I’d love/need before and after pictures of around 150 pound loss.
charlene77
Posts: 250 Member
I could really use the motivation! My goal is a 150 pound loss. I could probably lose more, but will be thrilled to hit 150 pound loss. I’m super conscious about loose skin, but I guess being able to hike, play sports, and buy clothes anywhere again will be worth it!
Please share your before and afters of anywhere around 150 pound loss A little testimony is so welcome!
Please share your before and afters of anywhere around 150 pound loss A little testimony is so welcome!
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Replies
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charlene77 wrote: »I could really use the motivation! My goal is a 150 pound loss. I could probably lose more, but will be thrilled to hit 150 pound loss. I’m super conscious about loose skin, but I guess being able to hike, play sports, and buy clothes anywhere again will be worth it!
Please share your before and afters of anywhere around 150 pound loss A little testimony is so welcome!
As for loose skin, yes, loose skin is most definitely a factor with this type of weight loss, and I have a panniculus to show for it but there is also loose skin just about everywhere. It doesn't bother me. It is just part of who I am and the path I have followed. It is something I am not afraid of, not ashamed of and not proud of. It is simply part of the reality of my existence, nothing more, nothing less.
Weight loss is both possible and simple for absolutely everyone. It is just not easy, especially in the beginning, when one is still attached to old ideas, old habits and - alas - weight loss mythology that surrounds us everywhere.
The only thing that matters, is an energy deficit. There are numerous dietary methods to achieve that, but they all have the same goal, and they are all about as effective. If they do not create an energy deficit, they simply don't work. All diets that create an energy deficit are effective. Just pick a method that is doable for you and stick with it. If you can't stick with it, it is useless for you. If you can stick with it, it will be great. It is essentially the hardest part of the journey: finding something you can live with long term.
Keep in mind that weight loss, especially significant weight loss, is essentially a game of patience. The fatter one is, the easier it is to lose weight. The skinnier one becomes, the harder it is to lose weight. Don't be in a hurry. Chances are you will lose the battle, because you will be intolerably hungry and give up.
You made a first step, don't give up, and you will reach your goal. Just do it.16 -
before
around 177kg
during
-40kg
near goal
-70kg
For reference, in the last picture, i'm 6'1", 48" chest, and could just about get into 38" waist Levi 501's - think small rugby player rather than skinny cyclist build...
at that point my Doctor who'd been with me all the way in the process said "never mind about the bodywork now Mark, go work on the Motor" so I spent the next couple of years getting from being shattered after a hour on the pushbike and riding less than 13 miles, to being able to ride over 100 miles in the morning/early afternoon, and still walk the 4 mile round trip to my favourite pub for my Sunday Lunch... Oh, and if I decided to go ride faster, then I'd go out and ride for a little bit less than a hour and do a 25mile Time Trial - got my pb down to 58:45 at the age of 54...
As to lose skin - well - i'd be lying i'd be lying if I said there wasn't some around my waist etc, and I had a belting pair of bingo wings until I hit the weights and got some muscle tone back into my arms - but this was around the age of 50 - if i'd have been younger, I'd have probably rebounded better.
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I'm 65 years old and it took me ~4 years to lose 160 lbs. It was done with aggressive low carb eating and lots of gym time. I religiously followed the Adkins book and it worked for me, but if there's one thing I've learned, it's that what works is different for everybody. I weighed 355 pounds at my heaviest and now weigh 195 +/-. I'm 6' and I've gone from pants with a 54" waist to a 32" waist.
To be honest, it was a journey of two steps forward and one step back. It's all about the eating: Period. That being said, the gym time was the real motivation that kept me on track. I became a gym rat to keep me busy during down times when I'd normally reach for (lots of) food. I had high blood pressure and was on two different medications for that, I was pre-diabetic and checking my blood sugars 3x/day, and I was on medication because my cholesterol was through the roof: classic metabolic syndrome. All of that no longer exists.
No one can fully understand how hard it is to lose weight and keep it off. I participate in the National Weight Loss Registry to support research on this issue. To my brothers and sisters who are out there fighting this fight: You don't know me, but I'm there cheering for you every day that you give it your best shot. Some days are better than others, but you've got this!35 -
brodozer2016 wrote: »
I'm 65 years old and it took me ~4 years to lose 160 lbs. It was done with aggressive low carb eating and lots of gym time. I religiously followed the Adkins book and it worked for me, but if there's one thing I've learned, it's that what works is different for everybody. I weighed 355 pounds at my heaviest and now weigh 195 +/-. I'm 6' and I've gone from pants with a 54" waist to a 32" waist.
To be honest, it was a journey of two steps forward and one step back. It's all about the eating: Period. That being said, the gym time was the real motivation that kept me on track. I became a gym rat to keep me busy during down times when I'd normally reach for (lots of) food. I had high blood pressure and was on two different medications for that, I was pre-diabetic and checking my blood sugars 3x/day, and I was on medication because my cholesterol was through the roof: classic metabolic syndrome. All of that no longer exists.
No one can fully understand how hard it is to lose weight and keep it off. I participate in the National Weight Loss Registry to support research on this issue. To my brothers and sisters who are out there fighting this fight: You don't know me, but I'm there cheering for you every day that you give it your best shot. Some days are better than others, but you've got this!
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When I set out to lose weight, I didn't set a 'goal'. I just knew that I had to weigh less than I did.
2 years and 145lbs later - here I am. Loose skin - oh yeah, but it doesn't matter to me. My 'womanly features' have literally disappeared - that makes me sad, but in the long run - being healthy, feeling good - and now doing whatever I can, at any cost, to keep it off - that's the goal. This was all done without exercise - food alone (eating 6x a day, low carb, low sugar, lean meat). Prior to my weight loss I was exercising 5x a day and quite literally to injury thinking if I just went harder, I'd lose the weight. News flash... you can't outrun your fork! The part I wasn't prepared for is transfer addiction (now its shopping), and people telling me I am 'too skinny' now (currently 5FT 4IN and 116LBS)... but it's my life, my journey and unless they want to quite literally be ME, they can mind their own business.
This year's goal is to lean up - work on the loose skin the best I can and in 2024, have skin removal, implants and BBL.
I always remind people the key is to not beat yourself up over 1 meal, or 1 day. Indulge if you feel so inclined but remember a few things:
1. Some days you need to take it hour by hour - just make it to the next hour, and the next hour. It was all I could do sometimes was remind myself it was just another 30 minutes, and I would eat again, that I wasn't going to starve, and it wasn't necessary for me to stuff my face right this very second.
2. When overindulging, its 1 meal/snack/day - not meals/snacks/days, so do it and jump right back in the next meal/day. Do not linger or wallow in that feeling of doing yourself with just 1 'off' meal.
3.You CAN eat whatever you want, just because you are 'dieting' doesn't mean you can't, BUT, when you do have that one bad meal, take note of how your body feels - because I know the discomfort I feel after an overindulgent day and these days, I'd rather not spend a whole day feeling like trash, when I can eat well and spend the whole day feeling well.
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Amanda_P_Apperson wrote: »When I set out to lose weight, I didn't set a 'goal'. I just knew that I had to weigh less than I did.1. Some days you need to take it hour by hour - just make it to the next hour, and the next hour. It was all I could do sometimes was remind myself it was just another 30 minutes, and I would eat again, that I wasn't going to starve, and it wasn't necessary for me to stuff my face right this very second.
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Amanda...not sure what womanly features you feel you lost, but you look great! My hats off to you!1
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dianacrutchfield1952 wrote: »Amanda...not sure what womanly features you feel you lost, but you look great! My hats off to you!
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BartBVanBockstaele wrote: »brodozer2016 wrote: »
I'm 65 years old and it took me ~4 years to lose 160 lbs. It was done with aggressive low carb eating and lots of gym time. I religiously followed the Adkins book and it worked for me, but if there's one thing I've learned, it's that what works is different for everybody. I weighed 355 pounds at my heaviest and now weigh 195 +/-. I'm 6' and I've gone from pants with a 54" waist to a 32" waist.
To be honest, it was a journey of two steps forward and one step back. It's all about the eating: Period. That being said, the gym time was the real motivation that kept me on track. I became a gym rat to keep me busy during down times when I'd normally reach for (lots of) food. I had high blood pressure and was on two different medications for that, I was pre-diabetic and checking my blood sugars 3x/day, and I was on medication because my cholesterol was through the roof: classic metabolic syndrome. All of that no longer exists.
No one can fully understand how hard it is to lose weight and keep it off. I participate in the National Weight Loss Registry to support research on this issue. To my brothers and sisters who are out there fighting this fight: You don't know me, but I'm there cheering for you every day that you give it your best shot. Some days are better than others, but you've got this!
That is an outstanding transformation. Simply amazing and good for you. I am in about the exact same boat. If I got anywhere close to what you accomplished it would be amazing.2 -
Here I am 4 years ago on 1/16/19
Over the holiday break looking like Mr. Rogers.
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