Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Slow and steady. Stop doing idiotic diets like 'keto' that are not sustainable.
Move more, eat less. Stop eating out so much - max 1 meal a week. Don't drink your calories. Take the stairs, park further away and walk more. And possibly, therapy. As someone who's been obese, it's not just a matter of food, but underlying mental/emotional issues. Exercise can also be a very helpful form of therapy.
+1000. Fad diets and all the other marketing gimmicks for weight loss are not sustainable. The results are not immediate, but transitioning to a healthier lifestyle is the only surefire way of losing weight
and keeping it off.
“Eat less, move more” simply doesn’t work for someone who has been 100-150 pounds overweight for a long time.
It would be like telling a healthy 135 pound person that they just have to eat less and move more to get to 90 pounds.
Our bodies will do everything it can to stay at the high weight.
This is complete and utter BS. Our HABITS will do anything to keep us at our current weight. If I forced someone who was 135 lbs to eat an additional 2000 calories a day you can be they sure as hell they would gain weight. Just like If you force someone who is 100lbs overweight to eat 1200 cals/day they will lose weight. just look at my 600lb life. When they follow the Dr's diet they lose a ton of weight. Most gain some back when they start eating crap again.
OP- it is all about creating a small but sustainable deficit. no fad diets, not starvation, but slow steady lifestyle changes.
Start exercising by just walking, slowly increase the time you walk each day.
For diet- track your calories. Everyone on here who can't lose weight says they don't eat "very unhealthy" but all food has calories and if you are 100+ lbs overweight you ARE overrating. You can not maintain that weight without consuming a significant amount of calories.
Take your current weight and subtract 50 lbs. Now multiply that number by 12. This is how many calories you should eat to start losing weight. You can also just subtract 30 lbs for a smaller deficit. Or take both number to create a range.
For example if you weight 250 lbs. Subtract 50 and 30 (200 and 220) multiply by 12= 2400-2640, this the the calories range you should eat in. Focus on eating protein and veggies at every meal and snack along with a serving of carbs and healthy fats.