Anonymous wrote:I eat oatmeal (usually the pre package portion) about an hour before the gym. Protein directly after. Maybe two eggs or one eggo waffle an hour later before work.
I usually have a turkey sandwich for lunch (one slice of wheat bread or the sandwich round, two slices of deli turkey, one slice of chesse, .5 tbl light mayo) a healthy choice meal or dinner leftovers.
I snack throughout the day on straight tuna, sometimes crackers, nuts. I eat baked sweet potatoes a lot (with olive oil)
Dinner is chicken, veggies (zucchini, chinese broccoli, whatever). I am not very strict with what I eat for dinner as long as it isn't a lot.
I drink a smoothie everyday with beets, spinach, OJ, and a banana. The smoothie is what really got the numbers moving and actually lowered my blood pressure into the normal range. I highly recommend it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not eating enough and your body has gone into preservation mode!
Eat a few hundred calories more - there are websites that can help you calculate exactly how much calories you need to ingest in order to lose weight. Keeping a journal is extremely helpful at the beginning until you can guesstimate correctly the amount you eat.
Make sure you cut out all animal fat, sugar and most salt (except after a heavy workout session). Keep the healthy fats in moderation. Lean protein. Green vegetables (less roots). Less carbs. Water. Sleep. Cardio and weight training.
You can do it!!!
This is a myth. If the OP weighs 200 lbs., it will take a long time and a lot of weight loss before she goes into the mythological starvation mode.
Anonymous wrote:I am on a low calorie diet and last week I didn't lose a pound. My dietician said I wasn't eating enough, that my metabolism had slowed down, going into starvation mode. It's critical to eat every few hours and enough to keep your metabolism working.
Anonymous wrote:You are not eating enough and your body has gone into preservation mode!
Eat a few hundred calories more - there are websites that can help you calculate exactly how much calories you need to ingest in order to lose weight. Keeping a journal is extremely helpful at the beginning until you can guesstimate correctly the amount you eat.
Make sure you cut out all animal fat, sugar and most salt (except after a heavy workout session). Keep the healthy fats in moderation. Lean protein. Green vegetables (less roots). Less carbs. Water. Sleep. Cardio and weight training.
You can do it!!!
Anonymous wrote:Drop every carb but vegetables. Add more protein than you "need." Drink a lot of water. Stop exercising except for fun until you drop some weight.
Good luck.