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Weight Loss

I started jogging recently, not so much for weight loss (though that would be a nice side effect) but to just be in better shape in general. Started about 3 weeks ago, and when I began I couldn't even do a quarter mile without breaking my pace. I'm up to 2/3 of a mile without slowing down at this point. Trying to hit a mile, then two, etc. Aiming for the 5K mark, though I'm not sure I'll actually ever run in one.
 
I struggle a lot with my own weight and am now starting to feel the damage of being too pot bellied for too long.

Last January, at my 1st Dan daughter's request, I got back into martial arts at the studio she's been in the last five years. I had been in a studio with her long ago, so I was able to pick up sort of where I left off. It's Taekwon-do and I usually get the the adult class 2-3 times per week. I haven't lost a lot of weight, but I've really tightened up. Clothes fit better, I FEEL better (when I'm not fighting off pain from sparring), and overall things are on the upswing. Sticking with it, adding better nutrition, and adding supplemental exercise continue to be the chanllenges.
 
I started to lose weight about 3 years ago when I was 47. I was around 20 stones, now I'm at 14. This year I upped the exercise (mainly walking TBH, but I walk around 10 miles per day), and tweaked the diet, and the weight's dropping off. Never felt better, believe me. Next up - maybe some gym time, not sure. I'm really enjoying the new me, and I'm not finished yet. :)
Update - now under 13 stone and off to the gym for my induction in half an hour. :)
 
Started fitness at age 34, 10 years later I'm 10Kg heavier but lost 10% of body fat, twice a week weightlifting/powerlifting and on the Saturday morning high intensity interval training, mainly hillsprints combined with pushing and pulling cars or tree trunks around or do farmer and suitcase walks with 20 kg jerrycans, lunge walks, pushups and pullups and that sort of stuff.

I am lucky, I have a group of likeminded maniacs as support, we push eachother, we support eachother and we also have whisky tastings and BBQ's besides the exercise, this helps, you stay motivated, among us there are two physiotherapists and a doctor so we always know how far we can go.
So at nearly 44 years old I am in good shape, far better than I was at 25 or 35.
 
I went on some antidepressants last year and went from 85 kgs (187 lbs) to 100 kgs (220 lbs) ina very short amount of time. Came off those pills because i didn't like the weight gain and managed to avoid going back on them or any other medication until recently. Over the last year and a bit I've stayed static on 100 kgs, haven't gained or lost weight despite pretty average eating habits and very little exercise. Very little exercise isn't entirely accurate, i went to a gym for a good 6 months and never saw results and got discouraged.

Anyway my diet was tied into how i felt about myself and a few weeks ago i went on some antidepressants that have really started working wonders. I'm starting to feel more engaged about my health so i'm currently working on small dietary changes. increasing vegetable intake, calorie counting and that sort of thing. My focus is to lose just 5kg initially then focus on 5kg increments until i'm at 80 - 85. I just need to figure out what I want to do in terms of exercise.
 
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Good on ya!

I've spent 5 years slowly reversing years of weight gain. I've shed over 90 lbs in that time. I figured it took 20 years to end up 100 pounds overweight. There's no reason to expect it gone in less than 5. What's funny is that it took a virus to kick start it. I lost like 15 lbs just being wretchedly sick for like 3 weeks, which dropped me down under 300 lbs. I took the cue to continue the trend

Stage 1: Stop gorging like I had a death wish & just drop some weight (No specific amount, no deadline) Just see if I can shake some, so I wasn't hurting so much... bone spurs, sciatica, aches, etc... In retrospect, I was in misery. Nothing motivates like pain. Over a year I shed 25 lbs, mostly by just cutting out soda & some fast food, plus I started taking walks & some swimming, even though it was mostly just low impact treading water on my backside. I dropped to 265, & felt WAY better. I plateaued after that, & ended up slacking off for a long time, but when I gained back a couple lbs, I got on it again

Stage 2: Start Eating Better & Get Into Shape. I gave up almost all fast food & sugary drinks, but there was still junk food about the house, if I'm being honest. I got really into the swimming. In warmer months I nature hiked, & in the colder ones I got a floor model punching bag. In 6-8 months, I shook another 35 lbs, & got down to 235. People noticed the difference. I felt really good but plateaued again & laid off a while.

Stage 3: Find a Balanced Diet, & Reach Target Weight. About 18 months ago, I'd put back maybe 5-10 lbs & knew I wasn't done. I made myself a deal. If I could reach my target weight of 200-210 lbs, I'd cough up the money for a cosmetic abdominal surgery to fix what excess skin couldn't be repaired naturally. That gave me a mission. Since then, I've been on a strict diet of unprocessed foods, tons of fruits & veggies, minimal fat free meats, brown rice etc... I cut out milk, ALL junk food, & cut way back on bread & eggs, & I drink only water, & tea (& an occasional cup of low fat, sugar free hot cocoa, as a treat to curb my sweet tooth, because I really miss ice cream & sweets)

I treat my diet like it's part of my job & treat my body like an investment. I bought weights for the house, & one of those personal step trampolines. Plus I still swim, hike, spar, & now that I'm done with my ab surgery, I have an average build & can do yoga type stretching & basic training type stuff at home too. I've reached my target weight, & I'm doing better than I have in 25 years.. I look totally different. I think the new goal will be athleticism.

Stage 4: I'm thinking of training for a marathon open water swim, that takes place in Lake George N.Y. every summer. That seems like a lot of work, but it might be just what I need to cement this new lifestyle.
 
I've gained extra 15lbs over the past five years (office job, age) and for the life of me I just cannot lose at least two. I tried MyfitnessPal and I was on 1500cal/day for a month without losing any weight. I tried biking to work and nothing, exercise for half an hour every day did not helped either and yes, I got a full health check and there is nothing wrong with me. Right now I really cannot figure out what else to do. Do you thin that maybe hiring some personal trainer/diet advisor might help? It may not be in how many calories I eat but what I eat?
 
I've gained extra 15lbs over the past five years (office job, age) and for the life of me I just cannot lose at least two. I tried MyfitnessPal and I was on 1500cal/day for a month without losing any weight. I tried biking to work and nothing, exercise for half an hour every day did not helped either and yes, I got a full health check and there is nothing wrong with me. Right now I really cannot figure out what else to do. Do you thin that maybe hiring some personal trainer/diet advisor might help? It may not be in how many calories I eat but what I eat?
Maybe changing what you eat can make a difference, as long as you don't get dietarily deficient, but it also might not be the solution. The only rule is what works for one person might not always work for someone else

Yours is the harder task, than losing much more weight for a person who's drastically overweight, like I was. It's a very fine adjustment you're looking to achieve, as opposed to my broad lifestyle change. If you can afford an advisor, I wouldn't discourage that. It may not be necessary though.

Even I still have maybe 10-15 lbs I'd be better off without, but I know those are the hardest to drop, because to lose weight requires adjusting your metabolism. Ordinarily, your body is opposed to that. IMHO, I'd think altering your diet for only a few weeks, or a month, might not be long enough to ensure your body the time to make that alteration. It's taken me 6 or more months of working at it to drop 20, & sometimes it doesn't peel off right away, until the body adjusts.

The thing about exercise is not necessarily how much you do, but how much impact you're having with it. When you rode that bike or exercised, were you upping your heart rate considerably, or busting a sweat? That kind of routine intensity, where you need to towel off, or shower, might be the only way to pull a small adjustment like 10-15 lbs, but again, people respond differently
 
I've heard of a lot of people having great success with a Ketogenic diet (spelling?)
I have had good success eating a ketogenic diet. I've lost 45 pounds over 10 months, not fast, but I'm happy with it. And my migraines are much, much better. And I have more energy and am sleeping better, too. I'm off all the meds I was taking for migraine and fibro and depression. To me, that's huge. I'd like to lose another about 45 pounds, but if I never lose another pound, feeling so much better is worth continuing to eat this way.

My exercise consists of housework and walking my dog. It's all good. :D
 
Good for you indeed! :techman:

I've been overweight my whole life, but I am kind of lucky because it doesn't show, meaning that the extra weight is nicely distributed around my body and no part sticks out. However, this does not mean that the extra weight is any better for my health, so I've been shedding it slowly but steadily for the past 7 years or so.

I think we all start aiming at *looking* better, but I realized over the years that the point is to *feel* better. You may feel better when you like what you see in the mirror more, but you also feel better when you can run for a while without gasping for air or when your back stops to ache etc. Healthy food and moderate exercise is indeed the key.

Find some form of exercise you enjoy. For me, it was pilates: I didn't loose weight, but I started to feel strong. Also, I started weights simply for the convenient hours in my gym, but it turned out marvelous: I actually gained some weight but my whole body got toned and I dropped some sizes in clothing.

My main point is: don't focus on the numbers on your scale, go out there, find what you enjoy doing concerning healthy food and exercise, and just do more of it!

Good luck with your progress! Have fun shedding away those pounds! :cool:
 
I've been overweight my whole life, but I am kind of lucky because it doesn't show, meaning that the extra weight is nicely distributed around my body and no part sticks out. However, this does not mean that the extra weight is any better for my health

Happily it means exactly that, at least comparatively speaking. CVD and diabetes are associated more commonly with abdominal adipose tissue and body fat distribution is an established determinant of risk
 
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You mean type two I am assuming as when I was diagnosed with type one, I was hellishly under weight.

Yup, the vagueness of the statement based on the relative prevalence and, just as importantly, degree of preventability.

Type 1 is both relatively rare and for many people simply rotten luck on the genetic lottery, whereas type 2 is much more common and far more susceptible to lifestyle and environmental factors, thus to a large extent preventable.

As far as type 2 is concerned (and several other nasties to boot), not all body fat is equal and abdominal fat is a particular determinant, hence my comment an even distribution in many ways is a healthier sign.
 
Yup, the vagueness of the statement based on the relative prevalence and, crucially, degree of preventability.

Type 1 is both relatively rare and for many people simply rotten luck on the genetic lottery, whereas type 2 is much more common and far more susceptible to lifestyle and environmental factors.

On the 6th November, I would have been diagnosed Type One for 19 years, so I am fully aware of all of that.
 
On the 6th November, I would have been diagnosed Type One for 19 years, so I am fully aware of all of that.

And the only reason I was addressing you at all was in response to your initiating what I thought was a friendly exchange. My initial comment had not been aimed at you at all :shrug:
 
I'd like to share a bit on my struggle, in case it helps others here.

I used to be in pretty decent shape. I could jog 3 to 4 miles and at the end feel good, instead of dead tired and exhausted. But my life situation changed and I ended up no longer commuting to a job and having less money on hand where I didn't feel like blowing it on a gym membership (most of the fitness clubs near me are pricey, and would only be worth it if I could get myself to really utilize it and stick to it). In time, very gradually, I began to gain weight. Now I'm 25 lbs over my "norm". I wear it fairly well, so it looks more like 10 lbs. But I should get rid of 25lbs. Trouble is that I'm finding it difficult to shed.

In retrospect, I should have taken up a new fitness club membership, presuming I'd make the effort to go. When you work from home, you really have to muster up your self-discipline. When you commute, you can then plan around that. It's ironic, because without a commute, you have more time. But I'd find myself drawn to various on-line distractions and at times get behind in work, then working late to catch up. Having a fitness club membership would help serve as an impetus to plan -- it's money being spent, so try to utilize it. The advantage of a fitness club is that it forces you to concentrate. You make a deliberate trip to this specialized place for exercising, so you better do it. What else is there to do? Also, if you partake in a class, it helps encourage you to be regular.

But if you exercise alone, at home, there are some pitfalls. What I've come to discover is that setting weight or waistline goals is counter productive. For example, I have a 25lb weight loss goal. I started trying to get myself into a routine of walking/jogging daily, and doing some light weight training. At the end of 2 weeks, I weigh myself, and I see myself 2lbs less. Great, right? But the next day it's up 1lb. That's because of water weight fluctuation. I do eat healthy and generally modest portions. Yet, the weight goal would start feeling too difficult to accomplish.

Then something occurred to me that I hadn't thought of before. What about a fitness goal instead of a weight goal?

I saw this video:
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Now, it's important to realize that there are some real problems with this. First, 100 pushups in a single day is a Herculean goal for someone not in shape. And you'll very likely injure yourself. One of these guys strained himself badly enough that he had to back off and work up to it. I do think these guys overdid it at first. You can also set yourself a different goal, for example, 50 pushups daily for 30 days. But most importantly, work up to it. Try 10 pushups the first day. And do that for a week until you feel like you can increase. If you need to, do the pushups from your knees. Lastly, buy a cheap pair of pushup bars. These are special "S" shaped bars that raise you up so that your wrists don't have all that angular stress.

I've started doing this and I'm making progress. When I first started, I found 10 pushups from my toes very difficult. Now I can do 25 easily.

The concept here is to set yourself fitness goals. If it's jogging, start with a mile. Don't knock yourself if you need to take quick rest breaks along the way. Work yourself up to going a full mile without stopping. Then up it to 2 miles. And so on.

The key with fitness goals is that you get feedback sooner rather than later. Plus, they're malleable. The side benefit will be increased physical fitness, stamina, and gradual fat loss. Weight isn't as important as fat. And once you've achieved enough fitness goals, you'll start to see measurable results in fat (weight) reduction. Once you're over that hurdle, then you can try aiming towards a weight goal. The trick is getting to that place where it's possible. Setting a weight goal from the onset has been a recipe for failure in my case. I'm expecting that with increased attainment of fitness goals, I'll make some good inroads on shedding the fat.
 
I lost 60 pounds once. I did it by having almost no food in the house, just eat lunch and maybe a snack for dinner, and go to the gym an hour a day. I lost about 10 pounds a month doing it that way.
 
I lost 60 pounds once. I did it by having almost no food in the house, just eat lunch and maybe a snack for dinner, and go to the gym an hour a day. I lost about 10 pounds a month doing it that way.
That's not a healthy way to go about it. Eating that little is not only extremely hard for most people to do, your energy level will be low, your mental and emotional state will be taxed, and you'll be prone to getting sick. Of course, this will be easier to do when you're younger (teens/20's), but no matter, your propensity to gain back weight is much higher when you lose it quickly. Truthfully, how much of the weight did you gain back? Because as soon as you go back to a more normal diet, you would gain weight unless you kept up a very active lifestyle.
 
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