Has anyone kept weight off for over a year - binge eaters?

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Replies

  • Tweaking_Time
    Tweaking_Time Posts: 733 Member
    I have OP - probably for 5 years. Look in my profile pic for the before / after shot
  • surreychic
    surreychic Posts: 117 Member
    Thank you for posting. I haven't had time to answer in detail to all the other fantastic and supportive replies... but I will! Were you a binge eater? how did you avoid turning to food when ...well whenever that I want to eat everything feeling came on? for me, it often wasn't even hunger.

    A note to everyone I have noticed my bingeing has been one million times worse when I've had little sleep. It's like it flicks a "I want carbs" switch! I had a very busy weekend and had a week of disturbed sleep and I was eating everything, bread and cereals (my default binge foods). In one day, in a few hours I packed in about three thousand kcal in snacking on raisin wheats of all things! It isn't even chocolate or "typical" yummy foods.
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    surreychic wrote: »
    Thank you for posting. I haven't had time to answer in detail to all the other fantastic and supportive replies... but I will! Were you a binge eater? how did you avoid turning to food when ...well whenever that I want to eat everything feeling came on? for me, it often wasn't even hunger.

    A note to everyone I have noticed my bingeing has been one million times worse when I've had little sleep. It's like it flicks a "I want carbs" switch! I had a very busy weekend and had a week of disturbed sleep and I was eating everything, bread and cereals (my default binge foods). In one day, in a few hours I packed in about three thousand kcal in snacking on raisin wheats of all things! It isn't even chocolate or "typical" yummy foods.

    Ugh tell me about it. It's awful when I don't have enough sleep!
  • davert123
    davert123 Posts: 1,568 Member
    I'll say yes. My weight still fluctuates quite a bit but as compared with 3 years ago I have lost about 48 lb. I'm at my heaviest peak right now and I will shed more now summer is coming. For me the important thing to realise it is possible and you can do it. For me changing lifestyle is the be all and end all. I need to exercise regularly and this allows me to put the brakes on the yo yo , realise though physical sensation when I am putting weight on and allow me to enter a deficit more easily to shed weight (it is also very good for your body of course :-)) What I find is that as I approach my goal, other factors take over - mainly sport performance. The target weight loss I had at the start is not really that important towards the end.
    I think the idea of "bad" foods are frowned on here but for people like me who find that sugar sets up a compulsion (a scientifically understandable effect), stopping eating sugar is good. Again though, exercise seems to mend my metabolism so I am more resilient. So it short it is possible to keep weight off but I think the way to do this is to change who you are as much as what you eat. Being able to come to MFP and finding this out is what makes MFP special .
  • hthr1969
    hthr1969 Posts: 35 Member
    I am going on 2 years and hovering around 200 lbs. Still more to lose but I am happy to be maintaining. Key to me is my exercise crossfit group. Tons of support there.
  • Gamliela
    Gamliela Posts: 2,468 Member
    A few months ago I started to change the way I think and act in a few ways that have helped me. Food was my god. I used food for so many things. I ate unconsciously, unthinkingly. I shut off when I ate.

    So I became conscious of every bite I eat. I enjoy the food very much. I eat a lot less of it. I log everything I eat everyday. I plan what I eat early in the day and then stick to it.
    I watch my mind. If I have low level anxiety, I try to not ignore it. Same with rsentments, anger, self pity. I seek out an understanding person and talk out my neediness. I confess to people that I have overbearing demands that life satisfy me all the time. I try to reduce those demands without turning to the food god.
    I ignore sugar and carbs to some extent, but I intend to begin to reinclude them once I start maintenance. If I can't eat more carbs without unconsciously overeating then I will have to reassess at that time.

    I get out for a walk now and then and I have some physiotherapy recommended excesize I do and asanas.
    I yoga meditate - pranayama.
  • crikey_katie
    crikey_katie Posts: 136 Member
    I have kept my weight off for about 3 years now, I did slip up for a few months and was drinking too much but didn't so much gain weight as I lost muscle and gained fat. Now I actually gained a bit but it's muscle. I don't do anything strict but try to eat healthy for the most part but not completely restrict. If I want some froYo I will eat it. I think a big part of success is staying active. I do work out 5-6 times a week and ride a bike frequently.
  • SunnyDayzMomma
    SunnyDayzMomma Posts: 114 Member
    Also.... Something I've done, which may be controversial, is instead of putting up a skinny picture on my fridge, I put up a fat picture of myself. A picture I hate. I am HUGE in it. I look at it as I reach for food and it has talked me down from a ledge so many times! It may not work for everyone but I love my new body so much and I find reminding myself of where I've come from and how much better I feel and look now, or be such a motivator. :) When I ate whatever I wanted, I looked like that. Now that I eat what I should, I look like this :)
  • surreychic
    surreychic Posts: 117 Member
    Thank you so much for your honest response. I am so glad sunny you have been able to self reflect, identify and combat the overeating. This morning, after little sleep, I felt I could eat the world... had just under 2000 kcal over a period of two hours, but somehow stopped and logged it all. Like you say, eat what I want I'm huge, eat what I should eat, a little frustrating in the moment but longer term happiness.

    For those who are anxious (I woke early worrying about work), how do you calm yourselves down? when I reflect, it may have been the lack of sleep as a result of the anxiety that led to hunger, but I also wonder if that bingeing just calms me, so coping without that can mean I'm an angry worried mess. It's filling the gap, especially when already tired too.... I hope that makes sense, some what!
  • LadyGisborne
    LadyGisborne Posts: 32 Member
    edited April 2017
    I am a binge-eater. I have been yo-yoing for many years. My lowest weight was 54kg and my highest weight 103kg. When I lose weight, I maintain successfully and then, after a few weeks / months, it is as if a switch was flipped inside my head and I cannot stop eating. I still haven't discovered what triggers it.

    However, I have learnt to know myself better with the years. A combination of low(ish)-carbing and lots of exercise it what works best for me. Low-carbing tends to reduce the cravings. The exercise allows me to still enjoy sweet things (before a workout), has built lots of muscle mass so I burn more calories, and it makes me hyper-aware of my body. In the past, I could put on 20kg before I realised something was wrong. Today, 5kg make a lot of difference (you can definitely feel 5 extra kilograms when you are doing jumping lunges).

    I still yo-yo, but on a much smaller scale than before (10kg instead of 50) so I consider it a success long-term.
  • mikebooker1
    mikebooker1 Posts: 148 Member
    bizyangel wrote: »
    I have a friend who has. Like myself she didn't change her eating drastically just cut back. She never gave up wine she kept it calorie based. The wonderful thing with this app it also shows how many calories you can take in without gains if you wish to maintain. I am 51 lost 20 lbs in under 2 months. 40 more to go. It's about making decisions. Is it worth the calories as you only get so many in a day. When I first started I looked at this app like a video game. Don't go over the calories or you lose. It was quite fun. Now it's a life style.

    That's exactly what I've done. I would say I've binged on food a good part of my adult life. I'd basically starve myself for 3 months, loose 30 pounds then gain back 35. This was the cycle of life for years. Then 2 years ago I hit my breaking point. I attacked the sources of the binge eating. My wife recommend I see a counselor(which I was very reluctant to do).. With help I understood​ the why in what I did. Knowing the why help me fight back urges.

    I still slip up occasionally but I don't let it derail me. Its been nearly 2 years and I'm down 70 pounds as of this week. I still eat foods I crave but not as much of them. Honestly I don't feel like I'm on a diet. I just make the best decision I can in that moment. String a few good decisions together and next thing you know it's been a week and you lost a pound. That doesn't seem like much but keep up and consistently as possible and before you know it's been month and 6 or 7 pounds. Then it's been 2 months and 10 pounds. Eventually you look up and it's been 18 months and 70 pounds. That's the story of my last year and a half.

    I've had some bad days and good days but overall I'm determined to conquer the day.

    Sorry for the long winded post....
  • Lukdbestucan16
    Lukdbestucan16 Posts: 168 Member
    bebeisfit wrote: »
    Former and current binge eater. in 2001at 260 llbs, I began a weight loss journey that took several years, but I lost 90 lbs., became a runner/gym goer, ate super healthy (I cooked all the time, still ate dessert at special occasions, drank socially) and kept the binges to a rarity. Things just worked...I can't explain it. Then in 2011/2012, I stopped caring as much, I let myself go above 190 then 200. I had a lot of stress (still do) I'm now a yo-yo. I have 2 good weeks, then sabotage it for a week or 10 days. I have a closet full of clothes that I would love to wear and I'm not sure what will send me back to those much more sane days.

    Just me.good 2 weekd.then a month sabotage.n hard to come back
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    I binge maybe once a week. I just keep my deficit the rest of the week and I walk A LOT.
  • starfruit132
    starfruit132 Posts: 291 Member
    What starts overeating is when I'm stressed or without enough sleep, so I start having an easy snack like a "bowl of cereal" thinking that will quench my hunger whether it's emotional or whatever. I even weigh the first bowl. Then, I do another pour to match the leftover milk but don't weigh it, then I decide I really hate to waste a bad day on food I really don't care for, so I try to find something better, and so it goes. If I limit the really good stuff (chocolate) by not keeping it in the house, I can limit the damage. I now make sure to count it and try to get back to good habits the next day.
  • catsfire
    catsfire Posts: 23 Member
    surreychic wrote: »
    A note to everyone I have noticed my bingeing has been one million times worse when I've had little sleep. It's like it flicks a "I want carbs" switch!

    So very much this! I slept on average 4-5 hours a night in February (and not in one block), and my desire for carbs & sweets went through the roof. Instead of baking a treat once or maybe twice a week, it was pretty much each day. I admit, baking for me is a stress relief, but instead of gifting away all or almost all, I was keeping most of them for me. :confounded:

  • ahamedseen
    ahamedseen Posts: 1 Member
    I just can't keep the weight off
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