TRE (Time Restricted Eating) great success

Hi all

So for the past 20 days I have been teaching myself the ins and outs of TRE, although, I am but a mere beginner so any help and/or advice will be greatly appreciated.

I am on 16/8 sometimes this stretches into 19/5 but I do not seem to have any adverse feelings when this happens. In fact today was one of those long days and I still had my morning run without any issues. Is there any negative effects that might show up or am I good to go as long as I feel well?

In order to get my weight down I am also keeping to an 800 calorie day which sometimes over the weekend might creep up to a 1000 calories but I do not add in my exercise and calories burnt.

Currently I commute to work by bicycle every day and on top of that I run three days a week. Coming up August we will have a 4 day cycle tour with loaded bikes and I am interested to see how my body manages the extra output. At this stage I am planning to keep to the TRE but up the calories on those days.

ps: I have managed to lose 3kg in these 20 days.

JanieB

Replies

  • SugaSugaNooo
    SugaSugaNooo Posts: 106 Member
    Wow you're on very, very low calories, am I understanding this right, you stick to 800 cals net a day? Have to be honest with you, I don't think that's healthy. Apologies if I misunderstood your post though.

    I've recently started IF 16/8 myself and I find it mostly helpful mentally, since now I don't have to "think" about food so much. I'm also trying to lose those last few stubborn pounds so I am restricting calories but I would not deliberately go below 1200 net calories.
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 6,009 Member
    mmapags wrote: »
    Time Restricted Eating has no magical effects nor negative effects. It is a tool for controlling calories.

    However, undereating had many negative effects. Malnutrition, hair loss, organ damage just to name a few. Mosley has a very questionable reputation and the advice you are following is just plain bad. If you are going to attempt a very low calorie diet, it should be under doctor supervision and not following some disreputable diet guru.

    Please reconsider.

    ^^^All of this...
  • SugaSugaNooo
    SugaSugaNooo Posts: 106 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    Oh goodie a new name for IF aka “don’t eat while you’re sleeping and skip breakfast if it doesn’t bother you to do so”

    Hahaha that's exactly what I'm doing! :D
  • Phirrgus
    Phirrgus Posts: 1,894 Member
    janiebsa wrote: »
    Thank you for the feedback everybody, I really appreciate it. Seems like Dr Mosley does not have a good reputation on here but believe me if I tell you that I did extensive reading before embarking on the Fast 800 and here in the UK it is not viewed in the same light. Having said that, I plan to not let your input just wash over me.

    Let me just be clear once again, I do not plan to live this way forever. For a few years now I have had a medical condition misdiagnosed which meant my eating and exercising went to the dogs and my overall health and fitness was non existent. It was only in April this year that the correct diagnosis was at last made and since then I have slowly been working towards a better solution and exercising more.

    I do not need to lose huge amounts of weight fast but I do need to lose weight. I stopped using alcohol in 2017. Have been eating less sugar, dairy and meat and now picking up on my exercising again. I honestly feel the best I have felt in possibly 10 years.

    So my question is then, if I understand the bulk of the comments correctly, the issue here is with the reduced calories and not the TRE. So if I dump the negative calories and eat back my exercise, is there any other red flags? Also I just want to point out that all my calories are freshly prepared food within the relevant nutrient levels. I dutifully fill in my daily food diary so I know exactly what goes into my mouth.

    Hi OP, regarding the bold above, was this recommended by, or are you being monitored by a doctor while doing this?
  • Dnarules
    Dnarules Posts: 2,081 Member
    LyndaBSS wrote: »
    Even a worse idea to be on a dangerously low calorie diet with an undiagnosed medical condition. Common sense alone dictates that.

    She said it was diagnosed now.
  • janiebsa
    janiebsa Posts: 17 Member
    Phirrgus wrote: »
    janiebsa wrote: »
    Thank you for the feedback everybody, I really appreciate it. Seems like Dr Mosley does not have a good reputation on here but believe me if I tell you that I did extensive reading before embarking on the Fast 800 and here in the UK it is not viewed in the same light. Having said that, I plan to not let your input just wash over me.

    Let me just be clear once again, I do not plan to live this way forever. For a few years now I have had a medical condition misdiagnosed which meant my eating and exercising went to the dogs and my overall health and fitness was non existent. It was only in April this year that the correct diagnosis was at last made and since then I have slowly been working towards a better solution and exercising more.

    I do not need to lose huge amounts of weight fast but I do need to lose weight. I stopped using alcohol in 2017. Have been eating less sugar, dairy and meat and now picking up on my exercising again. I honestly feel the best I have felt in possibly 10 years.

    So my question is then, if I understand the bulk of the comments correctly, the issue here is with the reduced calories and not the TRE. So if I dump the negative calories and eat back my exercise, is there any other red flags? Also I just want to point out that all my calories are freshly prepared food within the relevant nutrient levels. I dutifully fill in my daily food diary so I know exactly what goes into my mouth.

    Hi OP, regarding the bold above, was this recommended by, or are you being monitored by a doctor while doing this?

    Short answer, no I am not.
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