In addition to the ideas above, what is working for me is tracking quantity of Calories eaten and quantities of calories burned by exercise. Deduct burned from consumed and work to keep the net total close to or slightly below 1500.
It takes 3500 calories burned to consume a pound of fat. If 2000 calories a day was the former target, 500 less calories x 7 days sets you up for a healthy loss of 1 pound a week.
An app for both iphone and droid, and their really well done website, I can recommend is LoseIt! (
www.LoseIt.com). App makes it simple to track intake and burn, and keep on track. I'm eating what I want, not starving, but learning to replace the junk with better food choices. And have upped the exercise to 30-45 minutes per day x 6 days a week.
End result is that I am down 2 lbs per month since January and am getting close to rejoining the less than 200# club.
App has a full featured free version and a paid version. Paid unlocks more goal tracking and increased connectivity to electronic health monitors like FitBit and Withings that help improve the calorie tracking algorithm
LoseIt!'s online community is really supportive. Lots of folks helping others understand how to make the most of the program and answer health related questions. You can form buddy lists and participate in challenges around eating healthier and exercising more.
The surgical procedures are enjoying a boom of media attention right now. But IMO, this is our culture continuing to turn to another form of "magic pill, don't want to work for it" method. I know of more than one person whom the invasive procedure backfired and really screwed their health up badly. One was an aspiring commercial pilot who was messed over so bad, she can is unable to hold a medical.
As others said, it can be done without surgery. You just need to make better choices from both a nutrition and exercise angle.