argopilled
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2023
Hello kiwi's I am a Fat Retard! I am going to make it so im only a retard. Will poast weigh in when back from july 4 weekend.
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You can still have a soda and lose weight (depending on cal intake) Consider it your sweet for the day. Alternatively some juice might satisfy your sweet drink requirement. Although juices still obviously have calories, alot of times they are significantly less than a soda.Hey fellow Kiwi's. I am trying to loose a bit of weight. I already cut out sweets for some weeks now (mostly replaced with fruits like Apples or strawberries) but I am still looking for a replacment for the biggest problem: soft drinks. I love to drink at least half a bottle in the evening. Any tips with what to replace it with? And no I am not looking for the "Try Diet coke" or things like that because imho that is not a good replacement.
I too gained weight (in the 300s, I know I'm a fatfuck). If it helps, when I did lose weight, I did a lot of walking (about 10k steps a day) along with going to the gym, and replaced soda with flavored sparkling water. I need to start back on that and doing meal prep, though I can't find my foodscale.I weigh 355lbs. I plan on doing weekly weigh-ins and really focusing on water intake and hitting the gym whenever possible.
Honestly depends on how much you're willing to break the bank. Coconut oil really shouldn't be making your dishes taste like complete coconut. If you can get it, extra virgin olive oil is pretty much the next-best thing, or you can try duck fat, beef tallow, etc. just make sure to track how many extra calories that adds. Personally for me though, those sorts of animal fats when cooking get me fuller on less.I have been using avocado oil a bit more recently, as well as butter. Are there other non-seed oil fat alternatives you'd recommend for cooking? I tried coconut oil but that made the whole dish I was making taste like coconut.
A therapist who specializes in eating disorders. That's all I can think of never having dealt with it.Does anyone have advice on how to beat a binge eating disorder? I haven’t been officially diagnosed, but I’m starting to suspect this is more than just a simple question of willpower. I don’t keep junk food in the house, but it’s gotten to the point where I avoid buying normal foods like peanut butter or brown rice to avoid triggering myself. The shit I binge on is just embarrassing and nonsensical. I prepared a massive amount of pinto beans in my crock pot that could’ve lasted me an entire week, but by day 2 I had devoured damn near all of it.
Wat do? I would’ve reached my goal weight by now if not for this affliction.
If you actually have an eating disorder, then like @cactus suggests find some professional help. But make sure they're someone who has actually helped people with eating disorders and do not be afraid to straight up ask: "What is your experience with eating disorders and what were the outcomes of people you treated?" There are a lot of therapists out there who are useless.Does anyone have advice on how to beat a binge eating disorder? I haven’t been officially diagnosed, but I’m starting to suspect this is more than just a simple question of willpower. I don’t keep junk food in the house, but it’s gotten to the point where I avoid buying normal foods like peanut butter or brown rice to avoid triggering myself. The shit I binge on is just embarrassing and nonsensical. I prepared a massive amount of pinto beans in my crock pot that could’ve lasted me an entire week, but by day 2 I had devoured damn near all of it.
Wat do? I would’ve reached my goal weight by now if not for this affliction.
If you're in the healthy weight category, don't worry about it. If not, do you know your TDEE? If not, go find a TDEE calculator and see what it is, then you subtract however many calories you wanna lose from your daily calories (usually 500 calories a day for a total of 3500 for 1lb of weight loss a week). You may need to track calories and what you eat.How do I deal with plateau?
I stand at 180cm tall and currently 91kg. I am aiming at 85kg, but I just cant seem to do it. I have a low calorie diet, dont really work out (other than push ups and sit ups at home due to some very good advice a while back) and dont have time to hit gym due to work and other commitments. I work semi physically, chucking rather heavy stuff around for few hours a day. My meals are spread across the day (usually 6am-1pm-6pm) and I rarely snack on anything.
Should I just be happy with my weight and maintain it, or should I double down?
Do you count calories? If not, you may find that you're underestimating your intake.How do I deal with plateau?
I stand at 180cm tall and currently 91kg. I am aiming at 85kg, but I just cant seem to do it. I have a low calorie diet, dont really work out (other than push ups and sit ups at home due to some very good advice a while back) and dont have time to hit gym due to work and other commitments. I work semi physically, chucking rather heavy stuff around for few hours a day. My meals are spread across the day (usually 6am-1pm-6pm) and I rarely snack on anything.
Should I just be happy with my weight and maintain it, or should I double down?
My BMI says I'm overweight, and while I have some fat, there isn't much excess. So I am not sure.If you're in the healthy weight category, don't worry about it. If not, do you know your TDEE? If not, go find a TDEE calculator and see what it is, then you subtract however many calories you wanna lose from your daily calories (usually 500 calories a day for a total of 3500 for 1lb of weight loss a week). You may need to track calories and what you eat.
Forgot to include: recalculate your TDEE every so often to avoid plateaus.
Do you count calories? If not, you may find that you're underestimating your intake.
Take it with a grain of salt, but you're pretty much my weight and height, so I'll tell you what's been working for me:
Also, I don't know what weight you started at, but keep in mind that you're in the range where weight loss slows down considerably, so it's gonna be harder and harder to shed those last few kilos..
- Eating ~2200 kcal/day (like @cactus was saying above, I'm keeping it ~500 kcal under my TDEE). You'll need to find your numbers here.
- Intermittent fasting (I'll take my meals 12 PM to 8 PM at most).
- Weight lifting + cardio at home (doesn't burn too many calories over all, not for me at least, so you may skip it, but every bit counts).
- If you can (and aren't doing it already), make sure you build your main meal around a good source of protein like chicken breast. Low calorie diets aren't worth much if you're not eating good.
- Eating close to/a bit over caloric limit on the weekends (this right here has been breaking most plateaus for me and making dieting more palatable).
- Last resort, if above doesn't work: try fasting for 24 hours, this one always puts me back on track.
Again, take it with a grain of salt from me, as I'm only speaking from personal experience here, but unless you're a woman, you're starving yourself a bit at those numbers.1500-1700 calories with chicken meat
That's good. Don't stress it, slow and steady wins the race here. It would be a shame to stop now just because I imagine it took a bit of effort to get you here. There's no tragedy if you slip up for a day or two, just keep it steady overall and it'll work out.I started with 107kg
Oh, I was 130kg myself five years ago. Went down to 95kg, then up 107kg, now I am here. Thanks for the advice and support.Again, take it with a grain of salt from me, as I'm only speaking from personal experience here, but unless you're a woman, you're starving yourself a bit at those numbers.
I would structure the meals around a bit, add a bit of healthy fats like avocado and some greens, maybe a tad bit more chicken breast. Imo, ~2000kcal would be enough to lose 0.5 kg per week if you sweat out a bit every day.
Also, can't stress this enough, but since you said chicken meat, go for breast and obviously avoid frying it or eating it with skin.
That's good. Don't stress it, slow and steady wins the race here. It would be a shame to stop now just because I imagine it took a bit of effort to get you here. There's no tragedy if you slip up for a day or two, just keep it steady overall and it'll work out.
I'm ashamed to say I started out at ~135 kg a bit over a year ago. After trying lots of stuff that didn't work, calorie counting got me to 94 kg currently in 14 months. I, too, plan on reaching ~80 - 84 kg before doing a bit of bulk to fill up the surprisingly little bit of loose skin I've gotten since I started shedding the lard.