I know food is everything, but is there been anything that helped you going down in weight other the food habits?

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    You have to figure out a diet you can comfortably maintain forever, eat for your target weight. It’s no use just losing weight, you have to stay at a healthy weight.

    So it’s going to be individual. For me, increased activity is the only factor, apparently I eat the same all the time. So walking everywhere or adding extra exercise works better.

    I had a friend who lost weight by just reduced portions - she literally just took 1/3 less of everything. Like left more space on her plate. And another who ate popcorn for supper. Regular breakfast, regular lunch, then in the evening just popcorn. So again was eating 2/3 of what she had been. But then you have to keep it that way to maintain the weight.

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Hyper-fixating on something keeps me away from the kitchen, for better or worse. Same with sleep ¯_(ツ)_/¯

  • marquisalex@feddit.uk
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    5 days ago

    I find it easier to maintain a hard no-snacking policy, than to try to reduce snacking but with case-by-case exceptions. Stick to eating at mealtimes only, rather than allowing yourself to rationalise that slice of cake (it’s a colleague’s birthday, rude not to), bag of chips (I only had a small lunch) or dozen donuts (they’ll go stale if I don’t eat them, that’s wasteful).

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Thats why Intermittent fasting works so well for some people. I’m great at absolutes, I can not eat way easier than I can just do small portions.

  • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I’m very, very susceptible to addiction, but the thing that makes it easiest for me to curb a habit is to pretend I’ve already moved past it. If I think about junk food, I intentionally think of overly sweet, salty and artificial foods and (internally) express my distaste. With smoking, I think of the smell of an ashtray in the rain; with drinking, I think of cleaning up day old beer with a hangover.

    Saying “I don’t really have a sweet tooth” is what made me lose my sweet tooth.

    • daddy32@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      This is very good strategy. Like the infamous “fake it till you make it”. But actually vocalizing it makes it even more powerful.

      If anyone remembers the movie Closer from 2004, there’s a scene where Clive Owen’s character refuses a cigarette while almost failing at it. He settles it with a phrase: “I’ve given up.”. You can see he is not completely sure about that, but now that he said it out loud, he made it true.

  • MoreFPSmorebetter@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Calories in must be less than calories out for weight loss to happen.

    Every other method is trying to sell you something.

    Better diet can absolutely help loads, but if you are eating 15 pounds of broccoli and fish a day it’s still too much fuel and not enough burn. You can definitely work out to burn some of that energy off but at some point you just have to eat less.

    I say this as a current fat person who has lost the weight and put it back on in his life.

    I eat my feelings away and I got BIG over the last few years. I was at 340 at my worst. I’m still overweight, but I’m slowly working on it again. It takes time and discipline. Two things I’m not great about.

    Person for me I like to start off with a fast of a day or two without any solid foods. Just water and maybe some tea or something. this helps me get over the appetite hump and my huge black hole or a stomach.

    If you stop eating huge meals your body will alter where it’s “I’m full” feeling is at. Unfortunately food is delicious and I push past that feeling all the time because it’s yummy God dammit lol.

    Weight loss is not a sprint. It’s a marathon. Don’t quit if you fall off the wagon. Just get back up and keep joggin.

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I’ve tried a dozen ways.

    All diets work, if you stick to them.

    Try a few and go with the one you find easiest to stick with.

    Long term you’ll have to figure out how to change your habits if you don’t want to stick on the diet forever. Or you’ll regain it again.

  • phoenixarise@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Drinking much more water instead of diet soda all the time. I’ve never felt so hydrated and sated in all my life.

  • daddy32@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Weighting every day at the same time. Using a smart weight that logs the measurements. Using software that smoothens out the readings, so you don’t stress about day to day changes. Don’t want to advertise, but combination of Withings scale and trendweight website works great for me. And ultimately, combination of fasting and exercise is ideal for me. Every calorie spent and every calorie not eaten helps.

  • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    Reading the labels on junk I’m tempted by helps me. That much sugar, really? How many calories?!? Palm oil, ugh. And wtf is pentasodium triphosphate?

    Also, when I buy a bag of carrots, I peel them and put them in the fridge, so when I feel snacky I can munch a crispy carrot.

  • Samsonreturns@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago
    1. Plain oats with chia seeds for breakfast (no more than a teaspoon of honey[real honey from bees or don’t bother] because you still need to enjoy food). Table spoon on Saturday

    2. this is dependent on your budget: Bananas are cheap AF. Eat one whenever you have a craving. Drink a glass of water, eat a banana, then take your supplements (fish oil and multi v) in the morning after oats

    2a) Apples/pears/berries. An apple can kill a craving for sweets so quickly. Plus the fiber will clean you out. Other fruit is more expensive and goes bad quickly. But seriously apples can help to be one of those fillers in your diet

    1. Tea. If you don’t drink black coffee, switch to tea. No need for sugar and milk, tea is pretty good on its own. More importantly, it tastes just as good cold

    2. Drink water. When I get up in the morning, I try to drink 1 1/2 pints of water. Then start breakfast. Just walked the dog? Chug a pint. Out of the shower? Slug a half pint. Cooking lunch? Drink a pint before you eat. Yes, you will pee a lot. But you skin will look better and you won’t have those moments of “shit, I need coffee” A pg* a

    3. Rice and Beans. Make one pot a week. Use oil instead of butter. Lots of beans. Chop up one large onion. Put equal parts quinoa to rice. Last a while and you can spice it or add hot sauce. Use it as a filler for eggs or chicken or whatever

    4. high volume food with low calorie density. Need a snack? Rice cakes, to raw carrots and celery, pickles, cucumber, . Chips and salsa is a good one

  • klemptor@startrek.website
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    5 days ago

    Track your calories, macros, and any micronutrients that you’re concerned about (e.g., sodium, fiber). Set a goal and stick to it. I use the LoseIt app and a digital kitchen scale.

    Drink a lot of water. Half your body weight (in lbs) in ounces. So if you weigh 130 lbs, drink 130 ÷ 2 = 65 oz of water daily. This is your baseline; add more for exercise. Don’t go overboard because too much water is bad for you.

    Aim for 45-60 minutes of vigorous exercise 3-4 times a week. I like weightlifting for this. On the other days, be active, but don’t push yourself too much. You need rest for recovery.

    After your workouts, don’t eat back all your calories, but do consider having something protein-heavy.

    Sleep. I can’t emphasize enough how important sleep is. Try to get 7-8 hours every night. This is the hardest one for me personally; I don’t have a ton of advice. But developing a bedtime routine helps.

    Weigh yourself every day first thing in the morning, after you’ve used the bathroom and before you’ve had anything to eat or drink, with no clothes on. I like my Withings scale because the app tracks my measurements over time.

    Have a mindset of lifestyle change - otherwise, if you go back to old habits, you’re likely to gain back any weight you lose.

    Good luck!

  • I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Eat less. It sounds obvious, I know. But prepare your meal as normal, divide it in half and put half in a container in the fridge. Eat the other half, then distract yourself for half an hour. If you’re still ravenous, heat up the other half and have it. But you probably won’t be. And you’ve got your next meal ready to go!

  • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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    6 days ago

    Not eating works pretty well, though I understand it’s probably harder for someone with a desire to eat.