I know this will sound odd but honestly don’t exercise. You don’t lose weight in the gym. You lose weight by being in a caloric deficit and you don’t burn much actually in the gym or running. If you want to exercise just go for a walk. Exercise makes you hungry and when you’re weak you give in and binge. Trust me I know.
Start tracking your calories for a solid week. Like everything that goes in your mouth…everything! Weight out your food so you know exactly what’s going in. Then drop calories a few hundred and stay there till you plateaued. Then drop a few hundred more. You’ll lose weight but will take a few weeks to get in that mode.
I used to think this was the total of it all. calories in vs calories out...gain, loose, or maintain depending on the balance. I have recently learned that is is A WHOLE LOT MORE COMPLICATED than that, and proven it to myself through experience. Our bodies are extremely complicated and on a cellular level process the energy in an very different ways depending on many variables that change.
Right on though about not burning as much calories through working out as you might think you should. I don't really believe that exerise makes me hungry. Seems to be much more to do with insulin levels...which are of course driven by carbs
I tracked my calories with an app myfitnesspal for a long time. It was the tool I used my second time on Contrave and it was key to a successful weight loss that time. The thing is, it was not the key to keeping it off. I loop that back to my belief now that metabolism is more complicated than that.
I will also add for those interested in counting calories and such.... I found a different app that seems to be even a bit better, called Cronometer. Seems to have a much better database of foods. Very good food and biometric tracker..
Low carb diets are about easily getting into process B. Staying there is a harder problem because our food systems are all about high carb, which is what puts all of us at risk. Carbs are a quick and easy to put energy in, so much so that we can easily get too much. Replace carbs with protein and fat (yes fat) and you'll feel full and lose weight. As weird as it sounds, when you're in mode B, you feel great and have lots of energy...but no stamina.
Agreed! I'd say that staying there isn't so hard eating at home. My wife and kids are not on board with this way of life so I have tons of carbs in the house....but it's still very easy for me to stay on track. It's eating out where it hard, and sometimes nearly impossible. The "standard American diet"...even the so called healthy versions...are just horrible..... if it's not carbs, it's vegetable oils, and it's stuff with antinutrients hidden inside
Thanks. I was using the word creamer generically. Some years ago I ditched the vegetable-oil based stuff, and tried all the alternatives; milk, half-and-half, butter, almond milk, powders, etc. Finally settled on soy-based as my preference.
Watch out with soy. I haven't gotten really deep into this area of plants yet but want to learn more (antinutrients, oxalates, phytates, etc.)....but I have heard a few docs and professors mention in lectures and interviews about soy and soy products being high in estrogen and killers of testosterone.
I heard it said that dairy is great for making a person fat. thinking about it, it's meant for making babies fat!
that said, the closer to the fat you get, the better it is for you.
whole milk better than low fat, but it's still high in carbs
half n half is what I used for years is better than whole milk, but still has high carbs
heavy cream is much better with almost no carbs.....
butter is best, because the process removes nearly all the carbs
and some cheeses are ok too, because the live cultures used convert the carbs...but I have found that even good cheeses still change my glucose levels...and I only eat them in small qties...