new toMFP
southernskeeter
Posts: 26 Member
Hi, my name is Cindy and I am new to MFP. I had a heart attack on 7/5 and am diabetic with high blood pressure and cholesterol. I need to lose a ton of weight, (over 100lbs). my main thing is to track my calories, sodium, and carbs. it's so hard! I feel like I barely eat and limit my bread and pasta and rice but my pie chart at the end of the day still shows more carb than protein. I am not an early morning person so the first meal is usually 11or 12. I am having a really hard time finding foods I like that are low carb, low sodium, and low fat. I do use a pedaling machine for 30 minutes to an hour every day. have to look at it and start watching calories burned, other than that I am not very active due to chronic back pain. I need help! lots of encouragement please
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Replies
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Its fine if you don't eat until 11 or 12, meal timing is a personal thing. I too prefer to not start eating until later in the day, and it has worked out quite well for me.
There are also many members here who are quite successful through diet alone and also have exercise restrictions, so don't let that worry you too much. It's great you have found something you are able to incorporate into you plan!
You may find this group helpful: https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/394-low-carber-daily-forum
@southernskeeter I am also going to move your thread to the food and nutrition board in hopes it gets more attention there. Hopefully some fellow members have some good suggestions for low carb, low fat, low sodium to get you started. Sometimes things move too fast in the introduce yourself section and threads don't get alot of responses.
~best wishes on your journey
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I highly recommend eating lunch meat throughout your journey. I love Sam's club brand honey ham and honey turkey; I find they help me get pure protein in my diet without the carbs.0
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doesnt lunch meat has lots of sodium? i have to really limit my sodium due to my heart attack and i now have a stent in my right artery.2
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Can your doctor get you an appointment with registered dietician? You will get too many conflicting advice on foods to eat on the internet. Hugs.4
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You can do this!! At one point, hubby and I got so good at low sodium that he tested too low and we were told to up it a bit! But it's not easy and takes time to adapt.
First to overcome is blandness! Yes, cooking without salt can make things awfully bland. This is where herbs and spices come to the rescue. Mrs. Dash is a great thing to start with but also make ample use of garlic, scallions, roasted red peppers, etc. for flavor. Cook things with plenty of taste on their own like sweet potatoes instead of white.
Read labels! Avoid most grocery store items that are "low salt" versions of regular things because they are often still high in sodium. A regular bowl of canned soup might be 700mg of sodium while the "low salt" version is still 500 mg. Check the labels. Make homemade soups so you control the sodium, etc.
Consider no-sodium treats from some mail order places. https://healthyheartmarket.com/ has salt-free pickles hubby loves -- especially the salt-free dill pickles. Who knew such a thing was possible?
I, too, have more than 100 pounds to lose and have Type II diabetes so controlling carbs is important. I'm learning to skip the rice and pasta and eat riced cauliflower instead. A tablespoon of parmesan cheese adds a lot of flavor for relatively small numbers in terms of calories and sodium.
My kryptonite is fat. I'm still having trouble upping the protein and limiting the fat but it's all a case of re-learning how to eat and we shouldn't expect to become expert in our new ways of eating overnight.
Best wishes to you on your quest to eat better.
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Thank Heidi for the snack link I will def look into it. I am adjusting to the no salt pretty good. lots of Mrs. dash being used. My biggest problem is I don't like to eat in the morning but have 9 pills to take for BP, sugar, and beta-blockers, and feel sick if I don't eat . I really don't want to eat early, I would prefer to save my calories and carbs for lunch and dinner so I have been having a banana and some red grapes, it's not a lot but keeps me from feeling weird. I still have a lot to figure out and it is getting a little easier as I go.my biggest accomplishment is I haven't had diet pop since 7/4 and my finger sticks have been great! I always felt that being diet it was ok but boy was I wrong. its been all water for me. Its a long road ahead but I am giving it a go.0
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southernskeeter wrote: »... I haven't had diet pop since 7/4 ... I always felt that being diet it was ok but boy was I wrong.
I used to be a Diet Coke junkie but I figured out that sweet taste without calories makes me want to eat everything in sight. Sweets or starchy carbs at the end of supper will do that to me, too. It will probably take you awhile to figure out what things work for you and what don't. We are each different but I'm learning, for instance, that an ounce of cheese, eaten slowly, is much more likely to sate my appetite than cookies even if both have the same calories. You'll learn the tricks that work for you. It's just trial and error. No sweat. Whatever pounds you lose are to the good!
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southernskeeter wrote: »My biggest problem is I don't like to eat in the morning but have 9 pills to take for BP, sugar, and beta-blockers, and feel sick if I don't eat .
If you could eliminate some or all of those pills, how would that change your life?
I had acid reflux and GERD so bad it controlled my life, right down to what I carried in my purse (barf bag, Tums, often extra pants and underwear).
Losing enough weight that the GERD vanished was like rebirth.
You can do this. Focus on the positive, the changes and the future. Visualize where you want to be in 90 days, a year.
You could do a simple breakfast of 3 servings of an Egg Beater type product and half a slice of cheese for about 125 calories or less. Not extravagant, but filling, to help get those pills to stay down.
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Springlering62, thanks for the encouragement.I will be buying an egg beaters type product this week and will try it out. I would love to get off some if not all these pills but dont see that happening anytime soon. small steps towards a big goal1
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Hi, and good for you for taking control. I've had two heat attacks so far, for a total of three stents, so I feel you. If there's such a thing as Cardiac Rehab. in your area, get with that. I found it really helped with getting confident that I could exercise and get my HR up while hooked up to the monitor and the nurse right there. Either way, get hooked up with an RD (Registered Dietitian) if you're not already. Don't sweat having more carb than protein as percent of calories. Total calories, and minimizing your A1C should be your primary goals. Next to not dying from insulin shock if you're taking that, of course! And quitting smoking if that's a thing.
Hang in there!
jk
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James_keegan63, OMG I can not imagine enduring 3 heart attacks. I plan on talking to the dr about seeing a dietician. Its getting a little easier figuring out what to eat on a daily, I come in under my calories count every day. I have found that since stopping diet soda I don't feel hungry all the time and it seems like I barely eat. I prepared 40z of chicken breast with onions and mushrooms, 1/2 baked sweet potato, and sauteed yellow squash and barely ate 1/2 for dinner Tuesday. just wasn't hungry and didn't snack later. Positives move for me! thanks for the advice and encouragement. best of luck with your health0
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I did all right on my own at first, but it was seeing a dietician that really propelled me. She helped review what I was eating, made suggestions and referred me to MFP. I saw her several times last year, and each time came away with info that was well worth the visit, plus encouragement that I was on the right track, hair wasn’t gonna fall out, bones implode, etc etc. it’s amazing the scary stuff you can frighten yourself with, especially when well meaning friends (and others)convince themselves you are “too thin”, even while you’re still clearly overweight.
If you have access, boy would I recommend it.
Our gym is a subsidiary of a large local hospital, open to nonemployees, and offers consults with a hospital staff dietician for peanuts. I want to shout at everyone there “Wow! Are you taking advantage of this?!!”. My old gym, a chain, also offered discount appointments with a dietician.1 -
Starting with raw ingredients (veggies, meats) and cooking them yourself will help to keep sodium down. Anything that comes in a bottle or can or carton is likely high in sodium.
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I do use raw veggies and meats nut I also use canned green beans with no salt and canned spinach. I rarely eat bread ( no sandwiches). It is a long process
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