Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The glp1s are amazing for losing weight around your waist. It just disappears. I highly recommend them.
I don’t doubt that they are amazing - but I’m working on building healthier habits (eating well, working out) for my weight loss. So far it’s working for me, even though it’s slow. I want a lifestyle change, not a quick change.
Anonymous wrote:The glp1s are amazing for losing weight around your waist. It just disappears. I highly recommend them.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in the same situation as OP but struggling to eat consistently due to high stress job, busy kids, and little time for food prep. I usually start off well with breakfast but have a hard time with what to prep for lunch which results in late afternoon snacking. Any suggestions for easy breakfast and lunch on the go? I’m better with dinners.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, checking in. I’m down five pounds overall and about half an inch. I’m still tracking my macros and eating pretty well (definitely “clean” unprocessed food). I took a week off working out but still tried to get my daily 10k+ steps in. Progress is slow going, but I feel good and it’s all going in the right direction. I just realized last night that I am not having any food noise anymore. I don’t crave sweet or salty foods and I’m not “emotionally” eating like I used to. That’s a big win in my book!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again, I meant, when I originally measured my “waist”, I was incorrectly measuring my hips. My real waist measurement is 37!
Since you’ve lost four pounds you are now in the higher end of normal weight range for your height. Continue with strength training and healthful eating and you will feel and look better. Pelvises widens with age in women, there is loss of collagen/elasticity and genetic factors that determine fat deposition. I wouldn’t focus so much on waist measurement/visceral fat - exercise, eat healthy and focus on keeping your lipid profile within normal limits.
Anonymous wrote:Op again, I meant, when I originally measured my “waist”, I was incorrectly measuring my hips. My real waist measurement is 37!
Anonymous wrote:I think that number of inches, given the relatively modest amount of weight you need to lose, is probably unrealistic. My hunch is you'll lose 3-4 inches, but probably not six.
I struggle with that same number. I've lost a LOT of weight over the past 16 months, am now a healthy weight, and have lost 19 inches off my waist. And I'm still at 39inches. I can't imagine how much more weight I'd need to lose to get below 35, but am sure I would be uncomfortably/unhealthily skinny at whatever weight that took. (Or I'd need to have skin removal surgery.)
I've decided not to obsess about that particular number. Sounds like maybe you'll be in a similar position - pick which of the metrics correlates with optimal weight and health, and accept that you may not have "perfect" numbers across the board and that's ok.
Good luck!