Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might consider looking into weightlifting (including a bit of power lifting). It sounds like it’s going to be tough otherwise.
yes, i'm the 50 year old poster above, and that is a detail I forgot. No cardio unless i have gotten or can commit to getting in 3-4 lifting sessions that week. It's not that cardio is bad, but it can't come at the expense of the lifting.
This was my trainer’s advice as well. Six months ago I was lifting 2x to balance cardio 2x a week. Trainer told me to cut out cardio completely and add a third lifting day, plus one day of mind/body for flexibility and balance (yoga or Pilates). And eat lots of protein. In six months I’ve lost 12 pounds of fat and gained 2 pounds of muscle for a net loss of 10 pounds. I feel stronger than I have in decades. 55.
DP but I am so unsure about cutting cardio. I’m one of those people who don’t think I get valid enough workout unless the watch tells me I’ve burned several
Hundred calories. I lift weights and do yoga but I have a hard time getting rid of my heavy cardio!
Please don't cut cardio if you enjoy it. No offense, but the suggestion that ANY type of physical movement is bad is silly, and a bit dangerous. Something is better than nothing. Doing what you enjoy is the only way it is sustainable. And cardio has multiple benefits beyond fat loss. Plus it already looks like you are getting a good mix and variety.
Who said any type of physical movement is bad? That’s not close to anything that has been said on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:If you’ve had success losing weight at age 45+, how did you do it?
I walk/run 10k steps almost every day and eat fairly healthy, but the weight is not coming off and I feel like my belly fat/mom pooch is getting worse. What else should I be doing?
I have struggled with my weight since beginning anxiety meds in 2016 and have gone from a size 2 to size 10/12. Would love to stop the anxiety meds but not sure I can manage without them.
Appreciate any suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a normal weight on a bathroom scale of about 145 for lots of my adult life. I started lifting and running a little less and as I got older kind of settled into about 150-153 when I was eating well, working out, not drinking a lot but not restricting either. In August, I started gaining about a pound every two weeks. not a straight line, but looking back it was consistent and in one direction.
In mid-December, before the winter holidays I was 164. I went to an endocrinologist who did a InBody Scan. Body fat percent of 26.2. She put me on a mild calorie restriction and a goal of eating 100grams of protein a day. Last time I was there about two weeks ago, I was 153 and my muscle mass was the same as the day I started this, all of the loss is attributed to fat, and my body fat percent is now 21.9. She also put me on a very low dose of metformin and indicated that this was warranted b/c my visceral fat was within healthy range but much higher than she would have expected for my body size. The visceral fat has come down as well.
When I am getting the protein, I am not looking for a snack. There have been more than a few days when I have not kept precisely to the plan.
I'm 50.
What sourced of protein do you recommend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might consider looking into weightlifting (including a bit of power lifting). It sounds like it’s going to be tough otherwise.
yes, i'm the 50 year old poster above, and that is a detail I forgot. No cardio unless i have gotten or can commit to getting in 3-4 lifting sessions that week. It's not that cardio is bad, but it can't come at the expense of the lifting.
This was my trainer’s advice as well. Six months ago I was lifting 2x to balance cardio 2x a week. Trainer told me to cut out cardio completely and add a third lifting day, plus one day of mind/body for flexibility and balance (yoga or Pilates). And eat lots of protein. In six months I’ve lost 12 pounds of fat and gained 2 pounds of muscle for a net loss of 10 pounds. I feel stronger than I have in decades. 55.
DP but I am so unsure about cutting cardio. I’m one of those people who don’t think I get valid enough workout unless the watch tells me I’ve burned several
Hundred calories. I lift weights and do yoga but I have a hard time getting rid of my heavy cardio!
Please don't cut cardio if you enjoy it. No offense, but the suggestion that ANY type of physical movement is bad is silly, and a bit dangerous. Something is better than nothing. Doing what you enjoy is the only way it is sustainable. And cardio has multiple benefits beyond fat loss. Plus it already looks like you are getting a good mix and variety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might consider looking into weightlifting (including a bit of power lifting). It sounds like it’s going to be tough otherwise.
yes, i'm the 50 year old poster above, and that is a detail I forgot. No cardio unless i have gotten or can commit to getting in 3-4 lifting sessions that week. It's not that cardio is bad, but it can't come at the expense of the lifting.
This was my trainer’s advice as well. Six months ago I was lifting 2x to balance cardio 2x a week. Trainer told me to cut out cardio completely and add a third lifting day, plus one day of mind/body for flexibility and balance (yoga or Pilates). And eat lots of protein. In six months I’ve lost 12 pounds of fat and gained 2 pounds of muscle for a net loss of 10 pounds. I feel stronger than I have in decades. 55.
DP but I am so unsure about cutting cardio. I’m one of those people who don’t think I get valid enough workout unless the watch tells me I’ve burned several
Hundred calories. I lift weights and do yoga but I have a hard time getting rid of my heavy cardio!
Anonymous wrote:It's hard OP. Limit carbs and alcohol and sugar and don't eat much. I find that intermittent fasting works (I have Coffee, but nothing else until noon) and you get used to it. It brings you down to 2 meals a day and I finish eating by 7.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might consider looking into weightlifting (including a bit of power lifting). It sounds like it’s going to be tough otherwise.
yes, i'm the 50 year old poster above, and that is a detail I forgot. No cardio unless i have gotten or can commit to getting in 3-4 lifting sessions that week. It's not that cardio is bad, but it can't come at the expense of the lifting.
This was my trainer’s advice as well. Six months ago I was lifting 2x to balance cardio 2x a week. Trainer told me to cut out cardio completely and add a third lifting day, plus one day of mind/body for flexibility and balance (yoga or Pilates). And eat lots of protein. In six months I’ve lost 12 pounds of fat and gained 2 pounds of muscle for a net loss of 10 pounds. I feel stronger than I have in decades. 55.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might consider looking into weightlifting (including a bit of power lifting). It sounds like it’s going to be tough otherwise.
yes, i'm the 50 year old poster above, and that is a detail I forgot. No cardio unless i have gotten or can commit to getting in 3-4 lifting sessions that week. It's not that cardio is bad, but it can't come at the expense of the lifting.
Anonymous wrote:I had a normal weight on a bathroom scale of about 145 for lots of my adult life. I started lifting and running a little less and as I got older kind of settled into about 150-153 when I was eating well, working out, not drinking a lot but not restricting either. In August, I started gaining about a pound every two weeks. not a straight line, but looking back it was consistent and in one direction.
In mid-December, before the winter holidays I was 164. I went to an endocrinologist who did a InBody Scan. Body fat percent of 26.2. She put me on a mild calorie restriction and a goal of eating 100grams of protein a day. Last time I was there about two weeks ago, I was 153 and my muscle mass was the same as the day I started this, all of the loss is attributed to fat, and my body fat percent is now 21.9. She also put me on a very low dose of metformin and indicated that this was warranted b/c my visceral fat was within healthy range but much higher than she would have expected for my body size. The visceral fat has come down as well.
When I am getting the protein, I am not looking for a snack. There have been more than a few days when I have not kept precisely to the plan.
I'm 50.