How To Lose Weight

Re: How To Loose Weight

I avoid too many meals. Skip breakfast and lunch. Maybe a piece of pumpkin pie in the afternoon. I can easily loose 1 lb in a day if all I eat is pumpkin pie. If something else like a burger, I keep the portions reasonable for dinner. Then, I can eat as many pineapple Popsicles as I like and still maintain or lose. Once a week or so, I may go out for Mexican food. I find that can easily gain 4 lbs in one day just from that. It then takes at least two days of minimal intake to get back where I started.

Now, if I am spending most of the day out shoveling snow or cutting, splitting and stacking firewood, or pruning and burning tree debris, or other such work, then I'll either lose a lot more, or will need to eat more.

So, if you work hard physically, you can eat more or lose more, whichever you chose. If you sit around, you will either need to eat less, or accept the gains.
I hope you're kidding with the first paragraph!:yikes: That is not a healthy eating pattern!

I certainly agree with the third, though.
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

I hope you're kidding with the first paragraph!:yikes: That is not a healthy eating pattern!

I certainly agree with the third, though.

Honestly, I do the same. At least I normally skip breakfast anyway, I never eat more than two meals a day. My body automatically rejects the third.

Yes I know that doctors and dieticians advise against that, but it works for me. It especially works okay if you maintain a low carb diet as the whole digestion process is slowed down. I find two things wrong with eating several, small portions of food during the day:

1. It's very difficult to control total calories. It's easy to lose control of your total count if you're snacking all day long. Secondly small meals don't fill me up. If I split one meal in to two or three, I remain hungry and tend to overeat. If I same them all and eat them once, I'm happy at least once or twice during the day.

2. Dieticians say eating several small meals leads to more efficient digestion than eating less larger ones. Think about that. If your goal is to lose weight, you want the digestion process to be inefficient, not efficient.
 
I go to a "boot camp" class 3x a week at 6am-- it's great and gives you a lot of energy for the rest of the day, believe it or not. I also try to get to yoga 2x a week. And I stupidly agreed to run a half marathon, so I'm being forced to train for that. (Yes, there's a gun to my head, look really closely, you'll see it).

But ask me again in a few months and we'll see if I've gone back to my slacker ways, lol.
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

Carb restriction really worked for me when all else failed. I will start to incorporate high fiber complex carb stuff like oat bran or beans into my diet when I get to the maintenance phase. I now realize that sugar (in all of its various forms) is poison.

Gary... "Maintenance Phase" has a system approach ring / medical ring to it. Can you or will you elaborate? Is this a program you would like to share? I'm sure there are others curious about yyour life altering success.
 
I go to a "boot camp" class 3x a week at 6am-- it's great and gives you a lot of energy for the rest of the day, believe it or not. I also try to get to yoga 2x a week. And I stupidly agreed to run a half marathon, so I'm being forced to train for that. (Yes, there's a gun to my head, look really closely, you'll see it).

But ask me again in a few months and we'll see if I've gone back to my slacker ways, lol.

"Boot Camp" classes? :rofl:

I don't mean to laugh, but I find it funny that people pay to go to bootcamp. Heck when I went to boot camp they paid me!.... :rofl: :mad2: But I could not leave. ;)

There is one of those near my house. Looks like fun, but I did my time. ;)
 
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Re: How To Loose Weight

Gary... "Maintenance Phase" has a system approach ring / medical ring to it. Can you or will you elaborate? Is this a program you would like to share? I'm sure there are others curious about yyour life altering success.

Any weight loss program will have a maintenance phase. You can't loose weight forever, so you require a point where you stabilize your weight. Your diet and/or activities will have to be altered to accommodate this. Like I said, the tough part is keeping it off.
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

Any weight loss program will have a maintenance phase. You can't loose weight forever, so you require a point where you stabilize your weight. Your diet and/or activities will have to be altered to accommodate this. Like I said, the tough part is keeping it off.

Yea, but Gary has lost weight. You need to so I ain't listening to you! :rofl:
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

Gary... "Maintenance Phase" has a system approach ring / medical ring to it. Can you or will you elaborate? Is this a program you would like to share? I'm sure there are others curious about yyour life altering success.
Any weight loss program will have a maintenance phase. You can't loose weight forever, so you require a point where you stabilize your weight. Your diet and/or activities will have to be altered to accommodate this. Like I said, the tough part is keeping it off.
Well that's about it. I need to be careful not to fall back into my previous bad dietary habits. My main strategy will be to weigh myself daily, track calories and carbs. I will continue to abstain from sugar, strictly limit simple carbs (refined wheat products, potatoes and other starchy vegetables) and avoid junk food and as much as possible. I will increase my consumption of most vegetables and legumes.
 
I was very successful last year mixing diet tracking with this iPhone App...

http://www.tapandtrack.com/home/index

And a serious commitment to getting to the gym.

Then somewhere along the way I got busy and the habit got de-railed. I was down 30 lbs at the peak of that, and I've probably put it all back on now.

I also have done one round of P90X and really did enjoy it -- we moved things around and the upstairs room I was using isn't set up well to do it right now, but I'm about to go reconfigure it again, even if the Mrs. complains.

She wasn't into the P90X thing as much as I was... she prefers cranking away on an elliptical machine at the gym... which also worked fine for me, but was too boring.

The biggest problem I have is the time commitment. But I'll be dead if I don't get back to it, I figure...

I know it sounds girly -- but anyone want to start a thread for PoA'ers working on weight loss? Positive reinforcement is a Good Thing(TM). :)
 
"Boot Camp" classes? :rofl:

I don't mean to laugh, but I find it funny that people pay to go to bootcamp. Heck when I went to boot camp they paid me!.... :rofl: :mad2: But I could not leave. ;)

There is one of those near my house. Looks like fun, but I did my time. ;)


+100. I can still hear my DI's voice telling me to "pay attention to detail". Since it's saved my butt on several occasions, I don't mind.
 
While we're on this, can someone explain something that's always bugged me about our bodies.

With a few exceptions, weightloss is generally kCal out > kCal in over time. When I convert the pounds I'd like to lose into kCal (~3500 kCal/lb) I can get the total number of kCal to burn and/or not consume over time. By that math I contain enough energy to workout a long long time as long as I stay hydrated.

In theory I should be able to sacrifice a handful of weekends, paddle around most of the day, and force my body to burn fat until I near my desired weight. I tried that, but after several hours of what I expected to be a sustainable rate I'm just out of energy for the day. I'm still confused because it felt like I had a set amount of "usable energy" per day despite working at a reasonable pace.

Does this limit significantly increase overtime?
 
While we're on this, can someone explain something that's always bugged me about our bodies.

With a few exceptions, weightloss is generally kCal out > kCal in over time. When I convert the pounds I'd like to lose into kCal (~3500 kCal/lb) I can get the total number of kCal to burn and/or not consume over time. By that math I contain enough energy to workout a long long time as long as I stay hydrated.

In theory I should be able to sacrifice a handful of weekends, paddle around most of the day, and force my body to burn fat until I near my desired weight. I tried that, but after several hours of what I expected to be a sustainable rate I'm just out of energy for the day. I'm still confused because it felt like I had a set amount of "usable energy" per day despite working at a reasonable pace.

Does this limit significantly increase overtime?

I am sure there are people who know more about this than me on the board, but during my marathon training, I learned that you have about 3 hours of glycogen in your muscles, which get burned first, and then your body switches to fat. I believe, during exercise, that you can process and metabolize about 200 calories an hour (usually eating those energy gels), but you are burning closer to 800 to 1000 calories an hour (at least when running). Hence, you hit the "wall" after about 3 hours.
 
While we're on this, can someone explain something that's always bugged me about our bodies.

With a few exceptions, weightloss is generally kCal out > kCal in over time. When I convert the pounds I'd like to lose into kCal (~3500 kCal/lb) I can get the total number of kCal to burn and/or not consume over time. By that math I contain enough energy to workout a long long time as long as I stay hydrated.

In theory I should be able to sacrifice a handful of weekends, paddle around most of the day, and force my body to burn fat until I near my desired weight. I tried that, but after several hours of what I expected to be a sustainable rate I'm just out of energy for the day. I'm still confused because it felt like I had a set amount of "usable energy" per day despite working at a reasonable pace.

Does this limit significantly increase overtime?

It's not quite so simple. You have a large energy reserve in your bloodstream (glycogen) which acts as a buffer. Once that is depleted, it has to be replentished by digestion and/or fat metabolism which is a slow process unless you happen to be eating sugar or simple carbohydrates. A "sustainable rate" is not much above the basal metabolic rate.

You can bolster your basal and sustained metabolic rate by doing anerobic cardio exercises over a period of time.
 
Hopefully, this thread will be the inspiration someone here needs to take a look in the mirror and your bathroom scale and say; "Today, is the day I decide to do something about my weight."
 
Dah, though it takes a considerable degree of commitment to loose weight and keep it off, especially in our calorie rich society. We're the only society in the history of the world where the poor people are fat and the rich people thin.
 
Hopefully, this thread will be the inspiration someone here needs to take a look in the mirror and your bathroom scale and say; "Today, is the day I decide to do something about my weight."

"Today is the day I stop looking in the mirror or at the bathroom scale."
:wink2:
 
It's not quite so simple. You have a large energy reserve in your bloodstream (glycogen) which acts as a buffer. Once that is depleted, it has to be replentished by digestion and/or fat metabolism which is a slow process unless you happen to be eating sugar or simple carbohydrates. A "sustainable rate" is not much above the basal metabolic rate.

You can bolster your basal and sustained metabolic rate by doing anerobic cardio exercises over a period of time.

I stand corrected.
 
I am sure there are people who know more about this than me on the board, but during my marathon training, I learned that you have about 3 hours of glycogen in your muscles, which get burned first, and then your body switches to fat. I believe, during exercise, that you can process and metabolize about 200 calories an hour (usually eating those energy gels), but you are burning closer to 800 to 1000 calories an hour (at least when running). Hence, you hit the "wall" after about 3 hours.

I stand corrected.

No, that's about right.
 
It's not quite so simple. You have a large energy reserve in your bloodstream (glycogen) which acts as a buffer.

Just to be more precise: Most of the glycogen is stored in muscle cells and the liver, not the bloodstream. Glycogen is similar to starch and a means for short-term storage of energy within cells. Energy is shuffled between the different participants in the form of glucose and to some extent in fatty acids.
 
Just to be more precise: Most of the glycogen is stored in muscle cells and the liver, not the bloodstream. Glycogen is similar to starch and a means for short-term storage of energy within cells. Energy is shuffled between the different participants in the form of glucose and to some extent in fatty acids.

Correct. I made an oversimplification.
 
When I started flying I was 310lbs, at 14. The CFI thought I was lighter. He then lied to me and said "pilots can't be over 250lbs."

This is a great lie!

If I was going anywhere, bike or walk. (About 2-4 miles a day)
Candy money went to flying money. I'm now your pre-weight watchers weight.

Easiest way that I can think of?

Buy a new airplane. Factory new. Get a payday loan for the full amount. I understand that stress helps.
 
When I started flying I was 310lbs, at 14. The CFI thought I was lighter. He then lied to me and said "pilots can't be over 250lbs."

This is a great lie!

If I was going anywhere, bike or walk. (About 2-4 miles a day)
Candy money went to flying money. I'm now your pre-weight watchers weight.

Easiest way that I can think of?

Buy a new airplane. Factory new. Get a payday loan for the full amount. I understand that stress helps.

And don't tell your spouse... add some more stress worrying about when he/she finds out.
 
When I started flying I was 310lbs, at 14. The CFI thought I was lighter. He then lied to me and said "pilots can't be over 250lbs."

This is a great lie!

If I was going anywhere, bike or walk. (About 2-4 miles a day)
Candy money went to flying money. I'm now your pre-weight watchers weight.

Easiest way that I can think of?

Buy a new airplane. Factory new. Get a payday loan for the full amount. I understand that stress helps.

It could backfire; many people eat when they are stressed (comfort food).
 
I eat a diet so convoluted & complex that it results in fewer calories.

No red meat. I eat fish, eggs, or beans for protien.

No milk or cheese dairy it's all just fat.

I avoid processed foods and usually eat fresh veggies, fresh fruit, fresh fish. Never frozen fish, I want to be able to smell it before buying it.

No added sugar or salt.

No frozen meals, no canned soups, very little from large commercial chemical plants. Exceptions are too much bread and pasta, that I really need to quit.

You don't digest pasta or bread, they just dissolve and change to sugar.

I use the philosophy that just because some marketing person calls it a food, doesn't mean it really is a food or anything that belongs in you mouth.

I drink water, coffee, tea, have a water distiller so it doesn't taste like Clorox.

I believe I have an acid reflux problem that I make worse with too much coffee. When my stomach feels sour, I tend to put food in it. If I don't get enough sleep, I noticed I will want to eat to stay awake. I work on a computer all day, that doesn't help.

I do workout at least 4 days a week, usually more. I have swim days and strength days. I swim about 3 miles a week. Most other exercises are core strength and light weight lifting.
 
I eat a diet so convoluted & complex that it results in fewer calories.

No red meat. I eat fish, eggs, or beans for protien.

No milk or cheese dairy it's all just fat.

I avoid processed foods and usually eat fresh veggies, fresh fruit, fresh fish. Never frozen fish, I want to be able to smell it before buying it.

No added sugar or salt.

No frozen meals, no canned soups, very little from large commercial chemical plants. Exceptions are too much bread and pasta, that I really need to quit.

You don't digest pasta or bread, they just dissolve and change to sugar.

I use the philosophy that just because some marketing person calls it a food, doesn't mean it really is a food or anything that belongs in you mouth.

I drink water, coffee, tea, have a water distiller so it doesn't taste like Clorox.

I believe I have an acid reflux problem that I make worse with too much coffee. When my stomach feels sour, I tend to put food in it. If I don't get enough sleep, I noticed I will want to eat to stay awake. I work on a computer all day, that doesn't help.

I do workout at least 4 days a week, usually more. I have swim days and strength days. I swim about 3 miles a week. Most other exercises are core strength and light weight lifting.
What are you trying to tell us here? Have you been successful in losing weight? I have lost another 4 lbs since my post in this thread on the 2nd of Feb. and have lost a total of 60 lbs. Carb restriction really works for me. I'm not sure what to think about your diet. I noticed an inaccuracy above, you really digest bread and pasta, that's the problem. The turning into sugar part is accurate.
 
Have you been successful in losing weight? I noticed an inaccuracy above, you really digest bread and pasta, that's the problem.

I went from about 250 to 234 doing this. I haven't been on the scales in a few weeks.

Regarding digestion, I guess it's all in how you define it. Those are heavily processed foods not found in nature. If you leave them in a pan of water, they just dissolve. In your stomach, they are converted into sugars very rapidly, in a way not distinguishable from refined sugar.

Honestly, I don't really know if it's that much different from eating an apple, but I'll eat the apple and wish I could kick the pasta and bread altogether.

I don't believe the materials produced in industrial kitchens is very healthy.

I'm trying to adopt a diet reminiscent of a seaside agricultural culture. We all get to choose our own wingnut dietary course. That's mine, I didn't even need to buy a trendy book.
 
...I'm trying to adopt a diet reminiscent of a seaside agricultural culture...

The downside: To be successful using this strategy for weight loss/maintenance, you may also have to adopt the exercise regimen of outdoor, physical labor from dawn to dusk!
 
I go to a "boot camp" class 3x a week at 6am-- it's great and gives you a lot of energy for the rest of the day, believe it or not. I also try to get to yoga 2x a week. And I stupidly agreed to run a half marathon, so I'm being forced to train for that. (Yes, there's a gun to my head, look really closely, you'll see it).

But ask me again in a few months and we'll see if I've gone back to my slacker ways, lol.

Half marathons can be daunting but the one I just did was FUN too!

My cousin and sister didn't put a gun to my head but, just about. They were all talking about a girls weekend in Disneyland (HECK YEA I WANT TO GO), but I couldn't go if I didn't run the Tinkerbell 1/2 marathon and it had a pace car at a 16 minute mile, and if you fall behind the pace car you get picked up!

So I DID IT!!!! and at the start I was trying to keep the attitude that I had lost 40 lbs and ran hundreads of miles to get to the start line, I had already won the race before I crossed the start line!

I lost the weight by watching my intake and working out more. Did a modified "low carb" as well. Kicked out most of bread and pasta, less then 2-3 servings a week.
 
We keep almost no processed foods in the house. No junk food, no frozen meals, no meals in a box. Dairy products are either non fat or low fat. Splenda or Stevia in place of refined sugar. In our house, if you want to eat, you have to prepare it. You can't just grab something out of the freezer and stick it in the microwave for 5 minutes.

I bake my own breads. I have a garden that is three times the square footage of my house. We do cook meats, but only once or twice a week.

Protein shake for breakfast, tuna for lunch (or egg salad, no bread).

Lots of fresh veggies and fruit.

Kettlebells rock. Spouse is a little more, ummm.. anal about exercising than I am, but the guy is 60 years old and can still do 20 pull ups every morning (usually two or three sets of them) and does snatches with a 65 lb bell.

I do have my moments of weakness. Single malt scotch. Hard cider. Whipped cream on a skinny iced mocha. Hot Tamales (usually when I'm down in the shop working on a bike).
 
Well, after reading over this thread, I'll admit that you guys have inspired me. Today I began a low-carb diet and I'm hoping to lose about 30 pounds. I'm looking at it as a good way to gain useful load in my plane.
 
Well, after reading over this thread, I'll admit that you guys have inspired me. Today I began a low-carb diet and I'm hoping to lose about 30 pounds. I'm looking at it as a good way to gain useful load in my plane.

Congratulations.

Be sure to accompany the diet with increased exercise, it's the combination that makes a difference.
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

The point where I reached my heaviest and decided I'd better do something about it I used Atkins and lost 53 pounds.

Atkins diet will kill you. The man who invented it died of a heart attack.

I personally dont have a weight issue (ya know being active and all) but I stay the hell away from artificial sweeteners. They may be "diet" but they also give you cancer. They are 0 calories because your body cannot process the extraordinarily unnatural substances in it and thus the cells mutate. Calories or not, sugar beats artificial sweeteners. The best is the more unrefined sugar that takes even longer to breakdown.

Diet pepsi and coke have also been linked to early onset dementia.
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

Atkins diet will kill you. The man who invented it died of a heart attack.

I personally dont have a weight issue (ya know being active and all) but I stay the hell away from artificial sweeteners. They may be "diet" but they also give you cancer. They are 0 calories because your body cannot process the extraordinarily unnatural substances in it and thus the cells mutate. Calories or not, sugar beats artificial sweeteners. The best is the more unrefined sugar that takes even longer to breakdown.

Diet pepsi and coke have also been linked to early onset dementia.

We're also both teenagers with really high metabolisms
 
Re: How To Loose Weight

Atkins diet will kill you. The man who invented it died of a heart attack.
Running will kill you. Jim Fixx died of a heart attack at 52. (Yes, it's an absurd association to make. So is the one above, especially since that one contains a false statement.

And Atkins did not die of a heart attack, and he was 72 when he died, though he did have cardiomyopathy.
http://lowcarbdiets.about.com/od/atkinsdiet/a/dratkinsdeath.htm said:
On April 8, 2003, at age 72, Dr. Atkins slipped on the ice while walking to work, hitting his head and causing bleeding around his brain. He lost consciousness on the way to the hospital, where he spent two weeks in intensive care. His body deteriorated rapidly and he suffered massive organ failure. During this time, his body apparently retained an enormous amount of fluid, and his weight at death was recorded at 258 pounds. His death certificate states that the cause of death was "blunt impact injury of head with epidural hematoma".

See also http://www.snopes.com/medical/doctor/atkins.asp
 
I had a friend pass away when he had a seizure at home and fell face first into the floor.

He was building an airplane with the help of one of his friends. I believe the Estate made his friend "a deal you can't refuse".

His seizures started after falling on ice and a head injury.

I believe his prognosis was that they might clear up on their own eventually, which is probably why he continued work on the airplane.

Never got a chance to ask him. You just don't know when your number is up.
 
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