+2. It’s very American to think you need to lose weight but can’t possibly eat less and move more. |
Cut out all sugar, flour, white rice and potatoes. No seed oils. An anti inflammatory, low glycemic diet is the way to go. Exercise daily. |
I think you just need to start and make consistently good choices over the long run. Don’t let a treat or forbidden food sabotage your whole day. Focus more on adding fruits and vegetables and other Whole Foods and less on restricting entire food groups. Alcohol is the exception- I would really cut that out if you’re trying to lose.
Practice portion control and focus on meals. Try to avoid snacking. This is what works for me! |
What dosage of Ozempic were you on? |
This is how I live, and this is the company line I repeat on here over and over on here whenever this question comes up. Eventually someone comes on here to tell me I have "disordered eating" because I live this way. Can't win. |
Only eat veggies and meat or eggs. Eat berries once in awhile for dessert.
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Don’t come to DCUM for advice. It will be 99% bad. |
What is the 1% that's correct? Since you seem to know that 99% is "bad". |
This. It is the ONLY way. Now what methods you use to do that may differ depending on your needs. Maybe you needs meds or surgery in order to consistently eat less. If you do- do that. Baby steps with exercise. Start with low level exercise like walking on incline if you aren’t use to any. Increase intensity and add strength training as you build stamina and get stronger. |
For a period of 8-12 weeks:
Cut out alcohol. It’s a HUGE source of empty calories. A lot of people underestimate how much they drink and how many calories and how much sugar they’re consuming. Along with that, drink plenty of water. Water should be your main source of things you drink, not soda or Starbucks unless you’re just getting regular coffee there. Eat a fruit and a vegetable with every meal and every snack between meals. Or if you can’t manage a vegetable at breakfast or whatever, just a fruit is ok. But add as many fruits and vegetables to your meals as possible. Cut way back on restaurant meals/meals out. Cook and eat at home or bring a packed lunch. Aim for 1 restaurant meal a week. 2 is ok if you watch your portion sizes and take leftovers home. Incorporate more physical activity into your day by using a standing/treadmill desk or an exercise ball. |
I thought I wrote this and had to check. I also got injured during the pandemic by switching to all running, then gained weight. What was your injury? I just got mine sorted out by a genius trainer after wasting a year with podiatrists and traditional physical therapy. My injury was achilles tendon and plantar fasciitis on one foot. Finally back on track. |
The 1% that is correct is that permanent long-term weight loss is very difficult and that OP would be better off talking with a variety of experts, understanding at the same time that a lot of nutritionists and personal trainers are wildly ignorant, and that a lot of doctors are ignorant and motivated by keeping income coming in. In other words, what is true is that the state of advice for long-term, sustainable weight loss is grim. OPs best option is to carefully find professionals she trusts who can evaluate her individual situation. In her case it will need to include a weight-aware psychiatrist given how OP gained the weight. She also needs a comprehensive blood work-up, and an evaluation for insulin resistance and possibly for pre-diabetes. Most of DCUM’s advice on weight loss is shockingly stupid. |
Actually many women are losing on Ozempic with little effort. Thinner than their friends now who have to restrict and work out 2x a day. Winning. |
I'm curious about this, too. PP, please come back and let us know! |
Hi OP, I have lost approx 50 lbs so far this year and am still working on it. Give yourself grace and time and be realistic with yourself re what you can realistically do. Dont just cut out all carbs tomorrow and think that you will succeed in the long term. You wont. Small changes over time is what works.
Stop drinking, for starters. Alcohol has empty calories, yes, but that wasnt what was getting in the way of my health. It is that I would drink, eat more than usual while drinking, then be sluggish the next day and not want to get up and be active. So then its tempting to order takeover and put everyone on screens and it just isnt healthy. Speaking of exercise, give yourself grace. I used to be able to do Orange Theory type classes, but that then, this is now. Find an exercise you like and will regularly do. It could be Zumba, yoga, walking, swimming, whatever, just go. Even if its a schlep to get there, your spouse is going to have to understand. Then, once you get there, dont beat yourself up if you arent kicking ass like you were in college. You will get back there eventually. Once you start to lose weight and can do more, you will. As far as food, again try to give yourself grace. You cant sustainably go from takeout every night to homecooked organic vegan meals overnight. It takes baby steps re removing unhealthy components of your diet and adding healthy. |