75 Hard
ekaba1998
Posts: 1 Member
Hey my name is Egbe. I’m 19 and I’m very overweight. I’m only 5’7 but 232 lbs and I’m tired of being this size. I’ve been overweight my whole life and I’ve never really been able to stick to a diet. I heard about the 75 Hard Challenge and was hoping to get some advice. Is it worth the struggle? What diet is good to do while doing the challenge? If anyone who has done this can help out I’d really appreciate it!
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Replies
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I don't know enough about the 75 challenge to have an opinion, but weight loss is caused by being in a calorie deficit. Use mfp and let that help calculate your calories. Log your food. Log any exercise separate and eat back those calories. I'm 5'7 and starting weight was 225. I'm down 20 lbs simply by being mindful of my calories. I still have 70 lbs to get my weight loss goal. I personally don't think weight loss should be a struggle. Find something that you'll want to stick with for life.
Lots of good luck!3 -
Weight loss is simple, but not always easy! Eat fewer calories in a day than your body needs and you’ll lose weight.4
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I would avoid things that pride themselves to be hard.
You don't need to punish yourself.
You do need to eat less Calories than you spend.
While it is a simple concept, consistently doing so most of the time is obviously hard enough to implement for most people.
No need to make it harder.
You don't have to eat a lesser quantity of food if you reduce the average Caloric content per gram.
You don't have to eat lower average Caloric content food if you reduce the total quantity.
You don't have to give up anything as long as you meet your reasonable caloric goals.
This does mean that you can have anything you want at any time. Just not always as much of it, or as often, as you went, and definitely not everything you may want ALL of the time!
(No idea what a hard 75 is: I just don't even like the name as a concept)
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THE RULES OF THE #75HARD CHALLENGE
1. Follow a strict diet - no cheat meals for the entire 75 days.
Calorie counting is not essential but the diet must eliminate chocolate, cake, soft drinks and alcohol.
2. Workout twice a day for at least 45 minutes, with one outdoor session.
3. Drink four litres of water per day.
4. Read 10 pages of a non-fiction entrepreneurial book each day.
5. Take progress photos every day.
Source: Medium.com
Followers of the #75HARD movement must adhere to five fundamental rules for the duration of the programme.
These include exercising twice a day for a minimum of 45 minutes per session, with one workout conducted outdoors.
A strict diet must be followed for the full ten weeks, with no cheat days allowed.
#75HARD does not stipulate a specific meal plan, but no chocolate, cake, soft drinks or alcohol may be consumed.
Participants must also drink four litres of water per day.
Having googled the rules amd quoted above. I feel you are making things unnecessarily harder than they need to be.
Plus eliminating the foods listed, but without counting calories, could easily mean failure. As it would still be easy to eat at maintainance or above, gaining weight instead. If you have no idea of calories consumed.
Exercise is great for health, but not needed for weight loss. While its good to start exercising & gradually build on what you can do. Will be far safer & more manageable.
I feel you would be better to use mfp, as designed. Set up your account, with your data. Add intended exercise seperately. Aim to hit your target, or close to.
The harder you make it, could end up with it being "to hard" and giving in. While slow and sready, building new habits and hitting your intended calorie target. Would probably, not just make weight loss easier, but if you continue long term. It helps as you lead into maintainance.5 -
Kinda sounds like a diet for failure to me. MFP is so much better and will teach you lifelong habits that are sustainable.5
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75Hard is actually about teaching people to get themselves into good habits. You don't have to choose any diet that you know you can't follow. You choose a diet that you think is good for you and that you think you should be able to do for 75 days. It has simple rules. If you mess up on a day you go back to day one. The program is pretty new and has people who have done it singing its praises. You can do this along with MFP. It isn't a one or the other type thing. It is also free.
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Here is the info I got....
You are about to embark on the hardest 75 days of your life. But if you can get thru it without cheating yourself, you will come out on the other side as the the hardest, most disciplined version of yourself. The habits you develop and what you learn about yourself will change your life forever.
At first glance, to some the program might look simple. It is.
But don't confuse simple & easy.
Some of the most simple things in life are also the most difficult.
#75HARD is one of those things.
To others it might look too advanced. Also, don't be fooled ... it's not. You can do this no matter what your starting point is.
This is not a physical challenge. It is a mental challenge, designed to develop all of the characteristics you lack in life that have landed you where you are at. The physical transformations that occur are just the by-product of the mental transformations you will make.
You will be tempted to cheat and compromise. You will not be tempted by me ... you will be tempted by yourself.
You will be tempted to try to change things a little to suit you and your "special lifestyle." But that right there is the root of every problem in your life.
Every single thing you do is built on your discipline and ability to keep your own promises to yourself.
EVERYTHING.
When you make a small compromise to yourself, it engrains that decision pattern in your life. You subconsciously tell yourself that is OK and create a pattern of compromise across every single area of your life. It rounds-off the sharp corners of what should be an exceptional life.
The next 75 days is a chance to prove to yourself that you're not a liar ... you're not weak ... and you truly have what it takes to break the patterns of weakness and compromise you've built over the course of your entire life.
I'm not special ... and neither are you.
I did this ... and I know you can too.
But that doesn't matter ... it's up to you to believe in yourself and do the work.
—Andy
So what are these simple tasks that you have to do the next 75 Days?
👇👇👇
#75HARD
☑️ Follow a diet. This can be the diet of your choice, but it must be a structured plan designed with a physical improvement in mind.
☑️ You must complete two 45-minute workouts. One of those workouts MUST be outdoors.
☑️ Absolutely NO alcohol or cheat meals.
☑️ Take a progress picture every day.
☑️ Drink 1 gallon of water.
☑️ Read 10 pages of a book. **Audiobooks DO NOT COUNT.
ZERO COMPROMISE
ZERO SUBSTITUTION
You have until you go to sleep to complete the day.
If you fail, you MUST start over on Day 1.
Sounds easy huh? We'll see about that.
Each one of those daily tasks was hand picked for a specific reason. They were chosen for a reason that I will explain and you will come to understand as you are moving thru the challenge. Trust me.
While you're getting started, here are your next steps ...
Step 1 — LISTEN
Listen to the Real AF episode I did specifically on 75 HARD. This is the cornerstone of the challenge that will transform your life over the next 75 days.
Listen to the Podcast
Step 2 — SHARE
You know others who struggle with traits like confidence, self-esteem, self-worth, self-belief, fortitude, and grittiness ... tap below to share 75 HARD with them.
Share 75 Hard
Step 3 — SUBSCRIBE
Join me and my guests as we discuss, debate, and laugh our way through trending topics and hot-button issues.
Subscribe to RealAF
Step 4 — GO!
Quit planning. Quit making excuses. Quit waiting for the perfect time. Get out there and move. Start your program.
Download the 75 Hard App to help you track your progress and post your results online thru the program.
Download the App
Use the hashtag #75HARD so me and everyone else doing the program can see your progress too.
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I can see how that might work for some people, sort of an inspiring Amazon warrior kind of idea. For my tastes, though, that really sounds like it's playing into "you're fat and out of shape because you're weak" kind of nonsense. Sets people up for "If you fail, it's not the program's fault - you just weren't good enough". "Go back to day 1" reminds me of the gym teachers who required push-ups of people who were slower than the pack in the track run. And it sounds like devoting hours of time a day, if that 45 minutes of exercise X 2 is daily? On top of regular life? With good overall life balance (enough time/energy for job, family, chores etc.)?
But I'm admittedly a lazy, hedonistic gradualist, so that program obviously wasn't targeted at people like me.
It might work for you, OP. But losing weight, or getting more fit, doesn't *have* to be all *that* hard. I mean, there will be times when some parts require a bit of self-discipline, but I'm inclined more to PAV's and Wendy's (posts above) way of thinking, that the easier, more sustainable, and even more enjoyable we can make the process - the less sacrifice and white-knuckled self-discipline we require of ourselves - the higher the probability of long-term success.
That's especially true, IMO, if the real goal is not just to get to a healthy weight and a fitter body, but to keep those long term, i.e., for longer than 75 days. (Maybe that 75hard character transformation part takes care of that, too, with some kind of ForeverHard - not sure.)
I know PAV's a healthy-weight pretty-active guy, after years of being something else entirely. I'm a pretty thin li'l ol' lady (have been for 4+ years now) after several decades of obesity, and not in terrible physical shape for age 64. Several of the other folks expressing skepticism are also coming from a place of decent success. That nice Quiksylver not only lost weight, but became a weightlifting champ. Maybe we have some point?
Dunno. Different things work for different people, for sure.
Since you're looking for "a diet", this is what I did:
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10636388/free-customized-personal-weight-loss-eating-plan-not-spam-or-mlm/p1
. . . but you'd have to add in some extra rules to fit the 75Hard restrictions. (I don't like rules, so I minimize them.)
Wishing you much success, whatever route you choose!2 -
If your boss at work gave you a tough and long-term task to complete would you deliberately set out to make that task harder or easier?
If you are a person who thrives on rigid rules, restrictions and routine then I would suggest defining your own would be superior to adopting someone else's.
Have a serious think about what gives you the highest chance of success, you should know your own strengths and weaknesses so seek to use your strengths and mitigate your weaknesses.
The question "is it worth the struggle?" - yes being healthy is absolutely worth the struggle but motivation and discipline are limited resources so use them wisely.
To me this absolute view of must do tasks sounds hateful and could give a very binary view of success and failure which might prompt just giving up instead of a sense of proportion. In reality success (in weight management) is the goal and tools should help you progress towards that goal, don't prioritise the tool over the goal.3 -
I really don’t understand the no alcohol or no chocolate thing AT ALL. Losing weight is about eating in a deficit. I have had chocolate and stayed within a deficit. I have had wine or beer and remained within a deficit. I am NOT a big drinker though, so at most I’ll have 2 beers, usually only 1.
I just think that this plan is:
A. Needlessly difficult
B. Has an end date
C. End dates mean you are done
D. When you end and go back to what you did before, you regain the weight lost.2
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