Anonymous wrote:If OP is telling the truth, it’s not sustainable in the long run.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:NP. One of my kids wears a step tracker and does 20k-30k steps a day so I believe OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s interesting that so many people are falling for what is so obviously a troll post.
It is possible to eat 700-800 cals a day for a while but it is very hard to maintain. There are people who do it for longevity and they are always cranky.
What gives OP away is doing 30k steps for less than 4 hours LOL
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s interesting that so many people are falling for what is so obviously a troll post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No questions but most people are going to be very frail after doing that. I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone.
OP here. I am not recommending this to anyone, but as for myself, I am far from frail, I feel and look great, my labs are fantastic and I am looking forward to my walks every day. I am no more completely invisible and I just fit comfortably into my size 28 jeans that I haven't worn in 15 years. I can suddenly climb many stairs and steep hills easily where I used to struggle with a floor or two.
I experienced exactly zero pain over the past 5 months. I was always good at walking, could walk long distances where people who were much more fit would complain - I just wasn't doing it enough and consistently. When I reach my goal weight I plan to maintain at least 20k steps, though to be honest, on days when I only do that much (e.g. travel etc), I feel like I want to walk more.
You are not walking "30,000" steps a day.
Absolutely possible!! I do it all the time. Walk with intention in the morning.. desk job during the day but up for walk breaks occasionally... evening walk after dinner. At least 30k steps a day. And no it did not take me 4 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No questions but most people are going to be very frail after doing that. I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone.
OP here. I am not recommending this to anyone, but as for myself, I am far from frail, I feel and look great, my labs are fantastic and I am looking forward to my walks every day. I am no more completely invisible and I just fit comfortably into my size 28 jeans that I haven't worn in 15 years. I can suddenly climb many stairs and steep hills easily where I used to struggle with a floor or two.
I experienced exactly zero pain over the past 5 months. I was always good at walking, could walk long distances where people who were much more fit would complain - I just wasn't doing it enough and consistently. When I reach my goal weight I plan to maintain at least 20k steps, though to be honest, on days when I only do that much (e.g. travel etc), I feel like I want to walk more.
You are not walking "30,000" steps a day.
Anonymous wrote:I haven’t read past the reply where OP said they’re eating 700 calories a day and walking 30K steps.
For others who want hope, I’m losing at a rate of 1-1.5lbs a week without GLP-1 and I’m in perimenopause. I do walk around 20K steps a day but I also eat at least 1700 calories. Most of the time, I only eat whole unprocessed foods that I cook myself. Some times I don’t and I eat a bag of Cheetos. If it fits in my calories and it’s occasional, I don’t sweat it. I do make it a rule to get 100g of protein and well over 25mg of fiber. Those two things keeps super full. It’s been 7 weeks, and I’ve lost 10 lbs. I feel great, and what I’m doing is sustainable. No shade to folks on GLP-1s—I was just below the cutoff BMI and decided that I’d try to do it on my own first and, if it didn’t work, I’d pay out of pocket for the drugs. So far so good—it is possible to lose weight at age 50 with just good old diet and exercise!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn’t you use a GLP 1?
OP here. i tried it and it didn't work for me. i ended up heavier than when i started. i do have a stash that i will use in emergency.
If it didn't work then why on earth do you need an emergency stash?
...To stay skinny?
But they didn't. work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn’t you use a GLP 1?
OP here. i tried it and it didn't work for me. i ended up heavier than when i started. i do have a stash that i will use in emergency.
If it didn't work then why on earth do you need an emergency stash?
...To stay skinny?