I'm not sure what diet is best.
sylviakristine87
Posts: 1 Member
Hi! I'm sylvia, I'm 19 and 245 currently but my goal is 175. I was wondering if you all possibly know about any diets that aren't too expensive( I'm living on my own) and this may be a dumb question but are there certain diets that help support better mental health and sleep? I have major depressive disorder, anxiety, and insomnia and was wondering if maybe there were diets and exercises that might help me with some of that
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Replies
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To lose weight, you need to consistently eat less than you burn. MFP should have given you a calorie goal to hit. If you do that, correctly, every day, you lose weight.
The best diet for you is a wide variety of foods you like in appropriate amounts, that provide you with all the nutrition you need and nothing you're allergic to. It's food you can afford and is accessible to you. It's a diet that is flexible, adjusts to situations you're actually in, changes in preferences, schedules and habits. This is a diet you put together yourself. Named diets go against all this.
Please seek professional help for any illnesses. A good diet and moderate exercise is important, but can only take you so far. But just losing weight and feeling more in control and relaxed around food, can help alleviate some symptoms.12 -
Hi Sylvia! I'm in a fairly similar boat (same amount of weight to lose, budget restraints, mental health).
I'm extremely sceptical of named diets - particularly ones that tell you to outright ban certain types of foods/nutrients. I'd suggest prioritising nourishing your body, using the MFP macros as a guide. Eat what you want in moderation; try to go over your fibre and protein goals and stay under your sugar and sodium ones, replace white bread/pasta/rice with wholemeal/wheat/brown equivalents.
Gimmicky diets are super unsustainable and you should prioritise listening to you body; like the above poster says, the main principle of losing weight is taking in fewer calories than you burn off.6 -
The best diet is the one you can stick with and helps you lose/maintain your weight8
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sylviakristine87 wrote: »Hi! I'm sylvia, I'm 19 and 245 currently but my goal is 175. I was wondering if you all possibly know about any diets that aren't too expensive( I'm living on my own) and this may be a dumb question but are there certain diets that help support better mental health and sleep? I have major depressive disorder, anxiety, and insomnia and was wondering if maybe there were diets and exercises that might help me with some of that
Walking outside might help, if you're able to do that. It gets us out of our head and can lift our spirit. Walking is a low impact exercise where you'll burn calories, you're not likely to get hurt, and it's free. We get Vitamin D from the sun (or from a supplement), which can help with low moods.5 -
Good news; you don't need a special diet to lose weight. I suggest you invest in a simple kitchen weigh scale for your food and start weighing it and logging it. You will then get an idea how close you are to the calorie and macro goals set for you on MFP.
You don't need special foods so you can do this on a budget.
Many people don't eat enough vegetables so I suggest you venture out and try a new vegetable every week.
Caffeine can disrupt sleep patterns so if you do drink coffee have it first thing in the morning and not later.5 -
Don't diet. Track your food and work with what you like to eat after you've calculated your TDEE and set a deficit versus that (not too big).
In terms of diet for your MH: There are foods which are supposed to affect your mental wellbeing and sleeping patterns. Rather than being on a full blown diet, read up on those foods (the ones to consume and those you should avoid) and slowly build them in (or try to reduce them) within your calorie limit. That way a diet becomes manageable and sustainable.
Foods good and bad for Anxiety.]1 -
I tried 3 different diets to lose 75 pounds in 18 months...only one worked permanently. What I tried, in order, follows:
- Atkins - Low Carb - Weight fell off - about 30 pounds. But I missed spaghetti, rice, carbs badly soooo
- Weight Watchers - Low Fat - still lost weight - about 15-20 pounds - but I missed the WW forbidden foods and it was expensive soooo
- MFP and diet/exercise - lost the last of the weight and have kept it off for years.
The equation is simple:
Calories in less than calories out = weight loss.
All ^^^this^^^ requires is portion control, a nice food scale, and eating right.4 -
The one whose net result produces a caloric deficit.2
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The best diet is the one you will never stop doing.
It depends on your food budget, on what you like to eat, how much you like to eat. There are two major components to lose weight efficiently and for good.
1) you have to be in a caloric deficit. Burn more calories than you're eating. To do that, you have to know what your TDEE is. You can compute it on the internet, MFP does that for you when you enter the info, and with time, you'll understand how your body works more and be able to adjust it if needed.
Then, accurate data is king : log everything precisely, with a scale. You'll learn quickly that it's really easy to make mistakes if you don't, and then to think you're on a deficit while you are not.
2) You also have to be consistent. Not only during the time you're losing weight, but also afterwards, so that you keep being the same weight. If you go back to eat the way you're eating right now, you will gain everything back. Losing weight if changing your lifestyle, it's a commitment.
That's why it's important to chose a diet that is not only efficient as far as calories are concerned, but that is also fit for you, that you like and you're ready to use for the rest of your life. Don't be to restrictive, and don't be to impatient. It's a life long change, if it takes a few years to get to your goal, it's nothing compared to the rest. Not only that, but the quickest you want to see results, the more likely you're doing something not sustainable.
Every diet you'll hear about may be fitted for you, maybe not : it's up to you, experiment, see what you prefer.3 -
You don't need a specific "diet," just eat high nutrient low calorie foods and stick to your calorie allowance. Lean meats, moderate amt of carbs like half a potato, and plenty of vegetables. In general my doctor says approximately 1/4 of your plate is protein, 1/4 is carbs, and half is vegetables. I treat fruit as dessert.0
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For the insomnia, there are guided sleep meditations for free on youtube. A cup of chamomile tea is a mild sedative. Do both nightly.0
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Diets don't work, not for long term results. Mainly because diets are by nature, temporary. You have to actually change your lifestyle. Eat healthy at a calorie deficit (pure calorie deficit works, but 1000 calories a day of soda and nothing else is not sustainable as you'd end up with severe malnutrition) and the weight will come off. The second reason diets don't work is that they are very restrictive; sets you up for binging. Just eat what you normally eat, decrease the high calorie/low nutrional foods and increase the low calorie/high nutrition foods while remaining in a deficit.
If you find yourself constantly hungry: 1. Reevaluate your rate of loss, go slower so you can eat a little more and not be hungry all the time. 2. Go for a brisk walk, an extra 200 calorie allowance can make a huge difference in your hunger.1 -
sylviakristine87 wrote: »Hi! I'm sylvia, I'm 19 and 245 currently but my goal is 175. I was wondering if you all possibly know about any diets that aren't too expensive( I'm living on my own) and this may be a dumb question but are there certain diets that help support better mental health and sleep? I have major depressive disorder, anxiety, and insomnia and was wondering if maybe there were diets and exercises that might help me with some of that
The best diet is one that you will stick to. Getting to a weight that you are comfortable is hard enough but keeping it Off can be even harder if you have chosen a diet that's not sustainable with your lifestyle and you revert back to old ways. Do yourself a favor and pick a diet that allows you can transition it into a long term health protocol.
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