Struggling with patience?
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galinabluedress33
Posts: 2 Member
Hello everyone,
I was wondering if you had any advice for helping with patience. I am trying to lose 10-13 lbs and always find myself losing patience really quickly because results are so slow. I am not one for fad diets and am not trying to go quickly, actually, I am trying to take about a year to do this but am still struggling with patience (I want to fit into a new dress faster! lol!) I am willing to go slowly but still struggle with patience.
I also find myself eating in excess if I get hungry. Not because I am overly restricting my calories but because I just don't exactly enjoy being hungry. Can I still lose weight if I choose to not be hungry? Will focusing on whole foods and veggies help? I definitely am willing to focus on quality over calories. Just wanted to hear everyone's advice or personal experiences.
I was wondering if you had any advice for helping with patience. I am trying to lose 10-13 lbs and always find myself losing patience really quickly because results are so slow. I am not one for fad diets and am not trying to go quickly, actually, I am trying to take about a year to do this but am still struggling with patience (I want to fit into a new dress faster! lol!) I am willing to go slowly but still struggle with patience.
I also find myself eating in excess if I get hungry. Not because I am overly restricting my calories but because I just don't exactly enjoy being hungry. Can I still lose weight if I choose to not be hungry? Will focusing on whole foods and veggies help? I definitely am willing to focus on quality over calories. Just wanted to hear everyone's advice or personal experiences.
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Replies
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I think you might be impatient because you're planning on taking a year to lose 10-13 pounds. These forums are really big on telling people to go slower, and that's usually good advice, but in your case ...
Here's the thing. The weight loss challenge usually boils down to a struggle between getting a success that's big enough and fast enough to keep your motivation up, while not being so extreme that you do things, like ultra low calorie dieting, that sabotage the effort by causing you to give up because you feel deprived. That's the tension right there - going fast enough for a diet to be motivating, but not so fast that it backfires and leads to a binging cycle. Everyone has to find their right balance between those two extremes.
There must be 100,000 posts on these forums telling people to do 1/2 to 2 lbs a week, and in your case, 13 pounds at the minimum 1/2 pound a week shouldn't take more than 26 weeks, or six months.
So, March 1, basically.
So I would, personally, use the MFP goals tool, set your goal to 1/2 lb per week, find out how many calories to eat to make that happen, and then try to stick to that. See how it feels at that calorie level, and adjust as needed after you've tried it out for a few weeks.
My personal experience with food on a fixed calorie diet is that fat and protein are filling and make me not hungry. As are high fiber vegetables. But of all of that, protein is what makes me not think about food an hour later. The real culprit for excessive hunger, in my opinion, is empty calorie carbohydrates - refined carbs like white bread, pasta, etc. When I eat that stuff -- and I do love it -- I get a very temporary fill and then I'm hungry again pretty quickly. I now use full fat salad dressing, real mayo, and anything else that will give me a good amount of fat, and lots and lots of protein. Really trying to minimize empty calories like refined white flour is a very good starting point for beating back the hunger, imho.
Also, you will be less hungry if you get foods you really love. Even in small portions, a meal consisting of a favorite food can take your mind off food because you're satisfied and got what you wanted. So I'd think about the foods you love, and try to work some of them into your diet throughout the week. Absolutely anything can be eaten in a controlled portion. I love, love, love beef bourguignon and like making it too, original Julia Childs version with the whole sticks of butter and so on, but I know from making it that it's about a billion calories per plateful. Still, I can have a nice little serving of it and then I am basically done eating for the day LOL That is a very different approach than its opposite, with the diet salad dressings and vegetables that one pretends are delicious but aren't really, and never feeling sated, and it's definitely worth a shot to have smaller portions of more satisfying foods to see if it helps with the cravings.
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A year to lose 10-13lbs? I plan on losing 15 by the end of the year. No wonder you’re impatient! Speed it up a bit within reason and you might be happier6
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My personal experience is that it took me 3 years to lose 20ish lbs. The reason was like yours - I just didn't like being hungry and my overall weekly deficit was very small.
Then after 3 years it was impossible to keep deficit anymore. The food just wasn't enough.
I'm completely sedentiary due to numerous health issues (in hospital as we speak). So I maintain on ~1600cal (72kg, 171cm, 38 female)
During the last year I regained all these 20ish lbs. and I don't think I'll be able to lose them again as 1600 is too little as it is. I only had so much motivation. I can't eat even less than 1600 as I used to for 3 tears. In fact I think I'll keep gaining.
Not very encouraging but that's my experience.5 -
I can only speak for myself and say that looking back, impatience is my biggest regret.
I recently realised that trying to lose weight in 6 months has kept me fat for the last 25+ years. So because I was too impatient to take my time and do it over the course of 2 or 3 years instead of being a healthy weight by my mid-twenties I'm not having to take 2 or 3 years to get to a healthy weight by my mid-forties.
So yeah. I was fat for 25 years because I was too impatient to be fat for 2. Feels stupid in hindsight.11 -
It is slow if you’ve only got a little to lose but as others have already covered it sounds like your plan is not keeping you motivated.
You’ve not given us any information about your height, age, current/starting/goal weight, what calorie level you’re eating at and how you’re logging your intake. Also, what, if any, exercise you’re taking.
You don’t need to exercise to lose but if you are doing anything, are you eating at least a portion of those ‘gained’ calories? If not, that might explain your difficulty with hunger.
If you let us have all the above info, maybe we can be of more practical help! 😊2 -
I lost my weight very very slowly (we're talking like 7 years). The trick is to not look towards your end goal as your only goal. Of course the process would feel daunting when you have to wait a whole year to feel successful. Look for shorter term goals and distract yourself with them. Is there anything else you want that you can achieve within a month other than fitting into that dress? Maybe a fitness goal, a mindset goal, a habit goal...etc. It doesn't even need to be weight related.2
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It took me 6 months to lose 18 pounds and I usually did not feel hungry. If I did, I would eat something like an egg or a carrot with some hummus or some protein powder with water to tide me over until the next meal. There were a few times when I was hungry and could not seem to get full, and those days ran completely off the rails, but that only happened like 3-4 times. I exercised moderately for extra calories (even 150 cals helped). I binged a few evenings (not TOO horribly) ate whatever I wanted for my special birthday dinner, and ate 100 cals or so over my daily allotment at least once a week. I tracked and logged pretty honestly but not minutely (“1 egg, large” or “corn on the cob, 1 cob”). They key for me is getting back on track as quickly as possible if something went awry but not sweating all the times I wasn’t perfect.3
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Take your time and do it right, like everyone has already said.
As far as the hunger goes, try loading your plate up with the low calorie stuff like salad or veggies so you're eating more volume. Also make sure you're drinking enough water3 -
Thank you so much for everyone's comments! It is definitely motivating to know that other been have been here before and your experiences are really helping me see things more clearly. Shorter-term goals are a good idea and I do agree that not seeing any results because a year is a long time may be a culprit. Do any of you have advice for shorter-term goals?1
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galinabluedress33 wrote: »Thank you so much for everyone's comments! It is definitely motivating to know that other been have been here before and your experiences are really helping me see things more clearly. Shorter-term goals are a good idea and I do agree that not seeing any results because a year is a long time may be a culprit. Do any of you have advice for shorter-term goals?
Do you have any fitness goals? I found focusing on fitness not only gave me realistic short term goals for the last ten lbs, but it took my mind off watching the damn scale for the next half a lb to click off. As a bonus, focusing on strength training during that time probably did more for how I looked and felt than actually losing the vanity lbs anyway.
You might find some inspiration in some of these threads as well:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10332083/which-lifting-program-is-the-best-for-you/p1
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10177803/recomposition-maintaining-weight-while-losing-fat/p1 (this thread can apply to losing vanity lbs slowly as well as maintenance)
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10662287/the-goal-is-the-process/p1
:drinker:1 -
I fight the impatience by keeping my focus on the habits that I will carry forward long after I reach my goal weight.1
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I think many people misinterpret the root cause of their impatience. Is it really the length of time or the fact you don't enjoy being hungry even for today?
If you are experiencing physical hunger it is time to address it so you can sustain your plan for as long as you need. If you open your diary or give a rundown of your typical day perhaps we can float some ideas your way of things to try.1 -
I understand the "I feel a bit peckish let me grab a snack thing." I work from home too so a lot easier to get to stuff. That's when I go try on the t-shirt I bought at the Police Reunion Tour that hasn't fit right since 2009. Still doesn't fit right? Then I don't need a snack.0
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On the slower road myself as well, and patience can definitely a problem. When I've been successful in the past, if the hunger was just getting silly I would plan in a week of "maintenance" (basically a diet break but hadn't heard that term before) and eat more. That would help with the hunger and I wouldn't lose ground - just wouldn't lose weight that week.
Right now I'm shooting for the .5-1 lb/week range, mostly closer to the lower end of that, but it's important to realize that weight loss isn't linear, too. Keeping weekly averages helps me stay sane when overall losses are slower and harder to see on the scale.
Even at the slowest loss rate I have to deal with a fair bit of hunger. Upping my activity helps since I have then have bigger meals, but still just have that occasional day or weekend at or maybe even slightly above maintenance.1
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