Losing weight over 50
debrakannan
Posts: 1 Member
Hey - I’m looking for compadres on this journey of losing weight over 50!!!
What do I eat, when and how much??!! What exercise ideas- I want to lose about 30lbs.
Deb
What do I eat, when and how much??!! What exercise ideas- I want to lose about 30lbs.
Deb
2
Replies
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Hi Deb, I’m 63 and in the last year I’ve lost 43 pounds by simply eating within my calorie limit and moving more. I plugged my stats in here and logged daily. I started at 173 and am now maintaining right around 130. This took about 9 months. Take it one day at a time, patience and consistency will get you there.6
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I will turn 61 next week. I was a WW member for the past year and have lost 75 pounds. Their "goal weight" for me was much lower than I wanted to go. When I had my annual physical I discussed where I should be with my doc and she said 5 pounds more. So I am back to do what I've done all along......AT LEAST 30 minutes of activity a day, but count calories now rather than WW points.3
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Hi Deb,
What you eat is highly individual. What matters is how many calories according to your height, protein according to your goal weight, and just enough healthy fat to function properly.
I'm 58 and I lost 85 pounds of body fat between ages 48-50, and yo-yo'd on various diets for 15 years before that.
People tend to think your metabolism comes to a screeching halt when you age but the fact is that is not true. Metabolism ebbs and flows.
As as to what macros and calories to eat, your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is based mainly on your height. Anything under, even slightly, your TDEE consistently over time is what will cause you to lose body fat, slowly and in a healthy manner over time. Be extremely patient. 30-60-90 days for results. Don't look at day to day or week to week data so much because it's just not long enough, although people can jump for joy and cry in pain for the water fluctuations which is a useless waste of precious energy.
How much protein? .8-1.2 grams per goal body weight.
How much fat? The average female needs a minimum of 30-50 grams per day for a healthy brain function and hormone production.
Too much under your TDEE causes your metabolism to slow down a little and also causes too many fluctuations in your daily calories. Valley's too low causes peaks too high. Look at your nutrition graph to make sure it's a nice consistent line.
I hope that makes sense. You can do it!
Roberta3 -
debrakannan wrote: »Hey - I’m looking for compadres on this journey of losing weight over 50!!!
What do I eat, when and how much??!! What exercise ideas- I want to lose about 30lbs.
Deb
I was past 50 when I started on MFP and lost weight just fine using the calorie goal it gave me (in fact, I lost weight faster than predicted and had to increase my calorie goal eventually, but I seem to be an outlier).
You can eat whatever you want (barring allergies, intolerances, and other medical issues). You can eat as much as you can fit in your calorie budget. Experiment to find what kinds of foods and what kind of eating schedule are most helpful to you in adhering to your calorie budget. Not everyone is the same. Some people are volume eaters, so they do well with foods that aren't calorie dense, e.g., watery, fibrous foods like salads, soups, nonstarchy veggies, and low-sugar fruits. Some people find protein and fat disproportionately satiating for the calories spent on them. Some people are "moderators" -- if they can have a small portion some desired foods like chocolate every day or a couple of times a week, they're fine. Others are "abstainers" -- they can't stop at a small portion of their trigger foods and need to just give it up entirely.
Find an exercise you enjoy, or at least don't hate, because you're more likely to stick with it. Better yet, find several kinds of exercises you enjoy, or at least don't hate, so you can
* have some variety (for many people, you will be more likely to stick with it, plus if you're only tolerating, not enjoying, the exercise, you may feel more like doing it if you give yourself a choice -- "Would you rather do X or Y or Z?" instead of "you must do X" -- hey, it works for toddlers!),
* get the benefits of cross-training (working different muscles, generally reducing risk of injury), and
* potentially have options when weather precludes outdoor exercise, or your gym is closed, etc.
When I started out, I mostly just walked -- and most of that was just adding walking integral to my day, not dedicated walking for the sake of walking. E.g., get out of the subway a stop earlier on the way to work or walk to a farther station at the end of the day; walk to the library, restaurants, or shopping on the weekend instead of driving (I'm fortunate to live within a couple of miles of two somewhat urbanized areas); when driving, choose distant parking spaces. I also started walking up the stairs to my 10th floor office -- at first, the last three or four flights were really hard!
Eventually I joined a gym, found some dance classes I enjoyed (ballet, folk, zumba), and started lifting. There's also a track for walking and running around the perimeter of the main gym space, plus treadmills and stationary bikes, so I can do my cardio there if I can't get outside and there are no classes going on when I can get to the gym.
I tried the yoga classes at the gym, but they were in a cinder-block, windowless, smelly room that reminded me of the high school wrestling practice room that we had to do gymnastics in on rainy days, because kids doing outdoor phys ed activities that session would displace us from the portion of the relatively bright, airy basketball court where we usually set up the gymnastics equipment. So I found a local yoga studio with a beautiful loft space where you can see the sky and tree tops while you practice. When I go to the beach (my most typical vacation), I walk the shore to the next little beach town and back at least once a day, walk the residential streets to enjoy the landscaping and see what home construction projects are going on, and rent a bike for both leisure rides and to reach places I don't want to walk to but don't need the car to cart stuff home. If I do a road trip vacation, most hotels and even motels have exercise rooms of some kind, and I always try to build walking or hiking into my sightseeing.5 -
Hi there! 52 and feeling good. Been on a couple of months now, lost good weight but have found I need targets! Riding Boston to New York on 30th April, running s 5k in June. I think you need to be mindful of what you eat and creative of how you burn it off - fun burns those calories!!2
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Follow the MFP logging thing every day. It's an eye opener! I started MFP when I was 57, and lost 30 pounds. So it's doable! The key for exercise for me was doing things I enjoy: Zumba classes, jogging in the park, taking a hike with a friend. I tried some other classes and I just couldn't continue with them because they were either boring as heck or a little too challenging. Good luck!1
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Hi! I am 54 and love my journey so far with MFP. I find logging is very important for me. Some days I will log the next day in advance. I think what to eat varies with each individual. My personal motto is everything within moderation. I tend to have 3 meals and 2 snacks a day but that is what works for me. I have to lose between 100 to 120 pounds. I have lost almost 30 so far. For exercise, my go to is walking. I just started adding strength training and this week I am going to do some water aerobics.
The one piece of advice I would give you is log everything. Buy yourself a food scale and weigh everything.4 -
Hi I’m 56, 5-5”, currently 146 pounds, and lost 10 pounds in 3.5 months. I feel fabulous now but would like to lose 6 more pounds to be at a respectable 140 lbs. I had a body scan done about a year ago, which suggested 135 would be the ideal weight for my physique. I’m ok with 140. I’m finding the weight loss currently resides at around half a pound a week which allows for a few small “cheats” here and there so I don’t feel deprived of my loves. ( ice cream, cookies ). At a bare minimum, daily I will do 30 minutes of cardio, usually the treadmill. I will add to that, sit ups, planks, weights, skipping, mountain climbers several times per week.i follow the calorie and macro suggestions provided in MFP. The videos and articles are inspiring and helpful. I wasn’t always so inspired. I joined MFP a year ago but didn’t find my motivation to move forward until I was mentally ready which was for me, on Jan 2. Yes it was a New Years resolution that is currently progressing positively, given that I haven’t thrown in the towel. You have to figure out your own body and what it responds to, in terms of weight loss ( calories/ macros/ exercise) because we all are different, and basically a science experiment to figure out. I found being conscious of my macros ( protein/ carbs/ fat/ sugar etc) is a huge eye opener and made me more aware of how much of each I should be eating based on what MFP suggests. You can adjust those a bit to suit you as you learn more about your limits. Hope all of this helps and good luck!!!0
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When you’re over 50, incorporating some sort of strength training into your exercise becomes important to overall health, especially warding off osteoporosis. It has the added benefit of helping you retain lean muscle as you lose weight. When I lost about 27 pounds a few years ago I ate at a calorie deficit and did lots of cardio and wasn’t happy with how I looked at my goal weight because I still had a high body fat to lean body mass percentage. This time, I am lifting (heavy for me but not for others because I am a beginner) three times a week and doing some cardio on orher days.5
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I started MFP 13 months ago at age 55. I'm down 68 pounds since then, mostly sticking to my calorie goal. Exercise has been mostly walking, for at least an hour, at least four times a week. Doing yard work, gardening and household chores round out my activity. It took several months before eating right and resisting binges became second nature, and exercise has been something I've grown to look forward to, reminding me how much better I feel when I finish.1
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OP never came back - guess she isn't ready yet.
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