20 years old and sick of being over 250lbs!!!
kirstw91
Posts: 4
I'm Kirsty from Bury and I recently went to the doctor for a check up and was told i have a 'horrendous body mass index'. Which scared the life out of me!!!
I want to finally be healthy i'm currently 265lbs and really need help!!! I'm a snacker and love anything from chocolate to crisps. Love takeaways and i'm a big binge drinking too!
How do you guys find the motivation to eat healthily? And can anyone suggest healthy snacks that actually fill you up????
Lots of love, Kirst xo
I want to finally be healthy i'm currently 265lbs and really need help!!! I'm a snacker and love anything from chocolate to crisps. Love takeaways and i'm a big binge drinking too!
How do you guys find the motivation to eat healthily? And can anyone suggest healthy snacks that actually fill you up????
Lots of love, Kirst xo
0
Replies
-
Hi Kirsty, here are a couple of tips
1. Keep track of the food you eat. Sounds easy but most people underestimate their calories by 50%.
2. Don't skip meals. The reason for this is simple, when you skip a meal you are hungrier longer. This will trigger something in your brain that will draw you to high calorie foods (cravings). If you can eat at regular intervals, that will help.
3. Low fat dairy that is high in calcium actually traps fat and keeps it from absorbing into your system. In other words you poop it out.
4. Protein will keep you full longer and it has the added benefit of retaining or gaining some muscle.
5. Exercise has the added benefit of after-burn. When you exercise you deplete your fat stores, not many but enough that in the next 22 hours they will have to be replenished and thats where the weight loss comes in.
6. Any exercise is good for you. Take the stairs, park away from the building, walk to the corner grocery store, take a bike ride. Everything doesn't have to be an all out exercise attack. Anything you can do will help.
GOOD LUCK0 -
Hi Kirsty welcome to MFP.
Teddy Bear gave lots of good advice.
If you really want to lose weight (and you should really want to) you have to go all in. Read all about diet and exercise, find healthy foods that you like, stop all the take away and the sugary & high calorie snacks, get up, get out and exercise and keep at it.
It's not just a diet, it's an entire lifestyle change, and guess what? It's a total blast! Join in, give it your all and reap the benefits. It's all good and it's all for the good.
Good luck!0 -
First of all I have to tell you I absolutely LOVE your hair. Those are all great tips ^^^ take it one day at a time. If you can start working in some exercise that always seems to be the best motivation for me to eat well. (If you spend an hour working out you really don't want to blow it on fast food!) Some good snacks to fill you up: rice cakes, tuna on crackers, turkey, veggies, fruit smoothie (low fat yogurt or milk) laughing cow cheese is really good too. And as far as the alcohol goes, the higher proof a drink is, the more calories. 1oz can be anywhere from 64-73 cal in whiskey, vodka, rum, etc. Drink beer or wine and cut back as best as you can.0
-
Make sure you have planned meals and snacks... To many calories in a quick grab type thing... I find that if I wait to long to eat a meal or snack, I tend to eat to much, to fast and to wrong!!10
-
Welcome! For snacks I like string cheese sticks, celery with tuna salad (a little mayo, spicy mustard, chopped dill pickle -- not sweet, sometimes some scallions or pepperoncini peppers, dried dill and fresh ground black pepper) or with 2tbsp almond butter. Even just some rolled up deli sliced turkey with some cheddar or spicy jack cheese is awesome. A small palmfull of nuts gives crunch that crisps would have (not quite the same, but it works in a pinch) and nuts have a good amount of filling protein0
-
Hey Krist! Just started a week ago (@265lbs). I am not much of a snacker (which is not necessarily a good thing). However, with my new plan I am trying to do the eat all day thing. For snacks (so far), I have found Skinny Cow products, The Real Deal Veggie Chips (you can eat like 100 pieces for only 120 calories), lots of fruits and veggies, Hummus and crackers instead of chips and dip, and homemade smoothies with fruit, GREEK yogurt (not yoplait), a little honey, a little milk and ice (no ice-cream). As far as drinking, i think wine, especially red, is a good alternative. Good Luck!!!0
-
I am 33 and have been yoyo dieting for the last 10 years. I'm 5'2" and am 155 lbs. I have recommitted myself AGAIN to getting healthy, which for someone my size is about 130 lbs. When I have been successful with weight loss, it's always because I have planned my meals and smacks ahead of time. If I wait until I'm hungry I will almost always make a poor choice. So...my advice is to plan ahead at least one day at a time. Good luck! You can do it!0
-
I know its been stated numerous times already, but protein.
When I was 250 lbs, I struggled with the hunger. OMG did I struggle. I am one (yes even now still) that gets this euphoric sensation when I am stuffed, and its amazing. I don't stuff myself anymore, but have learned to curb this sensation with protein. The thing I hated about dieting was the always starving feeling. I couldn't handle it, it broke my diet millions of times.
I read a book called the fast food diet and though the diet itself was too demanding and not for me, it had some great common sense advice.
Protein= Feeling full. I usually try to make sure I get at least 14 grams of protein when I eat a meal, and when I snack, I make sure not to snack on anything less than 4grams of protein. This has been the staple of my weight loss.0 -
The snack should NOT fill you up, just satisfy the craving. Your food should fill you up. I can't help on the snack part cause I really do not eat them. If I need something to snack on I eat an apple or a grapefruit. No chips, no candybars, no ice cream, but then again I don't crave them anymore. If I do want one I count it in my calorie goals for the day and enjoy it. Good luck.0
-
I agree re protein. You say you snack on chocolates and crisps, and if you read up on what this does to your body you are staggering between insulin highs and lows. When you eat concentrated sugar it breaks down and hits your bloodstream too quickly. Your body leaps into action with insulin to bring the balance down again, but this has the effect of taking too much sugar out of your bloodstream so pretty soon your tired and hungry again - and what do you reach for? You need to break that cycle.
I think it's so important to kick the sugar habit I'd be watching the content of my food rather than the calories in the beginning. I'd steer clear of almost all carbohydrates except leaves, stalks and fruits for a couple of weeks. I'd even advocate doing the first stage of Atkins to retrain yourself - but you must get the carb ration from as wide a range of veg as possible. I used Atkins successfully but I'd never stay on any kind of restrictive diet - it's not realistic and it's not interesting.
The other really important thing is to monitor everything you eat. You can be surprised in either direction. A week after I kicked off my current project to drop some pounds, I had folks coming for Sunday lunch. I knew it was going to be a tough one but decided it would be a day out and I'd get back to the regime next day. I monitored what I ate. I'd had the usual 250 calorie breakfast and my lunch was roast beef, yorkshire pud, potatoes and green veg Pudding was rhubarb crumble and custard and it was all washed down with a big glass of wine. My guests left early evening and I decided to punish myself by entering in the contents of my meal. Amazingly, I was still around 100 calories inside the upper end of my daily allowance. It made me realise I wasn't that hungry and I just munched an apple for supper. If I hadn't done the count up I would probably have eaten another meal even though I didn't need it.
And the last thing - exercise. If you don't want to do anything else just walk. It's summer, it's a relaxing thing to do, it burns calories and it keeps you away from the biscuit tin. Good luck0 -
Thanks so much guys great tips. I've been struggling abit to keep off the snacks but i think it's just habit of going straight to the fridge when i get home from work!! In time i can change the way i think. And everytime i'm hungry i try and head to the fruit bowl!!
Great tips on the protein i will deffinatly take that into account!!
But as for the drinking... I think that's my biggest downfall. I have a busy lifestyle and i'm very sociable.. Most of my friends invite me clubbing/ out for meals etc. So it's learning to drink more moderately and pick sensible foods to eat when i'm out and about!! Opting for mash instead of chips is so hard for me!! Hahah
Thanks again everyone for welcoming me. Here's to a new chapter in my life. Xoxo0 -
I'm Kirsty from Bury and I recently went to the doctor for a check up and was told i have a 'horrendous body mass index'. Which scared the life out of me!!!
I want to finally be healthy i'm currently 265lbs and really need help!!! I'm a snacker and love anything from chocolate to crisps. Love takeaways and i'm a big binge drinking too!
How do you guys find the motivation to eat healthily? And can anyone suggest healthy snacks that actually fill you up????
Lots of love, Kirst xo
I wish I had come to that realization when I was 20 rather than 30, which is well over ten years ago and I'm still not there. All those wasted years. Sigh....
Good for you. The only way to get started is to start, and the best time is now. Get your proteins, carbs, and fat in balance, then bring your calories down and start some workouts (and make sure you are fueling those workouts, because the most depressing thing I can relate after trying to reach "normal weight" for the first time in my adult life is that losing weight too quickly leads to plateaus and "giving up").0 -
hey, you sound a bit like me! i'm 19, and started at 249. i promised myself i'd never break 250! i'm only 10lbs down, so i'll add you and we can do this together if you like? i avoid the doctors at all costs because i know he will tell me i'm fat, something i know myself without him shoving it down my throat.
like everyone else has said, keep track of your food. i tend to binge in the evenings and i can't seem to stop it, lol.
anyway i've added you! x0 -
Thanks so much guys great tips. I've been struggling abit to keep off the snacks but i think it's just habit of going straight to the fridge when i get home from work!! In time i can change the way i think. And everytime i'm hungry i try and head to the fruit bowl!!
Great tips on the protein i will deffinatly take that into account!!
But as for the drinking... I think that's my biggest downfall. I have a busy lifestyle and i'm very sociable.. Most of my friends invite me clubbing/ out for meals etc. So it's learning to drink more moderately and pick sensible foods to eat when i'm out and about!! Opting for mash instead of chips is so hard for me!! Hahah
Thanks again everyone for welcoming me. Here's to a new chapter in my life. Xoxo
I found a good way to cut back on the drinking - not perfect but it helps. When you are out clubbing or whatever, have your drink - but make the next drink a tall glass of water, club soda or something like that - then have another drink. It slows down your drinking as well as keeps you hydrated. It does help0 -
Personally, it's not a matter of motivation, it's a matter of "survival." I can either eat what I want when I want and let it kill me with metabolic disease (high blood pressure, diabetes, etc) OR I can make better choices, be more awesome, and live a better life. When you put it in a matter of a life or death perspective, you don't really need motivation anymore.0
-
my motivation was a number of things. I started feeling the downside of being unhealthy with having a minnie stroke when i was 42..that wasnt enough though because i continued on with my wonderfully unhealthy lifestyle.. turning 50 was a major turning point in my life. when you are 50 you start thinking you dont have much time to live. on top of that i work as a nurse in a nursing home and am taking care of folks my age more often and it scares me that may be me some day. im a new grandmother of two little ones too. so when i turned 50 i asked myself what i wanted to do with the rest of my life.. the answer was to live life to the fullest. 80lbs down so far . i have 40 more to go. my life is better now than it ever was .
dont let all them years slip away. at 20 you have a head start from where i was. what it all boils down to is ..its all your choice how you want to live your life. as a nurse you really are a time bomb ticking down the road of medical problems when you are overweight and eating wrong. that should be motivation enough right there but its something you have to want and you have to be the one to make those choices. its a whole new lifestyle. i would suggest going to a gym and hanging out with people who live healthy and are active. you are who you hang around with so hang with those who have common goals as yourself. they will be your biggest support and motivators too!!0 -
Hello and welcome. My motivation was the scale. I never knew how big I was. I was in denial big time and finally I hopped on and I was like in shock. I think you have done a great thing by taking the "first step" which is admitting you have an issue. I think the easiest way to start would be to look at how you currently eat and gradually start cutting back. I think that if you jump in and try to cut way back in the beginning then you might be setting yourself up for failure. Just take it slow and be patient.0
-
You can do it! The biggest advice that has worked for me is logging things before I eat them, that way I can see what the damage is before I eat it and then make a decision if I really want it or not. I would recommend setting you goal at 1 pound a week and use portion control for the things you like rather than cutting them out completely (I know if I try to do that then I just want it more!). Actually count out the chips and cookies and measure your servings. Good luck!0
-
Thanks so much guys great tips. I've been struggling abit to keep off the snacks but i think it's just habit of going straight to the fridge when i get home from work!! In time i can change the way i think. And everytime i'm hungry i try and head to the fruit bowl!!
Great tips on the protein i will deffinatly take that into account!!
But as for the drinking... I think that's my biggest downfall. I have a busy lifestyle and i'm very sociable.. Most of my friends invite me clubbing/ out for meals etc. So it's learning to drink more moderately and pick sensible foods to eat when i'm out and about!! Opting for mash instead of chips is so hard for me!! Hahah
Thanks again everyone for welcoming me. Here's to a new chapter in my life. Xoxo
I love Food, PERIOD! So, snacking is a big thing for me too. But, I have found that Flavored Sugar-Free gum helps and, also, believe it or not, drinking plenty of water throughout the day. It isnt jsut about getting your hydration but, it actually helps to keep me full. I have a sugar issue (Hypoglycemic) so, i have to eat more then jsut meals a day but, I have learned to space them out and eat the better snacks. I like Special K Bars, fruits and veggies, and even those 100 Calorie snack packs arent too bad, especially if you get a sweet tooth like me!
GOOD LUCK and welcome to the Journey known as GETTING HEALTHY!! I agree that it has to be a lifestyle change in order for it to work and keep working!0 -
Do you have Clif Bars in your part of the world? Good chocolate flavors and not the artificial taste.... have you tried protein shakes in the blender? I like the Chocolate powder, mixed with bananas or strawberries.
:flowerforyou:0 -
Another great tip that I'm just starting to realize: weight loss also happens in the grocery store, meaning don't even buy things that you're not supposed to eat. When I'm home, I only buy healthy options for myself, so when I go to grab something out of the fridge, I'm not tempted by anything and I know I'm making smart decisions. When I go to visit family, on the other hand, the fridge and cabinets are always filled with a whole bunch of sugary crap -- I've noticed that I don't eat as well as I should when I visit family. So lesson: if you shouldn't eat it, don't buy it. You'll save yourself the trouble later on, trust me.0
-
I found a good way to cut back on the drinking - not perfect but it helps. When you are out clubbing or whatever, have your drink - but make the next drink a tall glass of water, club soda or something like that - then have another drink. It slows down your drinking as well as keeps you hydrated. It does help
^^^^ Second this! I always order a beer or drink or whatever with a large glass of water. I try to make sure when the drink is gone, so is the water, by simply alternating between the two. It becomes a natural thing very quickly. Sip of wine, nibble of food, guzzle of water, sip of wine.
A lot of bar food is intentionally salty to make you thirsty. When you're THIRSTY, drink deeply of the water. When you want to enjoy your beer or wine, have a modest sip and savor the flavor and mouth-feel of it. Hold it in your mouth for a few seconds and let the flavor sink in.
One beer lasts me as long and is just as enjoyable as three used to be.0 -
I found that the Liquid Water Enhancer (Mio) really satisfies a craving for food. I find when I am craving something I will drink the flavored water instead. Zero calories and water does fill you up if you are truly not really hungry. Because of the sweet taste it tastes as if you are consuming a calorie laden drink. My only other suggestion is raw veggies as most of the crunchy ones are low in calories. I hope this helps.0
-
It's tough when you're trying to be social but you don't have to ruin your social life by trying to eat well. Also, getting in 30-60 minutes of exercise will really help with this because you'll be burning off some of those extra calories.
First thing is to remember than when you get a plate of food at a restaurant, they usually give you enough for two people. Ask a friend or two if they'd like to split it with you, or ask for a take-away box so you can split it in two right from the start. This will help keep your portions reasonable. Stick with choices like grilled meats and choose veggie sides but ask for them without sauce. Skip the potatoes altogether if you think mashed won't be as satisfying as chips. And don't be fooled by salads - there's usually hidden things in there like WAY too much dressing, croutons, cheese, etc. Get light dressing and get it on the side, just don't pour it all over because they usually give you twice as much on the side as you would've gotten mixed in. And if you're getting something like a taco salad, ask for it without the shell and no cheese - keep the quac though, it's good for you.
As for drinking, I like the suggestion already given about having every other glass be water or club soda. You can also lighten up your drinking by skipping the cocktails as many have sour mix or fruit juices that put the calories through the roof! Instead order something like a rum and diet cola. If you like beer, stick with the light/low cal ones. If you like wine, ask for spritzes - you get a full glass but less calories.
ETA - nothing wrong with liking your sweets but, as with the meals, keep them at normal portions. It's ok to have a square or two of chocolate but not the whole pound. Trust me, I know this is the tough part, I'm a sweet eater too, especially chocolate! There are some pretty good substitutes out there too - low cal snack bars, protein bars, etc.0 -
You are YOUNG therefore have a leg up on us older people. No excuses!
I am nearly 58 and have lost 54 pounds since June 23, 2011 -- over 20 percent of my body fat. If I can do it, you can, too!
Crucial: Be honest about logging your food.
Exercise: Start slow, even if it's a 10-minute walk, do it every day, adding 5 minutes every week. Your joints will appreciate the gradual increase in physical activity. Important: Do not over exert yourself as this may result in premature aches, causing you to stay away from further exercise. (I see this all the time at the gym: young overweight woman who start jogging way too soon who develop shin splints.)
About socializing: Monitor yourself very closely. The environment might prove to be toxic: lowered inhibitions may result in poor choices (more drinking / snacking). Hopefully, your social circle will be supportive.
Remember: You alone control the choices.
Best wishes :flowerforyou:0 -
Like the exercise tip Madga!0
-
These are a bunch of great tips!0
-
Hey! When I first started on my weight loss adventure I was 18 weighing 228 lbs(5'7"). I am now 24 years old and 174lbs. My advice is this:
1. If a friend confesses they feel insecure invite them to join you!
A friend invited me to go to weight watchers with her, and I was amazed with how many people came out of the woodwork wanting to join me. I was still in High School and had my mom, 3 friends, one of their sisters, and one of their moms going by the time I graduated High School. It was the support that really helped me. I lost 40 pounds by the time I started college.
2. Don't be afraid to tell people you are dieting.
I wanted to act like I was comfortable in my own body and not vain so I was afraid at first, but losing weight is about more than that. Its about being healthy, and good people respect and support that. When I let people know what I was doing, they stopped pressuring me to try their cookies and started accommodating my requests to go to restaurants with healthy options.
3. Snack on veggies (and some fruit)
Yes protein fills you up but protein is also higher in calories and many high protein foods are high fat foods. If you eat when your bored even if you aren't hungry (like I do) thats a problem. Eat veggies! find a spice that you like to make them more interesting! I love to snack on fruit too, but fruit is high in sugar, so beware of overeating it.
4. Cut calories wherever you can by reading labels
READ labels carefully. That means notice the details like what a serving is, not just the calories. labels can trick you sometimes
5. If it tempts you don't bring it around.
I love peanut butter. I love it SO much I will eat an entire jar in 2 days easily. (and not a little jar). In fact I once ate all my boyfriends peanut butter while he was at work and just as I was preparing to stash the evidence and buy him a new container (I was even going to scoop out the correct amount to make it look like I hadn't touched it) he came home. He no longer buys peanut butter because he knows I can't deal with it.
6. If you must give into a craving, buy a small amount
I don't buy anything bad for me in a quantity with more calories than I am willing to eat in 1 sitting. Because I WILL eat it in one sitting...
As for drinking and going out
7. Plan ahead.
look up nutrition information for drinks and food before you go out. Decide what you can have, be honest with yourself about how many servings you are given(if you order a single and it looks like a double glass, the bar tender was probably being generous, its still double the calories), and stick to it!
8. Ask for a to go box or a second plate in the beginning and put what you shouldn't eat on it before you even start the meal
if you are like me and will clean a plate this is really helpful, keeps me from thinking I've barely made a dent in the food when really I've eaten most of what I should eat in a day. Also saves money by making it into 2 meals!
Hope these are helpful!
Anyone is welcome to be my friend, I'd like some support while I try to work off the last 30lbs!
-Emily0 -
OH! Also when you go out clubbing, make a point to dance a little more and with a little more energy! Then you are at least burning off some of those drinks.
Exercise is great, especially a little resistance (weight) training. Resistance training increases your metabolism in the long run!
Finally (then I'll be done rambling): Remember that to be successful you have to view this as a lifestyle change. Thus, its ok to give in to a piece of chocolate or your favorite mixed drink (occasionally). If you go cold turkey on everything you will probably hate this, and it will not last. Make sacrifices, but ones you can live with.
Ok think that's all this time,
Over and out!
-Emily0 -
Read the book Dr. Dukan it is more of a way of eating than a diet, and might interest you because you still get to eat a lot of great foods, dairy, lean meat, oat bran (most diets take away all carbs this one allows oat bran) The book is in all libraries and book stores...it also only requires that you take a 35 minute walk everyday...who can't do that! Make time for yourself and remember you are the only one that can make any change happen...you are stronger than you think! Best wishes and tons of success!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions