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Starting the decade right - Lost 15 pounds in 30 days
My weight has crept up a bit in the last 3 years, I wanted to re-set and start the decade in the right place.
I lost quite a bit on no carb in 2003. I've tried it again a few times over the past few years and it wasn't as effective. This time I went old school calories counting. It seems indisputable that if you eat significantly fewer calories than you burn each day, you are guaranteed to lose weight. I found that for weight loss, I always need a strategy. "Just eat less" doesn't work for me in my 50s. I tried intermittent fasting. First I did 18 hours. Only eat between 12 and 6. Then I went to 20 hours. Between 2 and 6. A very small meal at 2 (200 or less calories) and a very small dinner (500 or less calories). My 2 o'clock meal would often be an Atkins shake (150 calories) with half a banana (50) or some strawberries (less than 50 calories) put in a blender with a bunch of ice to make a smoothy). Dinner would usually include a salad with a small amount of olive oil, and some small amount of protein (usually chicken). Surprisingly it became easy after a few days. I eventually was able to do some days with dinner only, total daily calories under 500. Whole, "clean" foods only, and at those low calories counts a lot of vegetables, by necessity. A lot of lemon water to stay hydrated. Some exercise, which is going to the gym for 1/2 hours and doing some light weights, or walking a couple of miles, but not every day. Anyways, maybe something to try for those who have a new year's resolution to lose weight. Was a lot less painful than I thought it would be. |
Appreciate this. I too have lost 20 lbs, but only over the last year. I would like to do another 20, and have heard diets like these are the best way to do it. Your data really helps.
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I've never been successful with the slow and steady weight loss plan. Like losing 20 pounds over the course of a year. That's probably the better or more healthy way, I just can't do it, I get impatient.
Seeing rapid weight loss is motivating to me and keeps me going. The intermittent fasting helped me because for 20 hours, food isn't even an option, so I don't even think about it. Hunger is far more in the mind than the stomach. |
Anyways, I hope everyone has a happy and healthy 2020.
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Losing 15 lbs in 30 days is quite an accomplishment.
One thing I will add is that until watching the video below, I had no idea how fat leaves the human body. It was one of those things you never really thought about. When you lose weight, where does it go? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuIlsN32WaE |
I've always been a lean person, who's weight only varied by a few pounds throughout the year. A couple of years ago, I noticed I'd developed a bit of a stomach - like going from 32 in. to 34/36 in. & it gave me a little round tummy of visceral fat - nothing on the outside. I realized it had crept up on me without being noticed for quite a while. I figured it was a function of age (mid to late 70s) and eating sweets without thinking about it. So I've pretty much cut out anything classified as a sweet or dessert. I've cut way down on carb rich food & eat meat, veges, & a bit of carbs. So over the past year+ I've started to get back toward a 32 in. waist and now my usual 32/32 pants fit well again. At this point I am pretty much in a groove of eating the way I have been over the past year+ to get rid of that 5 or 6 pounds. I find I don't think much about ice cream, cake, or any of those other sweet things, although I eat a cookie or something once in a while. But mostly, I've lost the craving for that kind of thing. I think that's where you have to get in order to establish & continue a decently healthy diet regimen.
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That is awesome McLovin!! Years ago, in 2009 I gained almost 25 lbs, it know why, I was depressed over the economy. I decided to make some huge life changes and since I had nothing but time, I turned back into a gym rat, radically modified my diet and dropped the 25 lbs in short order.
Then in 2010 I decided to see how much of a 6 pack I could get, I used a trip to our time share in the Bahamas as a goal date. I got a nice 4 pack never getting the full 6 pack to come in. I realized when I was dieting and training to get there how much life sucks when you try to maintain single digit body fat. I went off the diet on vacation carbs and beer never tasted as good as it did then. :D Then I made a rule, NEVER, EVER need to lose more than 10 pounds, I check my weight maybe once a month, if I see the 10 pound mark coming up, I get back in line, it is so much easier to lose 7-8 lbs than to lose 15-20 lbs. I can typically drop the weight back off in 3-4 weeks with just a few small adjustments in my lifestyle. Then I get back on with enjoying myself. Beer is typically my biggest problem. I love a couple of cheeky pints after a long hot work day. Good on you dropping that weight, now try to never have to do it again. |
Isn’t 15 in 30 days a bit much? I guess it depends where you started.
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Congratulations, keep up the good work and happy New year.
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For many years it was “get back on track when I hit 180.” Then it was mid 80s. Then “anything in the 80s is ok, because I’m still less than 10 pounds from 180. I had some health scares the past few years (resolved now) that made a few extra pounds seem not as important, and I started seeing low 190s. When I saw 199 a few days after thanksgiving, that scared me into submission. I went from 199 on November 30 to 181 this morning. |
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I’m 6 feet and worked out in my younger days and am not a thin build. 178 is my ideal weight. I got down to around 172 in my early 40s, that was a little too low for me. |
The weird thing about losing a lot of weight is when you then carry, say, a 20 lb bag of dog food or something and you realize just what a toll each extra pound puts on the joints. When I turned 55, I had my first knee replacement. Lost 20 lbs right after, but quickly gained back 30 after losing mobility.. Second knee came a year later, and the cycle repeated for another net 10. This past year, I got back to my pre-replacement weight, but want to shed another 20 in 2020.
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Last year at this time I was nearing 200#, I had always been a lean runner but Coors & food was catching me up. So... I got on my Concepts 2 rowing machine every day, continued my daily runs & started riding my bike on the turbo trainer. Nothing happened for about a month but finally, I started to loose weight. Today I'm running at about 168 lbs, It's doable, just gotta hand in there.
Steve |
I never buy pants larger than size 34.
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While that's sure an achievement, that's way fast and you will be hard pressed not to yoyo as what you are doing isn't sustainable. I don't get why you'd want to put yourself through such a radical diet instead of just upping exercise and changing few things in your diet and go slow. You also will have something you can sustain once you reach your target.
I just did look at my activity stats for 2019 and I would have gained about 30 lbs of fat if I had eaten the same but stayed sedentary. (assuming 3500 kcal = 1 lbs). G |
I lost 40lbs in 3 months last year, holidays put 10 back on. I quit eating breakfast, which was 2-3 egg, bacon, cheese tacos. When I lost the weight, I was quite a bit more active than usual, moving into a new home had something to do with it. 20lbs came off in a week and a half. Still need to shed anther 20lbs, but I like ice cream too much. I'm 6'1, 212 now, was 243lbs. My frame was not meant to take that much weight and I feel a lot better now. My feet no longer hurt.
Keep up the good work! |
You lost them.
Don't worry, I found them. It's so unfair. All my life I've eaten like a pig, and drank alot. But since I've hit 60 it's really gone to my waist. I could starve it off but the rest of me would get sickly skinny before my waist slimmed down. |
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I don’t agree, though, that it has anything really to do with the speed you take the weight off. Of course what I’m doing is not sustainable. It isn’t meant to be. I would eventually die of starvation if I sustained it. If you lose 25 lbs, you have the danger of gaining it back, whether you lost it in 2 months or 10 months. If you go back to the eating habits that caused you to gain it, you’ll gain it back. Another thing is yoyoing is in a way a dieting “first world” problem. Most dieters don’t ever have to worry about it, because they never lose any real weight to begin with! :) Me personally, I’ve never yoyoed. I’ve not been perfect and struggled, for sure. I’ve lost significant weight 3 times in my life. When I was 17 (about 25 lbs), it took me years to gain it back, when I was around 35 and in a very high stress job. At 35 I lost 45 pounds in 3 months (which was 5 pounds too much). I never gained it all back, but by early 50s slowly had gained about 25 of it back. Now In 5 weeks or so I’ve lost close to 20 and am very close to ideal again. 3 more pounds and I’ll transition to my maintenance plan. So I guess it’s maybe a slo mo yo-yo. Anyways, the real reason I do it this way is it’s the only way it works for me. I simply can’t lose weight the slow and steady way. Like i said above, it’s probably the better and more healthy way, but I’ve tried it many times and it’s never worked for me. So I don’t really have a choice. |
I only wondered about the sudden weight loss because it used to be a life insurance underwriting question about 20 years ago in a third world country... "Have you lost 5 lbs. or more in the last 7 days?" And it was a yellow flag. Not red.
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