Still hungry?....
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I am currently around 31-33% body fat. I am aiming for around 20-22%. And accounting for around 10 lbs of added muscle in the future which would put me around 250ish. Last weigh in was 300.2 lbs. going to be a long journey but definitely think I will get there through determination and hard work. Trying to get the wheels rolling!1
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wunderkindking wrote: »Honestly reading this I think the biggest problem for ME would be that even I would be kind of hungry on this. It's (more than) enough calories for me but it's still a protein shake, a sandwich, a pot pie, and a beef stick.
Heck yes, I could put that down and wind up hungry.
The fruit is blended, the vegetables are basically garnishes.
Replace the protein shake with a bowl of protein oatmeal (with water or unsweetened almond milk - or use regular oatmeal and throw your protein powder into them) and stick the banana and strawberries on top of it. Turn the turkey sandwich into a giant salad and sub the mustard and mayo for dressing of your choice. Eat some chicken and vegetables with those slices of bread you didn't eat at lunch - or save them for a snack to eat with your beef stick (eat as toast, add some low sugar jam). Or, you know, turn that snack into those two slices of bread you didn't eat with your sandwich (because it's now a salad) and make a new sandwich for later in the day.
You're just really low on volume and fiber.
Then you'd be at the same calories but eating about 3X the VOLUME of food.
Yep, this.
For the calories of a Costco pot pie you could eat real food - substantial slices of pork loin or a couple of pieces of chicken or a big slab of salmon even a small lean steak with a ton of roasted vegetables and a salad with dressing and a piece of chocolate for dessert. 300 calories for two slices of bread, do you really like your bread that much? Or would 120 calories for 2 slices of a different bread do just as well? Are you loving the milk enough to drink two cups of it for breakfast, or would solid food suit you better?
If you truly love and crave something, eat it. But I get the feeling this is what the OP thinks diet food is “supposed” to look like, when in fact it’s not calorie efficient at all. Eating like this would lead me to feeling deprived.4 -
Have been monitoring my calories for about three weeks now, I’m going to the gym for about two weeks.0
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tacolover10231989 wrote: »Have been monitoring my calories for about three weeks now, I’m going to the gym for about two weeks.
He could literally eat 6 slices of low calorie bread for 2 of his slices. Why are you eating such low volume high calorie foods? 750 calories could literally be like 5 bowls of high volume low calorie foods!
Also he didn't mention a pbj for breakfast before.
I used to eat that way too. Once you find the way of low calorie high volume it changes your world forever!
My regular bread is 130 calories for 2 slices. When I bother to remember to buy the low cal stuff it's 70 calories per 2 (Healthy Life).
It's definitely a process - finding new foods you like. Realizing your old choices are stupid high calorie and they're just not that important to you and what you already like that is surprisingly low calorie. I had an advantage in already liking a lot of low calorie food but doing stuff like eating 300 calories of bread, slapping regular mayo and cheese I was apathetic about onto a sandwich because that's just how you did it was also very much a thing.
I can now make a substantial sandwich I like as much by using no-fat mayo or mustard, toasted 'diet' bread, a good 4-5 ounces of deli meat, lettuce and tomato for 300ish calories.
...which is about on par with that meat stick (both protein and cals) but is a fairly good sized sandwich.
And honestly looking back at what was eaten over his day, seriously. One meal and a snack for me. Pot pie and a diet coke = meal. Portein shake and a sandwich = snack, maybe meal.
(Oh, OP, another suggested sub: PBfit or other powdered PB will save you a TON of calories on that breakfast shake)2 -
Theoldguy1 wrote: »Without further information, 2 pounds a week is fine for someone at 300 pounds.
You're absolutely right.... without further information.
Such as that they're struggling because they're here posting that they're hungry.
So is 2lbs a week good for them if it leads them to quiting?
What if aiming for 2lbs a week is leading them to 3 or 4lbs a week (which is entirely possible for a 300lb person who proves more active than they think they are while truly eating 2250), and the 3 or 4 lbs a week, in turn, is making things hard enough that they are ready to give up?
Weight management ends when you give up on managing your weight. If you remain willing to intervene.... you're still in the game.
I found MFP when I was ready to give up on weight loss at about 240lbs.
Because I was making things too hard. Thinking I had to eat as little as possible and "exercise" as hard as possible to lose weight.
Also, not understanding that weight management was about the balance of calories kept leading me to what I believed to be "healthy diet choices" that in reality were both sub optimal for me at the time, and much less healthy in reality than the type and quantities of food I now eat 7 years later.
I never would have gotten to maintaining a >120lb weight loss for several years had I not switched focus to developing sustainability instead of primarily concentrating on fastest possible weight loss.
Let me rephrase my response a bit. From a pure physiological standpoint a 2 pound a week weight loss for a 300 pound individual is very reasonable for the vast majority of people.
Psychological reasons not considered.0 -
Correction on my bread it is keto white bread that is 40 calories per slice so my calories have been off since logging the bread as “normal” white bread. This has cost me quite a few calories that I was not actually consuming. Live and learn! Again thanks for everyone’s input on my situation there was definitely some helpful stuff!1
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Bread has a weight in grams. Slices are an estimate, not a measurement
If you're doing keto, your (extra) losses during your first few weeks (and your corresponding regains when you go off plan and deliberately or inadvertently increase your carbs) are not indicative of fat level changes.
These fast changes are primarily driven by glycogen changes and should be handled with patience. Your base weight level changes will emerge with multiple measurements over periods of weeks
The goal, for me anyway, was to maximize my food intake "utility" while continuing to hit my caloric balance goals. "Utility" being an amalgam of satiation, as well as pleasure from taste and pleasure from knowing I've hit certain targets (e.g. protein, or fiber, or grams of veggies, or what have you)
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For me the key is high-quality protein for breakfast. And, again for me, that does not include milk or other dairy even though there is protein in those things. But something like two eggs, sometimes with a piece of breakfast sausage but not always (and usually always with some fruit) will hold me until lunch time. And then at lunch I'm just ordinary hungry, not "I-could-eat-the-whole-horse hungry". But for some reason oatmeal with milk does not do that, even though there's protein in milk, and I'm hungry mid-morning. Same with a breakfast shake (although I don't use anything like protein powder...my shakes are usually just yogurt, milk, some type of frozen fruit, and maybe a bit of peanut butter, and I have this for lunch not breakfast).
That's what works for me.
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