Discover effective weight loss tips that actually work to help you achieve your weight loss goals. Get motivated and start your journey towards a healthier you today.

Weight Loss for Everyone: When I started 3 years ago at 210 lbs my goal weight was 150 lbs. This morning, exactly 3 years later, my weight is 142.6 lbs.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

When I started 3 years ago at 210 lbs my goal weight was 150 lbs. This morning, exactly 3 years later, my weight is 142.6 lbs.

I was hoping to hit my goal weight by New Years day. Instead I sailed right on past it. I am also, according to the BMI chart, no longer overweight. At all. I am a healthy weight. Right before Christmas I went through my closet and all my drawers and got rid of everything that didn't fit. I was holding on to stuff in case I regained weight, but that's done. I'm not going back. Three bags of stuff went to Goodwill.

I'm just so proud of myself. Here's the things I tried that worked and the things that didn't work.

What worked for me:

-Small plates. Eating off of saucer sized plates help me learn what a serving should really look like and be aware of when I was having more than one serving.

-Less calorie dense foods. I shifted my diet to include more vegetables, and avoided anything where I could consume like 1,000 calories in five bites.

-Walking every day. This gave me more energy and helped me enjoy my lighter body.

-No more drinking calories, plus reward system. Banning drinking calories was hard for me. I would not drink soda for weeks and then spend a few weeks drinking like 3-4 sodas a day, gain weight again, and be like "damn it I have to not do this!", and repeat. Eventually I came up with a reward system where I paid myself $2 every time I didn't drink a soda. I put the money into a vacation/splurge fund. Watching all my "didn't buy that soda money" accumulate gave me another reason to kick my soda habit and the extra motivational boost I needed. And now I have like over $1,000 in there and we are going on vacation (seriously, I want to drink a lot of soda).

-Weekly and then monthly weigh ins- Weighing more than once a week made me get disheartened by small fluctuations that didn't mean anything. As progress slowed, I moved to monthly weigh ins, and found that really boosted my motivation.

What didn't work for me:

-Counting calories. It was frustrating, I was bad at it, I got no where with it. I even got a food scale to help me count more accurately, but a combination of being bad at math and an excellent wishful thinker doomed my success. Thinking I needed to count calories in order to lose weight held me back for years.

-Jogging. Too hard on my knees and I just didn't like it, I couldn't stick with it. Then I would do nothing instead. I learned to pick an exercise I could stick with.

-Banning foods. If I ban a food all together I will just end up binging it. For the most part (except my nemesis, soda), I did better by allowing myself all foods in moderation.

I know that maintaining a healthy weight can be even harder than losing, but I think my slow and steady progress and the real life style changes I've made are going to help me succeed. And I know that if I start gaining again, I'll assess the problem and do something about it. I won't just be complacent like I was when I gained the nearly 70lbs the first time.

Thanks to everyone for making this sub great and good luck with your goals!

submitted by /u/swimlesson
[link] [comments]

source https://www.reddit.com/r/loseit/comments/eipvpv/when_i_started_3_years_ago_at_210_lbs_my_goal/

No comments:

Post a Comment

Targeting Belly Fat Is POSSIBLE?! (New Study)

  Everyone wants to lose belly fat, right? The problem is, you can't choose where fat loss happens in your body every time you work out....