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Wowie kazowie, guy. And the weight you still have is obviously redistributed to different types of body tissue than it was way back at the start. Well done!2
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Careful! Your hard work is showing!8
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I did it all wrong.
Congrats on your success, OP.5 -
Hello there....;)4
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Much respect. Everyday is a battle but its a fight worth fighting.0
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Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?1
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Awesome!
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fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe12 -
Inspiring!0
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Great list and great motivation. Awesome job! I'd love to have abs like that....well, I might, but they're still in hiding lol.0
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Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe
I would never leave the house because I would stare at my abs and rub them all day long.6 -
fitoverfortymom wrote: »Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe
I would never leave the house because I would stare at my abs and rub them all day long.
So I'm not the only one I thought maybe I was too obsessed. Now if I grew breast, then I'd be staring and rubbing all day long. I don't mean manboobs, I had them and they were not the same.
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fitoverfortymom wrote: »Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe
I would never leave the house because I would stare at your abs and rub them all day long.
Fify2 -
You done good young padawan
You have sane advice too1 -
Good advice, great progress, good physique.2
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Damnnnnnnn!!!!!! You look good. Lots of hard work, motivating. Thanks for sharing3
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Where's the drooling emoticon when you need it?!?
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Hello!
ETA. I was side tracked, nice post!0 -
fitoverfortymom wrote: »Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe
I would never leave the house because I would stare at my abs and rub them all day long.
And THIS is why we can't have nice things!!2 -
Very nice.
Your post was good too.3 -
I needed that. Thank you!
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It's Friday. I saw the thread title and a handful or so replies. I was bracing myself for the worst.
I am pleasantly surprised. Carry on!2 -
Yeah, I guess that was kinda wrong, just focusing on your before & after photos when you also offered a concise set of absolutely spot-on tips for achieving that same kind of success. It's a great post in both respects,
I can only speak for myself, a woman who is likely old enough to be your granny, but my reaction to your photos was pure admiration of the goal-driven-ness, hard work, and achievement they represent. So striking!
I wish more "kids" (LOL) like you would figure these things out when younger - I sure wish now that I had. It would've significantly improved my last 20 years, if I'd gotten my act together 30-40 years ago, I'm convinced.
Congrats on being a wonderful example, and thanks for helping others along a good path.0 -
Thank you, everyone!
It sounds very shallow I know, but being fit and attractive was something I always wanted. Growing up overweight and "gross". I only got attention when the "cool guys" needed someone to laugh at. Then I'd see the "cool guys" walk off with the pretty girls and I wonder what it felt like to be them? Then I'd daydream about being the good-looking popular guy who treated everyone with respect and kindness.
I know looks are not everything but I do get treated much differently now. Perhaps, a lot of that is because I behave differenlty, I'm much more confident and outgoing. My point is, all things are possible if you want it enough. Even going from morbidly obese to 6-pack, nothing is impossible.7 -
Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Russellb97 wrote: »fitoverfortymom wrote: »Were you shocked when you found out you had perfectly symmetrical abdominal muscles?
I honestly hadn't noticed that before. Which is strange because when they started "popping" I'd take a peek every time I walked past a mirror
Heck, I still check on them quite often. Just to make sure they are still there and safe
I would never leave the house because I would stare at my abs and rub them all day long.
So I'm not the only one I thought maybe I was too obsessed. Now if I grew breast, then I'd be staring and rubbing all day long. I don't mean manboobs, I had them and they were not the same.
Hehe i can't imagine what it would feel like having something dangling down below... I'd imagine it would get in the way alot...
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This is so well done. I aspire to be at this point someday and I am so glad that you posted advice with results that prove you walked the walk. Congratulations. You have every right to be pleased with your physique and the attention it garners you. It's not shallow. It's an affirmation of what you've accomplished. I highly doubt you're out there treating other overweight people badly now so no shallowness at all.1
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Russellb97 wrote: »Thank you, everyone!
It sounds very shallow I know, but being fit and attractive was something I always wanted. Growing up overweight and "gross". I only got attention when the "cool guys" needed someone to laugh at. Then I'd see the "cool guys" walk off with the pretty girls and I wonder what it felt like to be them? Then I'd daydream about being the good-looking popular guy who treated everyone with respect and kindness.
I know looks are not everything but I do get treated much differently now. Perhaps, a lot of that is because I behave differenlty, I'm much more confident and outgoing. My point is, all things are possible if you want it enough. Even going from morbidly obese to 6-pack, nothing is impossible.
I love the bolded. I hope your dreams have come true, and that that's working out well for you.
(Nothing wrong with wanting to be fit and attractive. And you've been willing to put in the work to reach your goals. Good stuff.)0 -
Awesome post; awesome pics.
Totally agree with this advice. Excellent work.0 -
Adorable.....I'm a drooling old lady....
Seriously, congrats on a job well done!0
This discussion has been closed.
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