Those who 'only' had up to 25 lbs to lose - please share your successes!
HoneyBadger302
Posts: 2,069 Member
Looking to collect some success stories from those who weren't too terribly far from their goal, probably were considered "healthy" and relatively fit, but had to work hard to get rid of the extra.
While longer journeys are amazing, I'd like to keep this thread to those who only had ~25 pounds to lose to begin with. Please share if you are one of those people, and let me know what worked for you, what didn't, and what motivated you along the way!
I'm a 5' 7" F, 39 years old, highest weight ever was ~163ish, was steadily losing and around 145 when I broke my leg, and now am back to losing what I put on after that (and continue where I left off) - currently at ~155. My goal is 140 with my current muscle, where I will reassess how I feel.
I spent several months recomping at my weight to rebuild my fitness, which definitely changed my appearance, but now it's time to work on the cutting portion and get rid of that fat! I know I can't do a dramatic cut as my energy and workouts almost immediately suffer, but would like to hear success stories from others who were never really THAT far from their "ideal" weight.
While longer journeys are amazing, I'd like to keep this thread to those who only had ~25 pounds to lose to begin with. Please share if you are one of those people, and let me know what worked for you, what didn't, and what motivated you along the way!
I'm a 5' 7" F, 39 years old, highest weight ever was ~163ish, was steadily losing and around 145 when I broke my leg, and now am back to losing what I put on after that (and continue where I left off) - currently at ~155. My goal is 140 with my current muscle, where I will reassess how I feel.
I spent several months recomping at my weight to rebuild my fitness, which definitely changed my appearance, but now it's time to work on the cutting portion and get rid of that fat! I know I can't do a dramatic cut as my energy and workouts almost immediately suffer, but would like to hear success stories from others who were never really THAT far from their "ideal" weight.
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I am 5' 7" and 52 years old. I have a small to medium bone structure, but am pretty broad through the shoulders. I have never been overweight, but had gotten up to 145 last spring and just didn't like how I looked. With very diligent tracking and weight lifting (along with lots of walking, but no other cardio) I was able to get down to 125 in 4 months. I ate around 1500 calories a day + some of my exercise calories. I followed a fairly heavy protein diet and did periodic carb refeeds when I felt my energy was waning. I have stayed between 125-130 for 9 months now. The key for me was just being honest about what I was eating, weighing and tracking everything. I have been lax in my eating lately and am at the upper end of my maintenance range, but know that by tightening things up I can get back down to the bottom of the range. I weight myself daily in order to make corrections immediately if I get outside of my happy weight zone. I am currently going to Club Pilates about 5 times a week and continuing to walking 3-6+ miles a day. Good luck!10
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HoneyBadger155 wrote: »Looking to collect some success stories from those who weren't too terribly far from their goal, probably were considered "healthy" and relatively fit, but had to work hard to get rid of the extra.
While longer journeys are amazing, I'd like to keep this thread to those who only had ~25 pounds to lose to begin with. Please share if you are one of those people, and let me know what worked for you, what didn't, and what motivated you along the way!
I'm a 5' 7" F, 39 years old, highest weight ever was ~163ish, was steadily losing and around 145 when I broke my leg, and now am back to losing what I put on after that (and continue where I left off) - currently at ~155. My goal is 140 with my current muscle, where I will reassess how I feel.
I spent several months recomping at my weight to rebuild my fitness, which definitely changed my appearance, but now it's time to work on the cutting portion and get rid of that fat! I know I can't do a dramatic cut as my energy and workouts almost immediately suffer, but would like to hear success stories from others who were never really THAT far from their "ideal" weight.
I was approx 71 kg (maybe more at the peak) and now I'm 61kg. I was not obese but of a v small build and felt very fat. Calorie counting religiously worked and exercising as much as possible helped. Now I want to do less cardio and more weights.3 -
I'm short (164cm) and was around 75kg at peak. Counting calories works to a point, but discovered I need to do cardio to lose weight at a constant rate without feeling constantly hungry. Started cycling, then transfered to running when winter came and the streets got too icy.
Dunno how it happened but I've done a half marathon, continue to cycle three times a week, and recently started lifting too. 66kg now and have a bit more to go for optimum race weight and for abs to show. (Yes I can't believe I'm thinking about that...) Although weight loss has been moderate compared to many people, I'm feeling so much more clear-headed and in control of life in general. More energy. More able to deal with stress. More incentive to challenge and to change. Feel like a much better version of myself.6 -
I love this thread, because it is super inspiring to see big losses, but also not something I can personally really relate too.
About six (six?!) years ago, I hit an all-time high weight (for me) or 175 pounds. I'm 5'9" and this put me *just* int the overweight category. I got on MFP, started moving more and being more aware of staying active and not overeating, and got down to about 150 over six months.
Once I hit 150, I felt great. I left a dead end relationship and spent more time doing things I loved with friends. My ultimate goal weight was 135, but I felt good at 150, and those last few pounds were hard and I was busy so I kind of let up on trying to lose weight.
I did do a pretty good job of maintaining. I had made a real lifestyle change, and my body was clearly a lot happier at 150, and I kept the weight off (with a bit of fluctuation) without a lot of effort. I got into a new relationship, and his passion for cooking actually helped me form a better relationship with food, and I've been hovering around 145 now for the past few years.
We're getting married this fall, and I want to be in the best shape I can be. I've set the 135 goal again, with a focus on getting fit in a way that I can sustain. The wedding is a good motivator for my vanity, but also I'm rounding the corner on 30, and want to set myself up to stay fit as I get older.
I'm about four pounds away from goal as of this week and have been really excited about the habits I've built along the way.
Kept my method simply both times around: calorie counting, 30 minute home workout videos, and leaving room to mess up and then get back on track.15 -
I don't know if I qualify for your thread...I am 25 and 5ft4.
February 2015 - 170 lbs
October 2017 - 136 lbs
I am now 146 lbs (result of honeymooning and Christmas!) I don't have much to lose, probably about 6 lbs to get to my ideal weight. It has been a very slow process and I have had ups and downs, especially depending on where I am in life, and whether I am about to go on holiday or have just come back! I mainly just try and focus on bigger picture, and staying fit and healthy. It's been tough at times, but I always come back to MFP.4 -
I'm 33 yrs old and 5'2"
I started out at 155lb, back in Dec 2016. My initial goal was 130lb, it took me about 9 months to hit that. 1200 cal a day, sedentary lifestyle (job), exercising 4/5 days a week (my exercise consisted only of walking.. 20ish minutes on my lunch break and 30-40 minutes in the evening after dinner.) When I hit my goal I decided to keep going and lose a few more.. it was much slower going though. It's taken about 7 months to lose that last 5lb, I'm 125lb right now, so I total loss of 30lb. I'm currently inching my calories up slowly to hit my maintenance number of 1500. I'm at 1380 right now and seem to be maintaining easily. I'm still walking 4/5 days a week and have since joined a gym that I go to a few days a week (for the treadmill, mainly when the weather is crappy and stationary bike.)6 -
I only had 10-15lbs to lose, but when you are really short (just over 5') it makes a big difference. I prefer to be on the low end of the BMI scale as I'm very small boned. For me planning is key. I planned out my meals for the week and logged in advance. I knew exactly what and when I was going to eat, how much water I was going to drink and when and what exercise I was doing each day. Then you just follow the plan. I did an upper/lower bodybuilding split with Interval sprints for cardio on between days. I've since put back a good portion of the weight in muscle over the past 2 years.3
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After my second child I weighed an all time high of 155 (5 foot3). Lost about 10 pounds without trying too hard, but then nothing for about 5 years. Finally set out to lose the last 20 and it took about a year. It was a challenge! I had to be really strict with eating and cut back on alcohol a lot ( from a drink after work every night and more on weekends to only 1-2 drinks on weekends). I also took up running and fitness blender videos. I didn’t weigh my food at all, just cut back a lot, especially on kid snacks (pretzels, goldfish...). Now maintaining at 125 since October 2017 which isn’t easy either! I would still like to lose 5-7 more since my bf is about 25%.1
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I've always had very minimal to lose. I did gain 35-45lbs with my kids but after the initial baby, water weight etc, I was left with about 20lbs each time. I have gained and lost many many times and changed my body composition. I am the same height as you OP and have been all over the map in terms of weight.
Right now I am about 144lbs cutting after a bulk. I am in a good place to recomp but I am more the bulk/cut type.
I will add.. progress can be slow and frustrating. When you are down to the last few lbs it can come down to muscle base (and not having enough to have the look you desire).. so keep that in mind. Just be patient, consistent and you may have to constantly adjust your expectations and goals5 -
Prior to pregnancy, I weighed 120 lbs at 5'3. Quite a petite thing. Full term pregnancy took me to 207!! Within a year, I was able to get back down to 125. I recently had foot surgery in January so I managed to get back up to about 145, which is where I am today. Today will be day 3 of diet and excercise, and am looking to get back down to 125-130 which is toufhly a 20 lb loss goal) Logging my food and excercise on MFP keeps me accountable and on track. Being able to talk with people in this community is also a huge driving force. We're all in this together6
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I am so glad I found this thread. I probably have about 15 pounds to lose, but I find as I get older (I am almost 49) the weight just does not want to budge. Keep on posting your inspiring victories!5
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TL;DR up front for the wall of text to follow:
I was chubby as a kid, over time have learned how best to do something about it.
- eat at a deficit
- strength training
- treat logging as data collection, doing so as meticulously and accurately as possible
- "measuring" exercise calories can easily become a fool's errand, measuring intake and weight to adjust accordingly is the best way to go.
I'd say I've had four significant weight loss occurrences as an adult(ish).
Current stats for context: 29y/o male, 6-1, 175lbs, ~<15% bf, lift using a modified PPL 5-6day plan, have a rowing machine for cardio (which I should use more) and will roll out of bed to run 5/10ks as long as we go to Waffle House after.
- at age 17 in July of 2006 I weighed roughly 200lbs. I wasn't terribly active, had played baseball and basketball growing up but was always mild to moderately overweight. Was always told "some people are just built differently". The fact of the matter was that I wasn't active enough, had a relatively unhealthy diet and always snacked way too much. Went to a three-week-long, college-prep program for prospective engineering students at a university about three hours from home. First time I was away from home for any real length of time, and a good dry run for going to college the following year. Living in the dorms, I didn't have a TV or laptop so I didn't just sit around snacking, I ate three squares at the dining hall, had mandatory intramural sports and played a lot of pickup ultimate frisbee in the hot/humid Indiana summer. Lost 15 lbs over those three weeks and proceeded to lose another 15 or so more in the 1-2 months after coming home with relative ease and not much effort beyond stop snacking (pre-MFP for me). For the first time I felt like I had some measure of control over my body and it was really eye-opening. I would stay at relatively the same weight until after college, even finishing my freshman year at school in better shape than when I entered.
- at 22 in December of 2011 I found that the lifestyle I'd been leading in the few months of my first 'big boy' job had taken it's toll and I was getting a but pudgy. That position entailed a lot of travel and eating out constantly with little regard for nutrition combined with long days, car rides, etc. Guessing that was about 20 lbs gained, wasn't big on weighing at that point, but it was pretty visible in the mirror. After Christmas I started generically "watching what I ate" and borrowed a copy of P90X from a friend. By spring I'd gotten back to where I wasn't in danger of needing larger pants and on May 19, 2012 I came across MyfitnessPal, my first weigh-in was 178. Of course, that was eye-opening regarding how much I was really eating and making easy adjustments I dropped to 165 by the end of July. Those changes were largely choosing mustard instead of mayo, 5 oreos instead of 10, etc.
- From that point I stayed between 159 and 171 lbs until late 2014. I'd gotten back up to 175 around Christmas and quickly lost 5lbs in the early part of 2015. However, I wasn't doing any sort of strength training, I'd half-heartedly done the first month's workouts of P90X to the point of boredom, I tried P90X3 and hated it. I wanted to cut fat but I knew how I looked at 160 and wasn't appreciably happier there than where I was at 170. I started searching for strength programs and came across BuiltLean, which incorporates more traditional weight lifting principles than something like a P90X. I immediately started losing weight and got stronger such that I felt I was beyond my Bowflex Dumbbells to progress. In July I bought a bench, rack and barbell set and I was hooked on lifting.
- Come November of 2016 I was lifting like a mad-man but doing so on a self-developed program that wasn't properly structured for rest and periodization; I was deadlifting too heavy, too often, for too many reps with poor form, and my lower back started bothering me. It turned out I had L4-L5 facet arthritis and it was around the same time my wife, having just trained for and completed a half marathon suffered a stress fracture in her femur. With the Mrs. on crutches and me staying out of the weight room we essentially hibernated through December. In the down time I found a more reasonable strength training program, got a polar chest strap heart rate monitor for Christmas and was ready to get back at it with a plan come January. I started 2017 at 178lbs with a plan to cut down below 170, reassess my body fat and either cut further or start a bulk from there. Between MFP and my new fancy HR monitor my plan was fool-proof... so I thought. I got back to lifting without issue, ate according to my heart rate monitor and watched the scale do very little. I tried to get after it harder in the gym, which bumped up my recorded calorie burn, which made me eat slightly more.. and the scale started going up. I spun my wheels like this for much of the first half of 2017, far too long before realizing something was off in my math. I felt great, my lift numbers kept improving, and I kept rationalizing it had to be gained muscle or water retention. I got as heavy as 185 lbs in late April of 2017 but fell back down to 180 for May, lost a few pounds at the beginning of June and thought "here we go, I just had to hit a tipping point", but bounced right back up to 180 for four straight weeks into July (only weighed on Mondays at this point). At 2lbs heavier than I had been in January I finally resigned to the fact something was off in my numbers. I had set things up for a 1lb/week deficit at around 1800 and ate back all my exercise calories from my HRM, which was 700-900 calories per workout, netting me 2500-2700 calories on workout days. I'm not sure what prompted it but I found myself on r/fitness one day and found a spreadsheet for back-calculating actual TDEE from daily weight and calorie intake... BINGPOT! (pardon the Brooklyn 99 reference, I've been typing for far too long now). Ok, so to use this properly I was going to need to weigh myself daily and meticulously log my calories... this was no longer just something I did for my health it was DATA COLLECTION. As a very neurotic, science-driven person (engineer by trade) this resonated with me better than anything previously regarding my approach to logging and I was all-in. Looking back at my diary, I realized I'd gotten really sloppy with my logging as I got more disenchanted with the lack of scale movement I was seeing and had to pivot to fix it. I started logging more accurately, fanatically use my food scale, and weighing myself daily on July 24th and haven't missed a day since. It took a few weeks to build enough data in the spreadsheet to accurate set TDEE, but once it settled out I started losing weight and I finished 2017 at 176 after hitting that high of 185 over the summer. Coming off a week at maintenance-ish for Christmas visiting family out of town I again got after it in January. This time, armed with the correct TDEE number I dropped 5.5 lbs by moving average and hit 170lb for the first time since 2015 by February 1. However, this time at around 170, I was far happier with what I saw in the mirror. NOTE: these weight changes may not sound like much but the "ideal range" for someone my size is 164-183 so we're not talking about having whole to fuss around with; I estimate myself in the 13-15% body fat range, picture below.
Left: 172 lbs - July 2015, right around when I bought the bench, rack, and barbell
Right: 172 lbs - January 2018
As far as my current strategy, a week at maintenance in March turned into a maintenance+ bulk since. I need to get back to cutting consistently but I've found it hard to get back on the deficit wagon. Pretty much want to cut down to as low as I reasonably can and then start a lean bulk from there.
Current TDEE: 2440
Target daily calories: 1750
50% Protein 20% Carb 30% Fat
Even still, I wish I could send 10 y/o me a binder of all I've learned since that first weight loss event at 17 and say "here kid, read/do this, you don't have to chubby your whole adolescent life and 16, 18, 25, y/o you will thank you for starting some of this crap now".
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I've lost ~11 lbs since January, only have 10 lbs more to go. Low and slow works for me. 1/4 lb - 1/2 lb per week is good enough for me. I am not in a rush, it's not a race. I've given myself the rest of the year to lose the last 10 lbs. You have to keep a super accurate account of what you eat, especially if you're short like me -- every bite and splash of sauce counts.4
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Great stories everyone, and thanks to everyone who has shared!
I can typically maintain my weight pretty easily without needing to be super strict about tracking things, but losing is another matter. I'm trying to fit meal prep into my schedule - it's tough working 7 days a week, but when I do it, I find it a LOT easier to stick to my goals (plus it helps keep my food budget more reasonable). Only been at it a couple weeks at this point, but so far I like the results, still kind of sucks trying to fit it into my week.
Over the winter and into spring I put on a lot of muscle. Recomped quite a bit, keeping my weight fairly steady. Still have visible atrophy in my bad leg (compared to my good leg), but the rest of me is doing pretty well and I'm happy with the progress I've made in terms of strength. Now just need to unveil the muscles I can see are there but not defined.
My weight was never an issue until I got the dreaded desk job, so learning to have to control myself and really watch things was a lesson that was hard to swallow, but one I had to learn.
Currently working out ~5 days a week for about 2 hours/day - first hour is a warm up and some martial arts, 2nd hour is weight lifting with stretching at the end. Trying to keep closer to the 1500-1600 calorie goal in order to kick start the weight loss, but will allow myself up to maintenance if the hangries are real LOL. Weeks when I'll be at the track I typically end up skipping at least one gym day.
I 'used' to weigh around 128 (until said desk job). I'm fairly certain I have more muscle mass at this point than I did then, however, so I've adjusted my goal to 140, with a reassessment at that weight. If I feel like I could keep going and still have more fluff than I'm willing to live with, I'll choose a lower goal - if I'm happy with my composition, then I'll look to start maintaining.
I enjoy my martial arts, I enjoy weight lifting, I HATE most cardio. I can force myself to do it, but I have never enjoyed it - bicycling, running, elliptical, rowing - didn't matter, just have never enjoyed those types of steady-state cardio workouts.1 -
I don't have my success story (yet!), but this thread has been really helpful. I've felt so awful about myself and the weight I've gained over the past couple of years, but looking through success stories and seeing people who've lost 150lbs+ is so amazing. But so is seeing people who've lost 20, 30 or 40 lbs.
It also puts things into perspective for me - what people here have done is incredible, and gives me hope that I can lose 25lbs, and that it's not unrealistic!
It's more than I've ever had to lose before, but it's not insurmountable, and I should be more positive with myself instead of beating myself up. Besides, the worse I feel about myself, the worse I treat my body. Thanks for this thread6 -
So happy to find this thread! Am back on the wagon after an operation to remove my gallbladder a few months ago saw me pile on the weight and pick up bad habits (dinner in bed, saying no to social events and doing zero exercises). I’m 5ft 6”, 155lbs. Last year I got down to 131 and was able to wear my favourite jeans. Tracking, planning and weighing meals, yoga once a week, walking 10k steps daily, and one weight session a week so far. Hoping to add two more gym cardio sessions weekly. Baby steps!1
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Want to keep this thread alive - we've had some great stories shared so far!2
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HoneyBadger155 wrote: »Want to keep this thread alive - we've had some great stories shared so far!
Honeybadger we had the same start weight! How are you getting on so far? My goal is 126, but even in 3 weeks my weight has fluctuated up to 159 and now at 155 again! I’m working out and eating 1200-1400 a day, so I think it will slowly come off. Have just introduced regular cardio (cross-training) at the gym too.
Summer is SO hard to dress for when you don’t like your body. I see people in shorts and dresses and want to have the same freedom!
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There’s 20lb difference between these photos- 178lb to 158lb from Feb this year to now (I’m 5 foot 7). In reality I have up to 20lb more to lose although I feel ok with clothes on (I am still around 39% body fat)7 -
I too have some more pounds to lose- but i am a shorty at 5 feet 2 inches tall- also menopausal in the 50's so I know the struggle. but it does take time esp. if you want to take it nice and easy- so many weeks I will lose half a pound or maybe a pound- some weeks for two or three weeks- stay the same- but it is worth it- so let's keep going!0
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Thanks for this thread. I’ve had a bigger loss, but I’m on the last 20-25 lbs and it helps to read these stories. ❤️2
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Hey Im 5'8 (almost 44)
my lowest was 130
highest was upper 150's but i was too scared to weigh myself which is how things got so out of hand
Im 151 now, with a goal of 140...i think that is reasonable for my age/height
Things are going in the right direction..slowly
My cardio is walking...but i mostly do strength training/weight/core exc...with some yoga (all at home)
I eat around 1400 cals a day/low carb
I have a goal to get to 140 by the end of august
fingers crossed!
GL
kim
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@HoneyBadger155 I am the same build as you. I went down to 139/142 on MFP about 4 years ago after my second son. I took up running and ran 4 half marathons and 2 full. The last year has been job stress and some medications that got me up to current weight of 163. I’m finally ready to start again. (I am 5’7). Been back tracking a week now.2
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thebestyear2017 wrote: »
Honeybadger we had the same start weight! How are you getting on so far? My goal is 126, but even in 3 weeks my weight has fluctuated up to 159 and now at 155 again! I’m working out and eating 1200-1400 a day, so I think it will slowly come off. Have just introduced regular cardio (cross-training) at the gym too.
Summer is SO hard to dress for when you don’t like your body. I see people in shorts and dresses and want to have the same freedom!
I'm down to about 153 give or take a pound. Had a couple days around 151, but some that were up around 154, too (more of those than the other LOL).
The struggle is real, but I'm determined to stick to it, even if a bad week here or there throws things off. Quitting my part time weekend gig, so that will free up time for grocery shopping and better meal prep, which will do a LOT to sticking to my goals better.
Still trying to find that balance. Was hoping to try for a steeper cut for a couple months, was doing okay for a couple weeks, then the hangries hit HARD and I 'backslid' a pound or two. So, trying to be more reasonable about it and accept I won't be at my 1st stop goal for my birthday (which I really kinda wanted, but not at the sacrifice of everything else and/or being miserable).
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The last few lbs is the hardest because you have to lose slowly and be very strict. For some people, 20 lbs makes a big difference in how you look, especially being short.3
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I’m 5’6”, about to be 36 next month. When I met my now husband 3 years ago, I was 135-140ish and have bumped up to 160-165 currently. I’m fairly lucky in the “distribution” aspect - the fat plays fair everywhere on me (except my boobs - not fair, lol). But I do not feel comfortable in my skin so my goal is to lose 15-20 pounds. 135 made me look anorexic honestly so I’d be ecstatic to be 145. So far the last 9 days have been relatively “easy” and I’ve lost 3 pounds thus far. Really worried about plateauing, though.5
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Not at success point yet, but less than 20lbs to lose so I'll chip in. I'm 46 and 5'3". Currently at 147.5 after six months of recuperation from an injury (I stopped exercising and logging); my happy place is 132. I've been back on track for the last week. Looking forward to my clothes not straining at the seams!2
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5'3"
SW - 170 (Dec. 27, 2017)
CW -152.5
GW - 142 (total 28 lb loss, and maybe a few more from there - we'll see when I get there!)
So far so good - been going very, very slowly, celebrating each mini-goal along the way. I have incorporated a half hour of exercise 6 days a week (3 days cardio, 3 days strength) plus 15 minute walks to up my step count, and I really like the way I feel and the progress I have made. It has not been difficult, per se - patience has been the biggest difficulty! But I am really enjoying the exercise program I have been doing, and I don't really ever allow myself to get hungry (I'm a grazer), so this has not been painful. I have no timeline - I will get to my goal when I do.1 -
I am 52 and I am 5'3. I am currently at 132. My goal weight is 120-125. At my heaviest I was 185. I have been between 130-135 for a year. I was down to 125 a couple of years ago. The worst part is I have tons of cellulite in my legs. If I could just cut out sugar, I think I would drop these last 10 lbs. It's hard. I run and I just started a 5 month half marathon training plan. Hopefully, ramping up my running will help the look of my legs.3
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