100 lbs and Plus without surgery
Fit4Life8
Posts: 13 Member
Who has more than 100 lbs or more pounds to loose to get to a healthy weight? Why are you doing that is really working? What motivates you to do it without surgery? How can we most support each other.
I have chosen to do it without surgery because I just don't want to put my body through surgery and I know it is doable without it. That is no a dig at anyone who chooses surgery because everyone has to choose their own path. I have several friend who have had surgery. It's a tool but it is not a cake walk. They are mostly doing and have my full support. It is just not something I just for myself at this time. I would love to buddy up with people who have similar weight goals.
I have chosen to do it without surgery because I just don't want to put my body through surgery and I know it is doable without it. That is no a dig at anyone who chooses surgery because everyone has to choose their own path. I have several friend who have had surgery. It's a tool but it is not a cake walk. They are mostly doing and have my full support. It is just not something I just for myself at this time. I would love to buddy up with people who have similar weight goals.
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I have lost 30 lbs and still have 170 lbs to loose...I am not sure if I can do it without surgery BUT going to give it my best shot.
I am doing it because I want to be healthy for my son.
I love the freedom of cal counting xxxc9 -
At one point I would have had 110 lbs to lose to get to the generic 'optimal' weight by height, although I would have been happy with my weight having lost just 80 lbs. It has been almost 15 years of steady 3-7 lbs per year loss for me and I'm now just about 10 lbs shy of my goal. I didn't lose the weight fast enough to avoid some problems, but the weight is staying off. On the other hand, a friend of mine had surgery and encountered some complications. We're both ok now, but we both had our share of issues on our journey.5
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110 down lost my first 100 by 14th month im maintaining give or take - You know what you need to do, If you dnt theres TONS of posts here. Dont overcomplicate it though, Eat less move more -Just not move to much and eat to little. Determination. You can do it. No need to even suffer horribly if you do it right.8
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I lost 100 pounds since my heaviest, well I guess now 95 pounds now since a couple of bulk/cut cycles. What worked for me to lose it (and to keep it off the past few years) was to realize the best way to lose the weight was slowly and in a way that would require the least amount of change to my daily life. I focused on making small changes that were sustainable for me and didn't worry about any special diets or quick fixes. I also had to realize that no one else could motivate me to lose the weight and that I would eventually lose motivation myself. I prepared myself for that moment the motivation would fade by strongly ingraining new habits and practicing the willpower to just do it even when I didn't want to.13
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I’ve lost 110 lbs so far with a lot left to go. I’m not doing surgery as I’ve personally witnessed it not working. Weight loss Surgery is not a miracle fix, it’s a tool which makes it easier for some people to create a calorie deficit needed to lose weight. My dad has had two surgeries (first lap band then a gastric sleeve). He lost a lot of weight with the lap band surgery, but he gained it all back, plus more, because he never learned how to eat to maintain the weight loss. The lap band had to be removed due to some sort of complication and he opted for the gastric sleeve, which did not work for him at all. I realize that wls works for a lot of people, but I also feel that it is being pushed onto people as a miracle fix, when it is not. The awesome thing about MFP and similar tools is that it teaches us how to lose weight (and maintain or gain). It takes away all of the mysticism of a lot of the “miracle diets”, which I find is really helpful for me. If I go a week or month and the scale doesn’t move as much as I wanted, I can look back and see exactly what happened.
Edited to add: I’ve been overweight since I was a toddler. My mom, well meaning as she was, put me and my sister on diet after diet, but never taught us “how” to eat for health. This led to a really unhealthy relationship with food and many nights thinking that “tomorrow” would be the day I would start losing weight. Last December it finally clicked for me and, thanks to MFP, I learned how to lose weight and realized that if I followed my plan I would be successful. I always thought there was some secret to weight loss or that losing weight meant I’d have to starve. Once I figured out the science, I started seeing results.19 -
ive lost right around 100. all through calorie counting. i used to exercise almost every day but 'life' makes that near impossible now, but im still losing on a deficit alone.5
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Since I started Aug 15, 2016 using mfp & light exercise I've lost 95lbs. Please feel free to add me7
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Mellykay88 wrote: »I’ve lost 110 lbs so far with a lot left to go. I’m not doing surgery as I’ve personally witnessed it not working. Weight loss Surgery is not a miracle fix, it’s a tool which makes it easier for some people to create a calorie deficit needed to lose weight. My dad has had two surgeries (first lap band then a gastric sleeve). He lost a lot of weight with the lap band surgery, but he gained it all back, plus more, because he never learned how to eat to maintain the weight loss. The lap band had to be removed due to some sort of complication and he opted for the gastric sleeve, which did not work for him at all. I realize that wls works for a lot of people, but I also feel that it is being pushed onto people as a miracle fix, when it is not. The awesome thing about MFP and similar tools is that it teaches us how to lose weight (and maintain or gain). It takes away all of the mysticism of a lot of the “miracle diets”, which I find is really helpful for me. If I go a week or month and the scale doesn’t move as much as I wanted, I can look back and see exactly what happened.
Edited to add: I’ve been overweight since I was a toddler. My mom, well meaning as she was, put me and my sister on diet after diet, but never taught us “how” to eat for health. This led to a really unhealthy relationship with food and many nights thinking that “tomorrow” would be the day I would start losing weight. Last December it finally clicked for me and, thanks to MFP, I learned how to lose weight and realized that if I followed my plan I would be successful. I always thought there was some secret to weight loss or that losing weight meant I’d have to starve. Once I figured out the science, I started seeing results.
Brilliant post. Wish more could read it.3 -
I went to a surgeon for the sleeve, but it was going to cost $5,000 with insurance, so I didn't get it done. I don't think I was ready for it anyway.
I started here last year on December 30, with 150 pounds to lose. So far I've lost 50 pounds. I figure it'll take another two years to lose the next 100, but I'm in no real hurry, and I'm taking two week diet breaks every 8-12 weeks.
There's nothing special about this. Just track your food and stay in your calorie limit. After a while it becomes second nature, like brushing your teeth, but you still have to weigh and measure.
Weight loss is really really simple, even when you have a lot to lose: eat fewer calories than you burn.
But it's not easy. You can totally do it though.6 -
I'm down ~110 since Aug 2016, with ~30 more or so to go. No surgery, just eating less to start. Then I started walking. Using MFP as intended and upping my activity. Did a 10K run last weekend, taking swimming lessons and lifting twice a week.
It is a simple process. It is not an easy one. Don't make it more complicated then you have to.4 -
My fiance lost 90lbs over the course of 5 years or so. I'm very proud of him. He's never counted calories or used MFP.
It began when we both decided to try a keto diet. I was doing all the cooking so all he had to do was eat lots of meat and vegetables lol. So that resulted in steady weight loss for him.
Then he got into running, and that helped him shed more. Now he's in a high-intensity boxing class 3x a week for the past half a year, and that's really helped him reach his goal weight and put on muscle.2 -
I have several close family members who have had gastric bypass with varying success and terrible long-term side effects, and I know that I am just not strong-willed enough (or medically compliant enough) to go that nonreversible route.
I started with 102# to lose. I'm down 34# since my highest weight in November of 2016, but I have only been seriously logging every day for the last 211 days, and just added exercise in the last 3 months. Now I run 3x/week with C25k for my heart and lift weights 3x/week for my bones. I have a reasonable calorie goal and am usually within range and never feel deprived because there are no "bad foods". I'm averaging 0.75#/week loss. It has finally clicked with me that slow and steady will help me be successful in the long term.6 -
My 1st goal in March didn't have anything to do with my weight. I was having some digestive issues, (among other things) I tracked my intake for a week or 2 and realized I wasn't eating as much fruit and veg as I thought I was, so my goal was to add a serving of fruit or veg to everything I ate. I like most fruits and vegetables and if you asked me, I would've told you I ate a lot of each, but the food log doesn't lie. After a few weeks, I went to the doctor for something and I had lost 7 lbs, without really planning to. So I set a little goal, to lose 25#, and to increase my "healthy" fats (more nuts and fish) which I've reached. My new goal is another 30#, which will put me under 200#. I don't even want to think about my goal after that, it's too overwhelming for me, personally! ( I'm 5'1". so you can do the math if you want) I eat whatever I want, whenever I want, but I measure or weigh everything. I eat food I like, my digestive issues have resolved for the most part, and I feel good. Next non weight related goal is to increase my walking, which is challenging because I have a painful knee. (Never before until about 2 months ago, isn't that a kick in the head?) Good luck! Add me if you would like.3
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150 lbs lost. I was motivated to do it without surgery because I know just enough about surgery in general that it scares the crap out of me if not absolutely necessary. I also read alot about complications after surgery and relapse rates. I figured if I could lose x weight to qualify for surgery, then I could lose the rest without surgery too. All told I considered surgery for about an hour.
To lose, I logged in MFP, kept within my calorie goal, and started strength training with a personal trainer because I was horribly unfit. I logged for about 3 month, 25 lbs, then tried without loggin. I continued to lose every month for 2 1/2 years, so I've never gone back to logging, except for a few days here and there if I wanted to check my macros or whatever. Now in successful maintenance for 1 year.
The most important thing I did, before my first meeting with my trainer, was decide that whatever changes I made would HAVE to be for the rest of my life, and that I would not do anything while losing that I wasn't willing to keep up forever.
The motivation to keep going is and was looking back at my progress pics to remind myself of where I was to begin with, and remember how awful I felt then compared to all things I enjoy doing now.11 -
Best of luck to you0
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This thread is so inspirational. I have 100lbs to lose as well. It feels so daunting but I know that I can do it. Thank you everyone for sharing your stories. Its very helpful. Please feel free to friend me. Let's help each other!!1
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Who has more than 100 lbs or more pounds to loose to get to a healthy weight? Why are you doing that is really working? What motivates you to do it without surgery?
I have 135 lbs to lose in all. I have lost 46 lbs already. I have never considered surgery an option for me, probably because I'm scared of surgery. As far as what is working, I use MFP to record everything I eat as well as my exercise. I knew that for me to stick to ANYTHING successfully, I had to make a habit that I would do EVERY day. When I first started I made it a goal to see how many days in a row I could exercise 10 minutes or more. (10 minutes because I figured it was a low enough number to win over all of my excuses.) A month or so later I started counting how many days in a row I could come in under my calorie goal for the day. How long is my streak? Five months of exercising and 4 months of coming in under my calorie goal. Breaking my streak now would mean starting again at day 1, and that is hard to want to do, so every day I make choices that help me come in under my calorie goal and exercise 10+ minutes.
For me, those 2 things have made the biggest difference and have helped me STAY successful for the first time in my life.
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You know, seeing the posters at the local clinic of "bariatric surgery candidates" when they instituted the bariatric surgery specialty three years ago was one of the things that motivated me to lose weight. I was the same height and weight as several of the women in the posters. I was 270 lbs at 5'9".
Today I'm between 155-160 depending on the day and time of month. So averaging about 112 lbs lost.
Last time I went in, I saw their "before and after" posters. I've lost more weight than ANY of the bariatric surgery people featured in those posters have.
Also, my mom has successfully gone from 527 lbs to 300 lbs using MFP, and she's completely wheelchair-bound. She's working on getting down to 200. It definitely works.
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I'm so glad I stumbled on this post! I'm trying to lose at least 130 lbs. I'm in agreement with most on here that the surgery just wasn't for me. A lot of the surgery is eating right and smaller portions, but the complications and risks are too scary for me.
I've been at it since the beginning of August and my trainer suggested the MFP app! It has helped me to learn how to work out effectively. The price of the training and having someone to answer my questions and motivate me when I need it is worth it. I'm down 23 lbs so far, and I feel better. It isn't much, and I wanted to lose more faster, but I'm going the right direction.
I wish everyone luck in your efforts.2 -
That's 110 pounds and no surgery.
My loss used to be about 120 pounds a few months ago but I regained some. That's one thing you need to understand, setbacks aren't failures, they're learning opportunities and you just dust yourself off, take what you've learned on board and move on, for as many times it takes. The earlier you are able to catch any regain the better, but even if you happen to regain more than you bargained for, giving up is a worse option than moving on. Consistency is more important than perfection, and whenever you find something that makes dieting feel easier, add it to your strategies. Self-torture is not the point nor the norm in successful weight loss, no medals for that, and it's not a cop-out to do things that make it easier for you. You'll find yourself learning new strategies constantly, even years down the path.
Log everything you eat, even if you are having an "IDGAF" day. The simple act of logging makes you more aware of your intake and you may end up with a 3000 calorie day instead of a 5000 calorie one even without trying to consciously control it.
Don't use the scale to judge your worth, your body has a mind of its own when it comes to fluctuations, and how "good" or "bad" you are is not measured by the numbers on the scale. If you find yourself stalling or creeping up for several weeks, it simply means you need to troubleshoot and see where the extra calories are coming from, it doesn't mean you're "bad".
There will have to be a time where you need to accept that some things need to change for good, not just while dieting. It may make you feel sad or discouraged, I even went through a "mourning-like" phase because I realized I will no longer be able to just let go and eat everything every day in whatever quantity I want without thinking about how it would affect my weight, I can no longer be blissfully unaware. This doesn't mean you have to eat "diet foods" for the rest of your life, in fact that can be counter productive, but it does mean that there needs to be a permanent change in some habits and a degree of constant control over your food.
Every year you're not as heavy as you used to be is a success, even if you haven't lost as much as you'd hoped for. Remember that by simply not getting fatter every year, you're already a success story because most people keep gaining and few keep any lost weight off. Be patient and kind to yourself.
And finally, simplify. Don't get bogged down by details, at least not for a while. Weight loss happens when you eat fewer calories than you're burning, that's it. What you eat, when you eat, worrying about nitpicky details, all of that is not important. You will find your own groove of what and when to eat that makes things easier for you after a while, no need to force it, get tangled in the minutia, or jump from one fad to another.11 -
Since June of 2016 I've lost 75 lbs, and I have about that much left to go. I've also lowered my A1c from 7.9 to 5.4 and I'm out of diabetic range, which is even more exciting for me. As so many other posters have said, this is a simple process but that doesn't make it easy. It's tempting to make it more complicated than it needs to be (warm water with cayenne and lemon juice! plastic wrap saunas! detoxes for only $79.99 a week! buttered coffee and "junk light", ye gods!), but making it complicated is where we tend to get lost and wander around in the wilderness for a while.
Keep your calories in less than your calories out, eat for your own health & happiness, and get outside and play any chance you can. It can be done, there are a lot of us doing it, and you'll be successful too.2 -
Don't panick over one bad day and assume you just ruined the week or month. If it stretches into two days, don't punish yourself. Watch your totals. Keep it under maintenance for the week if that's all you can do. You don't have to lose by the pounds.. it's still a loss to lose by the points. And measure every month. Sometimes a plateau is only a scale thing.. not a fat loss thing.
Don't bring in foods you know you will go crazy over. Try to look for low calorie solutions to favorite foods if you can stand them. Like shrimp alfredo? How bout over broccoli instead of pasta? If you prefer pasta, don't cook the whole box. Pull out just what you need and fill up on veggies. Bulk out the rest with veggies or mushrooms.
1200 calories a day isn't necessary for weight loss. If your maintenance is 2400, you lose weight if you stay under it. 2300 a day would lose you .2 pounds. Not a lot but you didn't ruin anything. And if you average above maintenance for the week, your month is not ruined. Let each day be a renewing of your mind. You slipped on Monday? Tuesday is your first day. You slip again? Wednesday is your first day. Keep to that mentality and you won't give up. Each day is boot camp and you are in training to see what works and what to avoid.
Note the foods that have feeling satiated through the day. You don't need to live on salads. Meat and eggs can keep you full longer. Write down anything that kept you full longer and then keep those on hand. We just had Tuscan chicken over broccoli last night. It was amazing in flavor. 360 calories and I was stuffed. That is going into my "must have again" book with my shrimp alfredo over veggies (320 calories) and meat and mushrooms over zoodles (280 calories)..2 -
Great posts all.
"...and a degree of constant control over your food." Amusedmonk - love this0 -
I have 100+ lbs to lose and I'm going to need all the help I can to get it done. I'm looking for people to help me along the way either a virtual HIGH FIVE or giving me a pep talk on days I'm slacking! You all are an inspiration and I know I can do it one day at a time.0
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188# lost without surgery. Followed the calories MFP gave me. As far as exercise, I walk for an hour everyday. Nothing overly complicated at all.2
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I have so far lost 65 lbs without surgery with another 45 to go. I am a 50+ year old menopausal woman and have been overweight since having my kids in my early 30's gradually getting heavier and heavier over the 20 years. I went to the doctor a few weeks ago and all of my tests were excellent. The doctor said she was very impressed with my loss and with how healthy I look now. Oh and I don't go to the gym. I just try to move more and eat less. Currently remodeling much of my house for exercise.1
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I've lost 95+ with no surgery. I've gone from 256 (highest weight not logged on MFP) to 157 in a little over a year.
I have 5lbs to my original goal weight and probably 10lbs to my idea running/racing weight. All I have done is stay in a calorie deficit by counting calories and logging my food on MFP. I barely exercised at first because I was too fat. As I lost weight and felt better, I did more walking. Now I am training for a half marathon. Many of the people in my feed are like me and many of them stick with walking or decide to lift weights when they are ready.
Just...calorie deficit. Log your food. Commit to that one day at a time and you got this.1
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