I'm big....35 stone (490 pounds)
whitevanman5
Posts: 11 Member
Hello....only me
Standing 6ft 2in (187cm) and 35 stone (490 pounds). You can imagine my body, but anyway. I'm working not bed or housebound. I do get out of breathe, which is understandable. What sort of exercise would you recommended. I do walk but need to do more of it, I know. Just some helpful advice would be great.
Thanks
Wayne
Standing 6ft 2in (187cm) and 35 stone (490 pounds). You can imagine my body, but anyway. I'm working not bed or housebound. I do get out of breathe, which is understandable. What sort of exercise would you recommended. I do walk but need to do more of it, I know. Just some helpful advice would be great.
Thanks
Wayne
5
Replies
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Here are my first and second year weight loss anniversary threads. They may contain some helpful information for you.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10731694/after-a-year-over-150lbs-lost-learned-a-few-things/p1
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10791606/2-years-over-200-pounds-lost-lessons-learned-and-life-changed
I would recommend exercise that is very low impact. Walking might be fine as long as you stay off hills and stairs or wear knee support.
I would concentrate more on increasing your daily movement. A good idea might be to get a fitness tracker and then just try to add more steps. Look at starting to restructure your life in a less efficient manner. One of my favorite easy to do things was to get a smaller cup for coffee or liquid. This simple act forced me to get up a little more often but the moment I started thinking this way and embracing it, it started a chain of new thoughts and ideas.
It should not be long for you to lose your first 50 pounds but even the first 25 will start to make things easier. Don't jump too far ahead of where you need to be with the exercise. If you elect to do a punishing amount now it will potentially hurt you more than it helps you. Remember to eat for weight loss and exercise for fitness. When I was full weight and due to the weird way my fat accumulated on my body I was nearly disabled. I lost my first 80 pounds with no formal exercise. With so much weight gone now I am up at 4:30am everyday and I put in about 2 hours of exercise. If I had tried that too early I would have probably already needed knee replacements.10 -
Here are my first and second year weight loss anniversary threads. They may contain some helpful information for you.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10731694/after-a-year-over-150lbs-lost-learned-a-few-things/p1
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10791606/2-years-over-200-pounds-lost-lessons-learned-and-life-changed
I would recommend exercise that is very low impact. Walking might be fine as long as you stay off hills and stairs or wear knee support.
I would concentrate more on increasing your daily movement. A good idea might be to get a fitness tracker and then just try to add more steps. Look at starting to restructure your life in a less efficient manner. One of my favorite easy to do things was to get a smaller cup for coffee or liquid. This simple act forced me to get up a little more often but the moment I started thinking this way and embracing it, it started a chain of new thoughts and ideas.
It should not be long for you to lose your first 50 pounds but even the first 25 will start to make things easier. Don't jump too far ahead of where you need to be with the exercise. If you elect to do a punishing amount now it will potentially hurt you more than it helps you. Remember to eat for weight loss and exercise for fitness. When I was full weight and due to the weird way my fat accumulated on my body I was nearly disabled. I lost my first 80 pounds with no formal exercise. With so much weight gone now I am up at 4:30am everyday and I put in about 2 hours of exercise. If I had tried that too early I would have probably already needed knee replacements.
WoW....First of all well done on your weight loss journey....brilliant...
And thank you for the advice and input, I will be looking at your threads to get some helpful tips.....The way you are talking you know were I'm coming from. Being at large man, you can easy damage your body and joints doing high impact exercise...Thanks many many thanks 👍👍👍2 -
whitevanman5 wrote: »Here are my first and second year weight loss anniversary threads. They may contain some helpful information for you.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10731694/after-a-year-over-150lbs-lost-learned-a-few-things/p1
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10791606/2-years-over-200-pounds-lost-lessons-learned-and-life-changed
I would recommend exercise that is very low impact. Walking might be fine as long as you stay off hills and stairs or wear knee support.
I would concentrate more on increasing your daily movement. A good idea might be to get a fitness tracker and then just try to add more steps. Look at starting to restructure your life in a less efficient manner. One of my favorite easy to do things was to get a smaller cup for coffee or liquid. This simple act forced me to get up a little more often but the moment I started thinking this way and embracing it, it started a chain of new thoughts and ideas.
It should not be long for you to lose your first 50 pounds but even the first 25 will start to make things easier. Don't jump too far ahead of where you need to be with the exercise. If you elect to do a punishing amount now it will potentially hurt you more than it helps you. Remember to eat for weight loss and exercise for fitness. When I was full weight and due to the weird way my fat accumulated on my body I was nearly disabled. I lost my first 80 pounds with no formal exercise. With so much weight gone now I am up at 4:30am everyday and I put in about 2 hours of exercise. If I had tried that too early I would have probably already needed knee replacements.
WoW....First of all well done on your weight loss journey....brilliant...
And thank you for the advice and input, I will be looking at your threads to get some helpful tips.....The way you are talking you know were I'm coming from. Being at large man, you can easy damage your body and joints doing high impact exercise...Thanks many many thanks 👍👍👍
A lot of my posts are concentrated in the MFP Larger Losers group. It is for people who are starting or originally started with 75 or more pounds to lose. It is also very specifically for people who wish to lose their weight in a sensible and sustainable fashion. Here is the link if you want to join:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/133315-larger-losers
LL is not about methodology because you can lose weight with anything that creates a deficit. It is really more about changing how we mentally approach weight loss. Weight loss is needful but so is losing the habits and mindset of the person who gained it. If you don't then you may only be taking a vacation from your weight instead of losing it and keeping it off for forever.4 -
Protect joints right now.
Join LL
Lose sensibly and with a view of setting up the future; with a sense of wonderment and exploration, not hate, distaste, and self punishment!3 -
Wayne, You got some great advice above. I am a woman in the middle of my weight loss. I was over 400 pounds and currently have lost over 210 so far. I did not incorporate any exercise for the first 3 months. I couldn't really walk at all without getting breathless. When I did add in exercise, I started with a few strength training exercises with light dumbbells. It was something I could do without hurting myself or getting too out of breath. Once I lost enough weight, I started using an old recumbent exercise bike (that would hold my weight at the time). I lasted only 4 minutes my first time. (As you can see, I was in really bad shape!) Eventually I added in some walk at home videos by Leslie Sansone. I also started doing chair yoga. I read about chair yoga on a forum here. It sounded perfect for me since I couldn't get down on the floor. It surprised me but I really enjoy it. When I was going through a period of depression, it was the one exercise option I was able to keep doing. Now my usual weekly exercise routine includes the exercise bike/outdoor biking 5 times a week, the walking videos/outside walking or hiking 5 times a week, chair yoga 4 times a week, and strength training 2 times a week (plus occasionally some extra biking or hiking just for the fun of it!). When I first started, I never dreamed I could do some of the things I'm doing now.
Anyway, I just wanted to offer a couple options besides walking that might work for you as you start to add exercise to your routine. Good luck!7
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