• ouRKaoS@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    Long COVID.

    Lost my appetite, smell, & taste. Appetite came back in about a month, smell & taste were off for 6-8 months. Lost over 50lbs from just not wanting to eat.

  • 52fighters@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I read labels and…

    • Eat only trace amounts of saturated fat.
    • No sugary drinks.
    • Eat a lot of fiber.
    • No breakfast, it isn’t necessary.
    • Walk or bike 1 hour every morning.
    • Lift & run every work day during my lunch hour.

    I’ve never been more fit.

  • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Restricted my calories. It works, you just have to eat fewer calories than your previous weight to maintain your new weight, so a lot of people put that weight back on. That said, if you put yourself in a mild caloric deficit, it’s extremely easy. Then it’s mostly a matter of not keeping binge-worthy foods in your living space (you can eat them as much as you want when you’re out), and it’s pretty easy.

  • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    No magic tricks or diet fads.

    Eat less, move more.

    Eat more vegetables and salad, cut down bread and meat.

    Stop drinking sodas and juices with extra sugar in them and learn to quench your thirst with water.

    Limit eating candy or cookies to one day per a week, if you can’t let them go entirely.

  • xilliah@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’ll focus on decision making with a threefold approach. If that sounds fancy, well that’s because it is.

    Firstly, large change comes from seemingly insignificant decisions. Actually, they just seem so small because they are made in the current moment. But decisions made in the moment are all anybody has and ever had, and so they are actually most meaningful.

    Secondly, grow your capacity for decision making. Don’t start with the oak, but with the seed. Start small, slow, and with low expectations. Keep in mind that these take place in the moment.

    Examples:

    • Pay attention to the moments in your day when you could have made a decision. Don’t interfere, just observe.
    • While going for a walk, decide to change your path. Take an unplanned turn. Try a U turn.
    • See how long you can just sit somewhere. More challenging than it sounds.
    • Swim one extra lane.
    • Stop watching after one episode.
    • And so on.

    Thirdly, the same as point two, but focused on cultivating healthy eating patterns.

    Examples:

    • Observe your eating behavior without interfering and judgment. You’re simply learning about how things are and have been.
    • Throw away a handful of chips. It’s alright to toss food given your circumstances.
    • Switch out a chocolate bar with stracciatella quark. Chocolatey protein!
    • Read up on nutrition while waiting for the train. What is glycogen? How does one properly store prepared food?
    • Cook something nutritious and tasty by adding spices, cheese, cream, butter, salt, sugar. Can’t be worse than a factory meal, right?
    • Standing in the store in front of what you’re craving, and pay attention to what you’re feeling. Buy it.
    • Standing in the store in front of what you’re craving, and pay attention to what you’re feeling. Say no.
    • And so on and so forth.

    Lastly, I’d like to say that weight loss is a personal journey, filled with unique challenges and discoveries. Beyond these practical steps, it’s crucial to remain open to deeper insights about yourself. Whether it’s addressing emotional eating, seeking social support, or trying out sport, the essence lies in making a series of informed decisions in the present moment. Each choice, no matter how small, propels you forward, shaping the future you envision for yourself.

  • ExLisper@linux.community
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    1 year ago

    Eating less. When making dinner I wold make half of what I usually made, for lunch I would only have small things like a salad or soup, I stopped supplementing during/after training with gels and recovery drinks, cut out desserts. Went from 68kg to 63kg in couple of months.

  • pearable@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I moved to a city in the US where I can get around without a car. 95% of my trips I take via bike or public transit. I haven’t actually lost much weight but I have gotten much leaner

  • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I started slow jogging every other day, using an app called Just Run that has you alternate walking/running until you’re built up to running a full 3k. It goes for 9 weeks and I just completed week 6. There’s a 10k version I’ll be moving on to after.

    On the days I don’t run, I use Chloe Ting weight-training videos on YouTube to target areas I need strength support in, like my lower back and shoulders. I also use her cool down routine every day, it’s the best stretching video I’ve found.

    I’ve also been fasting every Monday. Just nothing but coffee (which I do put some sweetener and milk in in the morning) and water.

    I only weigh myself once my period has come and gone, since I tend to fluctuate about 10 lbs during. I weighed myself about 3 weeks ago and I’ve lost 13 lbs. I’ve just now started seeing and feeling a change.

  • 31415926535@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Can’t afford to eat much, cuz SSI, rent increase. Kept having conversations in head, like “I can buy laundry detergent OR have food to last the month.” I’ve lost 20 lbs past few months , after discovering how tasty white rice can be, with just a tiny bit of sesame oil, salt and pepper.

  • CraigeryTheKid@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    100% calorie counting, NO ‘extra’ exercise. Lost 30 lb in 30 weeks just by being ~500 cal negative every day.

    Don’t drink calories, skip breakfast, and cutting out obvious ‘junk’ made it rather easy once I got past the first 4 weeks of willpower & adjustment.

    that’s it, nothing fancy. (40yr old male)

  • Roopappy@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’m down about 30 pounds since last Summer, and it’s had sticking power. I went from a few pounds over obese on my BMI to a normal BMI weight (200 lbs to 170).

    I’m a data-driven guy, and I started using a phone app where you scan barcodes, or manually enter your food and weight. I got a scale off amazon for like $10. Before I even started changing my diet, I just started entering everything I was eating and drinking. It was a bit eye opening. The calorie count was too damn high. Lots of carbs, cheese, and alcohol.

    I didn’t follow any specific diet or anything, but I tried to keep my calorie count around or just under 1500 calories per day. If you’re trying to meet a calorie count and not be hungry all the time, you figure some stuff out. You can eat a lot of vegetables. You can eat a decent amount of seasoned meats. Pasta and bread are things you can only have a little of. Drinking alcohol ruins the day.

    Anyway, sticking to the count, I watched 1-3 pounds a week drop off and stay off. It was very satisfying. Math. Data. Measurable results. I recommend it.