Been a pilot for 30-years. Been heavy for 20. Obese at least 15 years.
49 year old male. 5'6" 255 lbs. been as low as 215 during height of COVID and as high as 265 in March.
Job and family schedule create a lot of stress / anxiety and not much free time.
Most of the scientific research says you can't lose more than about 10lbs and keep it off. Like meaningfully less than 1%.
I'm curious if anyone has pulled it off here. Where you aren't selling a health coach plan or supplements etc.
About to turn 50 and really dislike myself and looks/feeling. Stress snacker. No alcohol or pop/sugary drinks to cut out. 99% of liquid consumed is water. Desk job about 70-hrs a week.
I know this isn't a warm friendly place, but it's real and I need help.
My own story - 275 -> 240 on diet. I'm not great at this either. I probably could have lost more, but my doctor put me on Mounjaro for T2 diabetes and a side effect is losing another 30 lbs. (and blood chemistry that looks like non-diabetes)
You're not going to like some of this, but you know you need to change.
I'm a big proponent of low carb, I'm just not sure it's a easy lifestyle to sustain. But there is truth in what it's about. In order to lose weight, your body has to go into an energy deficiency. There's two processes at work:
A) high carb food -> Hey, it's a time of plenty -> insulin -> store as fat -> weight gain.
B) Low carb food -> it's scarcity time -> ketones -> fat becomes energy -> weight loss.
A is what we naturally would do living off the land during summer and fall. B is the winter time mode when food is scarcer, we live partially off the fat in our bodies. For eons, humans have been through this as an annual cycle, but today we never get to B.
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.
Fat is important because it makes you feel full. If you don't believe that, sit down and eat a bag of chips - you could easily eat another one. Now think of sitting down and eating a stick of butter. You'll never finish it because you're going to feel full long before you get it down. The bag of chips has 1200 calories in it and you want more. The stick of butter has about 800 and you can't finish it. Don't be afraid of fat.
All diets obey this A/B process rule. There is a threshold where you'll start losing weight, a range where you won't lose or gain, and a threshold where you gain weight. Exercise and activity will move those ranges up so you can eat more easily - by raising activity, you shift that point of energy deficiency. So the goal is to lower carbs enough that you lose weight, keep it there until you are at a good weight, then move into the middle range. Monitor your weight daily and if you get 5 lbs off your goal, cut back again until you're back to the right weight.
Steps
#1 get up and move. Yeah, I get the desk job, I do it too. You have to make time to get out and do something. Nobody is going to fault you for taking 30-60 minutes daily to take care of yourself.
Block the time on your work calendar, everyone will just think it's another meeting, then get out and do something.
#2
replace the snacks with something healthier. Instead of chips and cookies, try cut up vegetables or cheese. But that also means I eat less of them.
#3
go low(er) carb. Functionally, when our bodies have an excess of blood sugar, insulin kicks in to store that as fat. If you cut back 5 foods, you'll do better - flour, sugar, rice, pasta, potatoes. Think of meals as a salad, protein, and veggie. Steak is on the menu.
#4 relearn what hunger really is.
What you think is hunger is probably a sugar craving, which is leading you to gain weight and to T2 diabetes. Eat when your stomach grumbles, not when you're bored, stressed, or feel like you should.
Last, wisdom from the military -
Embrace the suck.