Tips to maintain without daily tracking for the rest of my life, please?

2

Replies

  • elisa123gal
    elisa123gal Posts: 4,333 Member
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?

    I have lost 40...but at other times in my younger life.. I often lost any weight I wanted never weighing myself or counting calories. When I joined MFP about 8 years ago is when I tried to count calories to control my weight. It has never worked for me.. I was overweight the entire time until this year when I went back to my old ways of just eating healthy..using food rules and exercise.

    I just don't think I'm wired for logging.. but I do recognize it works very well for many of you.
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?

    @cheryldumais

    Only 30lbs lost for me.

    But really I've always considered maintenance (not always at the right weight unfortunately but in a fairly stable weight range) something I have to think about consciously but I'm able to achieve.

    My weight gain was sudden following a major injury which not only made me inactive for months but also weakened my resolve through depression. Once I was back on my feet I maintained but roughly 30lbs overweight for two decades.

    I have concerns that when/if I can't continue my active lifestyle and high exercise levels I will have to adapt my eating but I've done it in the past to accommodate life changes so should be able to adapt again in the future. Logging was useful for dieting as that's the thing I find hard - the data made me accountable and stripped away excuses, if I need that tool again in the future I would use it.


  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,159 Member
    sijomial wrote: »
    I weigh daily and keep a casual eye on developing trends. Haven't logged food in ages but still log my exercise as it gives me a guide to my overall requirements (it's a very significant contributor for me and varies a lot from season to season - probably not necessary for most people).

    I also have an upper weight limit that is my intervention point. More rigorous about that in the cycling months but happy to drift up a bit in winter and lose a few pounds again in Spring. I don't see maintenance as necessarily a flat line.

    Typically my intervention is just making lower calorie choices or nibbling a few hundred calories off my calorie balance here or there. Might be food substitutions, skipping breakfast (easy for me), not fuelling some of my bike rides (easy way for me to trim off 1000 cals on odd days). I never go into "diet mode" though, pretty relaxed on getting back in range slowly. For me it's the trend that matters. Notice I'm using the word easy - meaning easy for me, knowing yourself (strengths and weaknesses) is very important.


    @kommodevaran
    I'm perhaps a bit of an anomaly in that I eat more at maintenance compared to when I was a chubster as now I'm semi retired I'm more active and have more time to enjoy my exercise. Long term maintenance has to take change into account.

    "....but also that it is for life, so it better be good." - Agreed, I really enjoy maintenance and I think that's important to long term success, I enjoy my food, my exercise and living in a healthy body.

    Why would someone flag this post? I found it informative and helpful...

    Fat fingers on a phone, etc? Just keep in mind they are just subjective no verbal remarks and carry no objective scientific meaning but perhaps cuts down on stress causing remarks that can close threads which cost moderators time out of their busy lives.
  • wenrob
    wenrob Posts: 125 Member
    edited October 2018
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?
    I lost 89lbs total and am coming up on nine years in maintenance. But, it was the only time I was ever obese in my life. I’ve been overweight over the years but would usually snap myself to. A lot of reasons came into play creating the perfect storm to eat my way up to 235+ pounds and stuck around for a couple of years. Once those started to resolve I set my mind to losing the weight and just have never looked back. So my answer to your question is, I really don’t know.

    I go through stages of logging diligently with few exceptions (birthday, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Vacation) and stages where I just keep an eye on things. Right now I’m weighing my food but not logging. What I have been consistent with is being aware of how much I put in my mouth and stepping on the scales regularly. If I see a rising trend I get my crap together. Getting as heavy as I did spooked me enough to never want to go there again so I do what I feel I need to do based on what’s happening. Sometimes that’s logging for long periods of time. It’s pretty much second nature at this point.

  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?

    I fall in this boat, I log just for fun because it helps me with meal planning and I like hearing how all my friends on here are doing so i'm on anyways. I didn't have much weight to lose, and I was always in a normal BMI range. I have never in my life used a food scale, even when I was losing weight. How I eyeballed my portions was I fell back on my childhood, I remembered what a serving my mom would give me looked like. I gave myself servings based off of what my parents taught me a normal serving should look like, and I used other tips and tricks I picked up along the way...I remember in kindergarten I had a gym teacher who told me when it comes to pasta one serving for you should look like the palm of your hand. I've also always had a good grip on hunger cues, and I love veggies, fruits, and lean meats. Sweets have always been my weakness though I know how much is too much.
  • ExistingFish
    ExistingFish Posts: 1,259 Member
    I tried logging in maintenance, but I found it very mind consuming (not time consuming), I was still frequently thinking about calories and how many calories I had already eaten and how many I was "allowed", basically I developed an unhealthy relationship with food for maintenance. I started eating to hunger, but like a PP keeping it to 3 meals and defined snack times. Eating serving size portions when I do eat something. I'm keeping an eye on my weight, I participate in two weekly log in threads and use a trending app (Libra) and weigh daily. If I start seeing a trend to the upper end of my goal range (which is 3lbs +/-, 7lb range) I'll reevaluate, but so far I'm holding steady in my range and keeping my trend dead where I want it.

    I lead a very active lifestyle and lift weights at least twice a week. I'm 5'0" and when I was logging and trying maintenance, I was still losing at 2100+ calories. I estimate based on my results at 2100 that I need to eat closer to 2300-2500. That seems like a lot, but I'm also breastfeeding my 1 year old still. And I know I was actively losing at 2100 calories (I lose 5lbs in my first month of maintenance {logging 2100}).
  • ExistingFish
    ExistingFish Posts: 1,259 Member
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?

    I lost about 35lbs. From barely into the "obese" BMI range to the "healthy" BMI range, so the full range of "overweight" BMI.

    I was happily maintaining my 156lb weight before I decided to lose it, I wasn't gaining and that was a weight I'd been at for years, sprinkle a few pregnancies in there. I had horrible eating habits, but I wasn't gaining. I did have the benefit of breastfeeding burning additional calories.

    I'm also scared to regain. Using Libra and keeping an eye on my trend line helps. I was getting unhealthily obsessed with calories when I was first in maintenance, but still losing.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    I would be very curious to know from those of you that don't log any more how much weight you lost. I'm curious if you lost smaller amounts and therefore already had better eating habits than those of us who lost large amounts. Personally I still log and have been in maintenance about a year. I'm scared to death to regain. Am I just paranoid or am I more likely to regain?

    40 Lbs...my eating habits were never particularly bad, though I didn't get enough veg and fruit (I do now). I've never really been an emotional or stress eater or binge type of person...always have been pretty much a three squares a day kinda guy with maybe a couple snacks thrown in the afternoon.

    My issue was namely that I went from being very active to taking a desk job and working 10-12 hour days when I was 30...before that, I never had any weight issues...competitive track and field sprinter most of my young life...Marine Corps and then college where I didn't own a vehicle for much of that time and walked and biked everywhere and hobbies included hiking, Ultimate Frisbee, and Disc Gold...

    My weight crept up slowly over the course of about 8 years sitting at a desk...about 45-50 Lbs over 8 years.
  • lollitakennedy
    lollitakennedy Posts: 33 Member
    I have read all the post so I can be ready for the future when I am at my goal. The only thing I would change is my window of lbs gained before I would get back on track. I would she 3lbs as a marker. I look at that as 2 lbs is water and 3lbs is a lb of fat gained. Letting it get to even 5 lbs weight gain is really hard to take off.
  • Winterbaby2014
    Winterbaby2014 Posts: 29 Member
    It may not work for some, but I used to do intermittent fasting. There are many 'programs' out there, and all revolves around one thing. Calorie intake.

    I would do it the '5:2' way. So 5 days of the week I eat 'normally' (still kinda watching what I eat, but if I eat a couple of chocolate bars not the end of the world), and then the other two you eat 500 calories, or 600 for men. On the deficit days you can choose how you want those calories- do you want to eat salad all day long, do one owant one nice dinner, you get the jist.

    This worked for me as I only had to really think about being healthy for 2 days of the week
  • lbryans929
    lbryans929 Posts: 42 Member
    Being able to easily copy and paste a recipe into MFP and track it was life-changing. I love to cook, so I can see logging forever, since it means I can cook and eat whatever I or my family want to eat.
  • lbryans929
    lbryans929 Posts: 42 Member
    nowine4me wrote: »
    I wish I could help. Every time I stop logging my weight creeps up. After many, many years, it’s pretty effortless to log. I wish i had better intuitive earring skills, but I just don’t.

    +1
  • walktalkdog
    walktalkdog Posts: 102 Member
    lbryans929 wrote: »
    nowine4me wrote: »
    I wish I could help. Every time I stop logging my weight creeps up. After many, many years, it’s pretty effortless to log. I wish i had better intuitive earring skills, but I just don’t.

    +1

    another +1
  • walktalkdog
    walktalkdog Posts: 102 Member
    Even on weekends I don't log very accurately and I "think" I'm eating less, but my weight always goes up a pound or two by Monday. Not logging doesn't work for me.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    Even on weekends I don't log very accurately and I "think" I'm eating less, but my weight always goes up a pound or two by Monday. Not logging doesn't work for me.

    I'm more loosey goosey on the weekend..my weight usually goes up a couple pounds on Monday...it's water weight, it isn't fat. Body weight fluctuates and people regularly mistake normal weight fluctuations or fluctuations caused by more sodium, etc to be actual weight gain (or loss) and it isn't.
  • urloved33
    urloved33 Posts: 3,323 Member
    a PORTION is roughly the size of the palm of your hand .
  • MikePfirrman
    MikePfirrman Posts: 3,307 Member
    edited October 2018
    @sgt1372, I am sorry you think so many of us, including me, are dishonest because there is no way to verify that we can maintain our weight without logging out food and weighing ourselves at regular intervals.

    You shouldn't have, but have, upset me more than a stranger, though I thought I was familiar with you, on the net should.

    I have sat for more than half an hour thinking of a rebuttal, and wondering if pictures would satisfy you, but in the end, I decided there is no need for me to justify myself.

    Believe me a liar if you wish. I'm not.

    Cheers, h.
    (Sorry for the minor rant folks, not used to my word being called into question)

    I didn't take it that way. I failed one or two times after stopping logging but that red line brought me back to logging again. I'd try again and if I failed, I'd log again.

    I think that's what Sgt meant, is that logging everything and using MFP as your CICO calculator is a lot more practical and exacting than what I do, for instance. And he may have a point. But for me, the freedom of knowing that over 3/4 years of logging, habits became so entrenched, that I don't have to log any longer is liberating.

    I still log weight changes, BTW. I just logged one today (up to 192!). My red line is 195, so I'm up a bit. Likely the last two days of Gluten Free Spaghetti and Turkey Meatballs. I've eaten a bit like a pig. I'm also bulking up a bit now, so I'll forgive myself.

    We all got fat (if we were fat/obese at one point) through habits, in my humble opinion. Change those habits and replace them with healthier habits and the "work" of weight loss becomes life. My habits were changed one at a time and very slowly with a lot of mistakes along the way. All I think Sgt meant is are all those little mistakes worth derailing your weight loss success? For some, they might risk reverting back to old habits. That's where I think having that red line where you absolutely go back to logging is helpful. I fear that red line because I like the freedom I have now and, quite frankly, after six years of hard work, I earned it.
  • JeromeBarry1
    JeromeBarry1 Posts: 10,179 Member
    Good habits. Once you have good habits, logging is superfluous.
  • brenn24179
    brenn24179 Posts: 2,144 Member
    wizzybeth wrote: »
    What got me in trouble the last time was not weighing myself on a regular basis until it was so bad that my clothes didn't fit anymore. That's what I plan to do when I get to goal weight the next time is weigh myself at least once a week.

    yes, me too. I gained 25 lbs over the winter last year, now have lost it and I am weighing every day and logging but especially weighing.
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