I am just telling my story not advocating for anything. Yes I have a job (which requires a phd, which I also happen to have) and 3 kids. I was losing maybe 3-4 lbs per week initially but obviously that has slowed down quite a bit now. I was afraid to weigh myself on day 1 but at some point in a recent past I was 208 in the doctor's office. That was my highest official weight. |
And your story is about disordered eating. 3-4 pounds a week is not healthy or normal. |
getting obese through eating is disordered eating also. pumping yourself full of drugs so that you don't eat and overeating when you stop is disordered as well. |
of course it is-nobody has said otherwise. |
| op do you snack at all? like when you watch a show or read a book and just want to munch? or do you only binge eat when hungry? |
I started sucking on lollipops. They take a lot of time to eat. |
What's your point, then? Most people have disordered eating. I would rather be slim disordered than obese disordered. |
Most people who develop eating disorders like this will lose a ton of weight. |
I already had an eating disorder. I was over 200 lbs! |
interesting idea! any particular kinds you like? |
Chips chups I like cola, strawberries and strawberries and cream |
| Would you recommend this same diet for someone who isn't grossly obese but just overweight? I am 5'7" and 150 pounds. I would like to lose 20ish pounds. Would eating 700 calories and walking 30,000 steps a day be recommended? I don't actually think I have time to walk 30,000 steps. Right now I am about 15,000 and that is walking the dog a few times and running around after my kids. But I could certainly do 700 calories. Or should I decrease it even more because I can't walk 30,000 steps? |
I mean, you know, talk to your doctor. Personally I think it would work and you would lose those pounds fairly quickly. from my experience once you drop below 700 you can "eat as much as you want" and that is often just 500 calories because you don't feel like it. I say this as a person who struggled mightily to stay below 1500. I was obese for 15 years, growing every year. You just need to power through the first few days. a few months ago I was looking at research papers on VLCD (very low calories diets - 800 calories or les; it's a recognized weight loss approach) and I found some evidence it was more effective than low calories diets. Paradoxically, it's more sustainable. You just kind of give up on food. It's not teasing you every day. |
Please. please, don’t take advice from the crazy lazy who did/is doing this. She clearly did not “talk to her doctor” and the amount of bone loss she probably has will be apparent soon enough. 700 calories doesn’t sustain a person. And certainly with any type of activity being added to the mix you are basically depleting your body of all nutrients. This woman thinks she is “healthy” now because she is skinny. But I would bet her labs tell a very different story. Don’t do this to yourself. Also 5’7 at 150 is not even overweight. |
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"VLCDs appear to be more effective than behavioral weight loss programs or other diets, achieving approximately 4 kilograms (8.8 lb) more weight loss at 1 year and greater sustained weight loss after several years.[10][18] When used in routine care, there is evidence that VLCDs achieve average weight loss at 1 year around 10 kilograms (22 lb)[19] or about 4% more weight loss over the short term.[20] VLCDs can achieve higher short-term weight loss compared to other more modest or gradual calorie restricted diets, and the maintained long-term weight loss is similar or greater"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very-low-calorie_diet#cite_note-29 |