Has anyone lost weight without going low carb?
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Yep *raises hand* This girl.
80 lbs down eating roughly 50% of daily macro split in carbs.3 -
I think when it comes to carbs a lot of people who are "low carb" are also counting NET carbs rather than actual total carbs eaten. I haven't personally ever gotten that advanced but I think it makes a difference.2
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You don't have to go low carb to lose weight. It's just one method that appeals to lots of people because it allows them to eat high fat foods that taste good instead of eating rabbit food all day like most diets offer. It also comes with the added luxury of not having to work out. let's be honest, everyone wants their weight loss as easily as they can get it.
Every low carber and keto eater I know works out and trains hard.5 -
I'm intrigued by the posts about low carb being invented for body builders and not being sustainable long-term. I'd be interested in seeing links. I've been low carb for years and have read plenty of studies and articles and have never come across that before, so OP, I wouldn't necessarily take that as gospel. (e.g. There are plenty of diabetics who eat this way long-term. I reversed prediabetes eating low carb and plan to eat this way long-term because for me, it's had a lot of benefits. So far so good and my doctors are all aware and supportive.)
You definitely don't have to do low carb if you don't like it; it's certainly not for everyone and definitely not the only way to lose weight. Sounds like you're leaning away from it anyway but if you end up reconsidering low carb, do some research on trustworthy sources and see what you think.
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You have to find the way to eat the rest of your life. if you cannot sustain the low carb, then it is not for you. you can add in some carbs to see how it affects your body, if you really want to be cautious about it.
Complex carbs are filling and give you needed nutrients. i do stay away from refined carbs like white sugar, white flour, white bread because the nutrients have been processed out, and they have to rea-add them back. so i just stick to complex carbs and that keeps me full.5 -
I've lost 63 pounds since Jan2017 following what I call a "moderate carb" plan, which for my 2000 calories/day comes to 150 g carbs (30%), 150 g protein (30%) and 89 g fat (40%). I'm also a T2 diabetic (& take insulin) who has found it best for me to eat 4 meals/day spaced 3 hours apart from about 9am to 6pm in an effort to keep my "carb load" at each meal fairly consistent which helps to normalize my insulin injections.3
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VintageFeline wrote: »You don't have to go low carb to lose weight. It's just one method that appeals to lots of people because it allows them to eat high fat foods that taste good instead of eating rabbit food all day like most diets offer. It also comes with the added luxury of not having to work out. let's be honest, everyone wants their weight loss as easily as they can get it. It's good that you recognize that your current diet isn't sustainable, it's not cut out for everyone. If I were you, maybe look into keeping carbs somewhat restricted but allowing yourself say 100g carbs a day. That should greatly increase your food choices and leave plenty of room to mix your cravings into your diet. It's personally how I diet. I'm able to mix in burgers, tacos, ice cream and the like (reasonably portioned) to my daily meals which leaves little to crave elsewhere.
I don't low carb and I don't rabbit food. Well I salad and veg because I like salad and veg but I eat high fat foods too. It doesn't have to be that extreme.
Same here. I'm also curious to know how eating low carb means you don't have to work out. I don't think it works that way.7 -
My diet = mostly veggies, fruit, grains, and tons of dairy. There's no reason to limit any food group unless you don't like it or have a medical intolerance to it.4
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Just watch my calories and nothing more; however, a friend from college is doing keto without watching his calories and he leveled off after losing 30 pounds several months ago. My carbs average around 200 a day, which is 50 lower than it states for my minimum. Sugar and salt is another issue. Not uncommon for me to be 40 grams over on sugar and 400 grams over on sodium. Currently averaging 2.6 pounds lost per week since starting with MFP.1
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I ate four slices of bread today Lol!
Carbs are my weakness. If so don't eat em I'll binge.
Down over 20lbs since April.3 -
I lost 100 pounds altogether and never gave up my beloved carbs! I've kept the weight off for a year and a half so far without any trouble, too. It really is as simple as burning more calories than you eat, at least for me. As long as I keep my activity level up and eat a balanced diet (I'm vegetarian, not that it matters) my weight takes care of itself. Just keeping to my calorie goal seems to work just fine.3
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'I work in a fitness center. With trainers. One trainer I respect very highly. Another one is a complete idiot who probably doesn't belong on this planet. They'll both go on and on about clean eating, detoxing, artificial sweeteners causing you to retain belly fat, etc. It's all nonsense. I can't counter their "knowledge" on the matter with my loss of 100 lbs eating fast food, frozen meals, diet soda, sweets, etc. because I'm "an anomaly," they say. My experience on MFP tells me that they're both dead wrong when it comes to me, and to their dietary weight loss advice.'
Good call. I find that people who enjoy exercise tend not to be overweight -and are rarely the ones who truly understand about weight issues.You clearly do.6 -
Nmarine1996 wrote: »Even though Dr.Atkins proven to not die of heart attack due to low carb, this thread has truly opened my eyes. This under 50 carbs a day is not sustainable. Maybe under 100 or less?
Why even worry about them? Eat the foods that will satisfy you within your calorie limit. There is no magic carb number.3 -
3+ years lchf and 96lbs down. However... agree that the weightloss is about eating at a deficit. More important is eating that is healthy for you and that's a personal choice. It has to work for you and be sustainable. That's the success factor.
Personally I know that the moment I start eating bread, ice cream, pasta etc I get out of control... eating lchf keeps me in control.
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I have lost a lot of weight on a moderate to high carb count (150-350 grams of carbs, I don't cap them to a certain amount and just let them fall where they may while making sure I get a reasonable amount of protein). Low carbing may feel easier to some, but not to all, and is not an absolute necessity for weight loss.0
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VintageFeline wrote: »You don't have to go low carb to lose weight. It's just one method that appeals to lots of people because it allows them to eat high fat foods that taste good instead of eating rabbit food all day like most diets offer. It also comes with the added luxury of not having to work out. let's be honest, everyone wants their weight loss as easily as they can get it. It's good that you recognize that your current diet isn't sustainable, it's not cut out for everyone. If I were you, maybe look into keeping carbs somewhat restricted but allowing yourself say 100g carbs a day. That should greatly increase your food choices and leave plenty of room to mix your cravings into your diet. It's personally how I diet. I'm able to mix in burgers, tacos, ice cream and the like (reasonably portioned) to my daily meals which leaves little to crave elsewhere.
I don't low carb and I don't rabbit food. Well I salad and veg because I like salad and veg but I eat high fat foods too. It doesn't have to be that extreme.
Exactly! And I find this whole assertion sometimes silly that low carb allows for more variety. I eat burger (WITH THE BUN), tacos, ice cream PLUS mashed potatoes, pizza, french fries, pasta, rice, and more. I am partial to my rabbit food because I like it, but that doesn't limit my food variety. I mean even 500 calories of vegetables (and that a LOT of vegetables) leave plenty of room for many other food items.3 -
Yes. Never was concerned with carbs in my diet0
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Nmarine1996 wrote: »Even though Dr.Atkins proven to not die of heart attack due to low carb, this thread has truly opened my eyes. This under 50 carbs a day is not sustainable. Maybe under 100 or less?
Why even worry about them? Eat the foods that will satisfy you within your calorie limit. There is no magic carb number.
I worry about them or else I will go overboard. Counting calories and to a certain extent counting macros works for me. I just need to figure out how much I am going to allow myself. I know myself and I need some sort of restriction of them or ill go back into old habits. Thanks for the response1 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »You don't have to go low carb to lose weight. It's just one method that appeals to lots of people because it allows them to eat high fat foods that taste good instead of eating rabbit food all day like most diets offer. It also comes with the added luxury of not having to work out. let's be honest, everyone wants their weight loss as easily as they can get it. It's good that you recognize that your current diet isn't sustainable, it's not cut out for everyone. If I were you, maybe look into keeping carbs somewhat restricted but allowing yourself say 100g carbs a day. That should greatly increase your food choices and leave plenty of room to mix your cravings into your diet. It's personally how I diet. I'm able to mix in burgers, tacos, ice cream and the like (reasonably portioned) to my daily meals which leaves little to crave elsewhere.
I don't low carb and I don't rabbit food. Well I salad and veg because I like salad and veg but I eat high fat foods too. It doesn't have to be that extreme.
Exactly! And I find this whole assertion sometimes silly that low carb allows for more variety. I eat burger (WITH THE BUN), tacos, ice cream PLUS mashed potatoes, pizza, french fries, pasta, rice, and more. I am partial to my rabbit food because I like it, but that doesn't limit my food variety. I mean even 500 calories of vegetables (and that a LOT of vegetables) leave plenty of room for many other food items.
To the point of variety, the assumption that all people even like those fatty foods is false.
Even if my medical status were such that I could eat a higher fat diet, I wouldn't want to. I don't particularly like how heavily fatty foods sit in the belly. I'm fine with small amounts of things like avocado and nuts, but lashings of cream and butter were never my thing. I never liked fatty cuts of meat when I used to eat meat (unless you count salmon).
The other point I'd like to make is that people eating either LCHF or keto should most definitely be eating plenty of rabbit food. Most of their low carb intake would come from fibrous veggies, I'd think. That's the very definition of rabbit food.0 -
I've lost 96 lbs without paying attention to carbs.1
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I've lost 20 pounds and have never even thought about going low-carb.0
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I've los 50lbs, been maintaining the loss for over 4 years, and I eat a higher carb diet (today I'll easily hit over 200g). Weight loss/weight gain/weight maintenance is about calories, not macros.1
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Yes, I did that in 2014 while prepping for a competition, my strength coach had me on I believe it was 250 carbs daily and I was getting leaner by the week. In my opinion you should keep your carbs as high as possible while dieting down and cutting body fat. When you get stuck and weight loss stalls gradually decrease the carbs to get your body to start burning fat again. Carbs make life more enjoyable so why cut them or lower them drastically when you can enjoy them and still accomplish your weight loss goals.1
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