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How to lose 5+ pounds

Lucky$trike

Bluelighter
Joined
Dec 2, 2007
Messages
302
Location
Chandler, AZ
I'm looking for a heathly, cheap way to lose 5 or more pounds. I'm a 5'8" 130lb female. Last winter at my skinniest I was 117lbs but I was probably averaging around 119. I would be happy losing 5, maybe even 10. People say that they don't even see 5 pounds on me, but I notice the difference.

I suck at exercising, ok at dieting. I don't know why I was so skinny last year. I think it was because I wasn't eating out at all and now my boyfriend takes me out practically every night but I always try to order something healthy.

Help me guys!! What works? I need a plan that I can follow =D
 
Sodium has very little to do with body weight and even the most extreme restriction only lowers water retention, not body fat.

To lose fat, it's very simple. Carbohydrate control. Eliminate simple, processed carbs from your diet, and minimize the complex carbs. Do this by avoiding sugars, and replacing grains, beans and potatoes with green vegetables.
 
I wrestled in high school and would lose 10+ lbs in a few days, to make weight. We would have 3 hour practices in a heated wrestling room and I would lose 5+ in a practice.

If I were you, I would:

Do 45 minutes of intense cardio, like on a tredmill or elliptical 4-5x's a week.

Eat light, drink a lot of water,, no pop!

And see where that takes you... GL:)
 
I'm looking for a heathly, cheap way to lose 5 or more pounds. I'm a 5'8" 130lb female. Last winter at my skinniest I was 117lbs but I was probably averaging around 119. I would be happy losing 5, maybe even 10. People say that they don't even see 5 pounds on me, but I notice the difference.

I suck at exercising, ok at dieting. I don't know why I was so skinny last year. I think it was because I wasn't eating out at all and now my boyfriend takes me out practically every night but I always try to order something healthy.

Help me guys!! What works? I need a plan that I can follow =D

I recently lost 20lbs in about one month recently. Since just before the holidays, I stopped my diet and exercising and have not gained a pound back yet. I'm guessing my metabolism is still jacked up so it's keeping me at the weight I obtained, but that won't last forever.

Today marks me restarting the diet/exercise that I was doing.

Before the diet there were the facts:

  • I weighed more than ever before, 197lbs. Since I've been 18years old i've been between 160-170.
  • I was drinking 1-2 redbulls a day (8oz - 12oz)
  • I was drinking 2 20oz Mt Dews a day, sometimes 3
  • I was drinking about 4-8 full beers every night
  • I did not eat breakfast, ever.
  • I ate lunch out at various fast food places, 2-4 times a week
  • I was eating dinner out about 3-4 times a week (usually fried bar food).
  • I did not exercise at all. My daily routine involved sitting behind a computer at work all day, and sitting behind a computer or tv when I got home.. most of the time.

Things I changed:
  • I kicked the sodas to the curb. I slipped up maybe a handful of times. Furthermore I kicked caffeine to the curb as a whole in order to keep myself from slipping up to go back to caffeine. Since the holidays I've gone back to them in full force. Today is day one again without them.
  • The initial intention was to stay with zero-cal and zero-carb drinks. Crystal Light would've worked, but I stayed with only water the entire time. No tea, no juices, no milk, no sodas, nothing. Just water. Most of people's calorie intake is done via liquid consumption. We've been mentally trained to beware of high fat, high cal, high carb foods, but most people don't apply that same thinking to their liquid intake.
  • I stopped drinking for the most part. I slipped up here about 4-5 times as well, but stuck with MGD64, Mich Ultra or other low cal low carb beers.
  • My meals changed severely. And I didn't eat less, I ate more. This will take a bit more explanation.

Meals

  • The majority of my diet became fruits and vegetables. I generally tried to stay with negative calorie vegetables and fruits. (Foods that require more calories to process than they contain).
  • I also jacked up the protein in my diet. I took a whey protein shake once a day after working out. I took creatine supplements once before workout, once after. I tried my best to stay away from really fatty meats ( burgers, bbq, ribs, etc.. ) and stayed more with baked chicken, seafood, etc. I avoided gravies, spreads, butter, and whatever else people try to put on healthy food to make them "better".
  • I began eating breakfast and this is where I would consume any foods heavy in carbs (Cereal, oatmeal, etc.) I made sure only to consume one serving.
  • I cut out a number of things. No fast food, period. No fried food. No microwavable food. No pasta. I cut out bread entirely. and opted to make my own wraps with wraps or soft tortilla shells.
  • I ate 5 small meals a day. I learned portions sizes. If i ate cereal, it was one literal cups of cereal and a 1/2 cup of skim milk for instance. I'd have a carb for breakfast, a fruit for a 10am snack, a small wrap (usually with turkey) for lunch at 12. A veggie again at about 2 or 3pm. Upon leaving work I'd immediately go to work out. 30 min after working out I would eat dinner. I tried to make sure dinner was early (before 7:30pm). Eating more often, but smaller portion-controlled meals raises your metabolism, on top of working out there is nothing more powerful you can do than this.
  • Even if you do this and you're eating more often, I promise, you will experience more hunger pains than if you're used to 2 meals a day that are crappy for you. Using veggies or fruit as a snack as well.
  • The initial plan was to go out to dinner once a week and have it be some place I've never eaten at before in order to keep things interesting. I ended up not sticking to that and just not going out, with 2-3 exceptions.
  • I looked up recipe's and such and attempted to really take joy in what i ate at dinner while maintaining that the food be healthy. Nothing can be as boring as healthy food, so you gotta try your best to find recipe's and seasonings to keep it interesting.
  • I took a multivitamin every day.

Exercise
  • mainly i used my apartment complex's gym and some free weights at home
  • I worked out every single day, I switched up what muscle groups I worked out and rotated that between 5 different workouts so I would never injure any particular muscle group. I created a spreadsheet detailing each day's exercise for the week.
  • The only thing I did every day was cardio and crunches. I do cardio for 30 minutes every day, at least. Usually a bike or a elliptical. Sometimes a treadmill. A treadmill would be best, but starting off at 30 min a day and not being used to constant exercise, the few times I did it I pulled muscles and it forced me to use an exercise bike for a week. The bike will burn less calories per minute than all other options, jogging will burn the most, the elliptical is in between. Of course, if you hurt yourself, you won't be burning any so i stayed with the elliptical generally to reduce impact.
  • I did about 60-80 crunches/situps a day
  • after cardio and crunches, i lifted for an additional 20-30 minutes. Every exercise that I did, I did 3 sets. The first set is at 12 repetitions, the second set the weight is increased and done for 10 repetitions. The 3rd set the weight is increased again and done for 8 repetitions. If you're looking to burn weight rather than build muscle, I'd go for lower weights, and more repetitions. I was looking to lose weight and build muscle simultaneously.
  • On the weekends, I did cardio twice a day on top of the lifting.

It worked well, but i was hell for a while. Caffeine headaches, adjusting to not having even half the sugar intake as normal. Every day in terms of times i was eating and when i had to work out and when dinner had to be eaten by, made my days incredibly structured to the point it was a bit irritating. I got somewhat burnt out by the time the holidays rolled around and I could see getting burnt out again. But this time around I'll have to keep myself busy as I'll be stopping smoking this time as well.

I'm not expert, but this worked for me. 20lbs in a month is fast as hell. Most sites I was reading suggested losing that amount in 2 months was do-able but difficult. Take it as you will.

My way of doing it also saved me a ton of money. Trips to the store for drinks were cut out, gas money from traveling at lunch time was reduced, i literally saved over 100 bucks a week in cutting out alcohol, and more than a 100 a week by not going out to restaurants for dinner.

My suggestions/warnings:

Beware of anything that claims to be healthy, non-fat, etc. Look at the nutrition label. Check the sugars, trans fats, calories, sodium, carbs, etc. Compare it to others. I didn't eat a single thing that touted itself as health food. The majority of my food purchases was done in the meat department and the produce section, and the spice asile. If it comes prepackaged by some Conglo Food Corporation, chances are there's a health catch somewhere.

Don't listen to miracle diets that tell you to cut all carbs. Or all fat. Or reduce your carlorie intake to some stupidly low level. They might work temporarily, but they're not making you healthy and the minute you stop these diets the weight comes back. Do not do some stupid corporate sponsored diet either. (Slim Fast, Weight Watchers, etc..) There's no reason to pay for what you can do on your own, probably better than what they're suggesting you do with their products.

When you work out....WORK OUT. I know there's days you go walking into the gym and you think.."meh, i'll shave 10 min off my cardio, i'll do less reps than i'm supposed to. I'm tired, i don't feel like it, i'll make up for it tomorrow". Bullshit. Push yourself through it. If you're muscles aren't slightly sore the next day, (note.. i said slightly) then you're doing it wrong. Don't go overboard with it though, learn to know your limits. Push yourself a little one day, if there's not the slightest bit of soreness, the next time you do that workout push it more than before. Just don't push to the point you hurt yourself.

Lastly, try to have a regular sleep schedule with 7-8 hours of sleep. Try to go to bed relatively the same time every night and wake up the same time every day.

Keep a chart to keep track of progress, it'll motivate you when you screw up and it'll reward you when you achieve what you want.

If you're looking for an easy healthy way to do it, I'm sorry to say, it doesn't exist. This probably isn't for anyone, but I know with myself I have to take a tough guy, do-it-the-hard-way, push yourself til you hurt, get used to getting tired of veggies, get used to your drinks being flavorless attitude. Just admit that being healthy sucks and regardless of how bad it is, you have a goal and certain things sucking won't get in your way. Take that attitude, and you can do it.

Do it half assed, and you'll get half assed results.
 
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eat earlier in the day.

and run

for losing such a small amount of weight, id stick to cardio workouts.

you dont have to change your diet too much
 
besides what everyone else said...diet change and proper minerals and vitamins etc etc..
I've found that high protein diet, iodine (like kelp), ingesting coconut oil, and green tea extract all will shed the pounds and keep it off if continued for a substantial amount of time
 
Sodium has very little to do with body weight and even the most extreme restriction only lowers water retention, not body fat.

To lose fat, it's very simple. Carbohydrate control. Eliminate simple, processed carbs from your diet, and minimize the complex carbs. Do this by avoiding sugars, and replacing grains, beans and potatoes with green vegetables.

I'm trying to lose weight as well.

I thought I was in the clear by eating low glycemic index carbs but I will try to take it a step further and replace them with green vegetables. *sigh* That will be hard, if not impossible because I really love my 100% stone ground wheat bread with nutella.
 
I'm trying to lose weight as well.

I thought I was in the clear by eating low glycemic index carbs but I will try to take it a step further and replace them with green vegetables. *sigh* That will be hard, if not impossible because I really love my 100% stone ground wheat bread with nutella.

This is a common idea because low GI carbs are a lesser evil than high GI. However, when it boils down to the biology of body fat, insulin is the complete controlling factor. Only the rate, not the amount of insulin released is affected by GI.

Eating low GI is much, much better than high GI, but the carbohydrate density ultimately keeps it from being a healthier option than green vegetables.

The comparison that I like to make when teaching our Intro to Nutrition class for our weight loss program is that 1 cup of spaghetti (a low-GI food) has 35 grams of carbohydrate while 1 cup of broccoli has 3 grams. Now, imagine yourself eating 11 cups of broccoli.
 
-If nothing works, try caffeine...for some reason I lose my appetite whenever I get an energy drink buzz.

Just be careful with the enegry drinks, and sugar content. Black coffee is your friend.

I really believe the diet aspect of getting into shape is way harder than actually working out. Working out takes a hour or so out of the day. Preparing the six (healthy!)meals is a much larger pain in the ass.

Eating 5 or 6 smaller portioned meals has always worked for me. Try carb cycling...have a high carb day, a low carb day, and a ZERO carb day. Pretty self-explanatory with the high carb day containing as many as you want, the low with half your meals containing carbs, and the ZERO with absolutely no carbs all day. You body responds well to the constant change, and I've noticed great results with this cycling process.

What everyone else said about sugars, cokes, sweets in general gotta go. Haha I know I'm going to catch a lot of shit on this site for saying this, but watch out for sugar withdrawls. I read about them while researching the whole carb cycling, and thought it was a joke. However, on the ZERO carb day, I am one cranky S.O.B. People don't realize how much sugar they consume everyday, and when it's taken away, it can make you quite the irritable bastard. If you think about it, you've been consuming sugar(usually excessive sugars) your entire life, and to suddenly take them away sucks. I quit a 3 year nicotine habit, and that was a breeze compared to getting used to having no sugar all day.
 
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Good reading, I'm currently trying to lose 10 - 15 lbs and there's a lot of good advice here.

I'm buying a treadmill this week. I figure even after I lose the weight, I'll still use it a few times a week to stay in shape.
 
I know this is bad, but I drop weight like nothing if I stick to fish and only eating before 5. I usually only eat one meal a day, but sometimes I'll eat breakfast and then at 2pm and then nothing for the rest of the day. It's the only thing that works for me. For me, I can eat anything I want...fries, bacon, whatever as long as I eat it for lunch and then don't eat anything after 4 or 5pm.

Well... I am a wine lover, so I do drink 2-3 glasses at night.
 
Haha I know I'm going to catch a lot of shit on this site for saying this, but watch out for sugar withdrawls. I read about them while researching the whole carb cycling, and thought it was a joke. However, on the ZERO carb day, I am one cranky S.O.B. People don't realize how much sugar they consume everyday, and when it's taken away, it can make you quite the irritable bastard. If you think about it, you've been consuming sugar(usually excessive sugars) your entire life, and to suddenly take them away sucks. I quit a 3 year nicotine habit, and that was a breeze compared to getting used to having no sugar all day.

Sugar withdrawal is very real. Sweets are addictive due to a very strong dopamine release in response to their ingestion. I've seen dizziness and irritability carry on for as long as three weeks after a complete stop of sugar intake.

I absolutely require a complete removal of sugar from the diet of my clients, so I see the withdrawal symptoms pretty often.
 
Sugar withdrawal is very real. Sweets are addictive due to a very strong dopamine release in response to their ingestion. I've seen dizziness and irritability carry on for as long as three weeks after a complete stop of sugar intake.

I absolutely require a complete removal of sugar from the diet of my clients, so I see the withdrawal symptoms pretty often.

Haha alright at least one person believes me. Yah, to be honest, I thought it was a load of bullshit myself. I'm just about on my 4th week of the carb cycling, and on the no carb/sugar days, I'm still quite pissy. I also feel more rundown which I expected, but I upped my fat intake because I read fats would in turn take the place of carbs as an energy source. Keto diet I believe.

RAbbi, you think my body will eventually adapt to the different energy source, and I'll start feeling a little better?
 
It has nothing to do with adapting, it's only breaking the habit of the hormonal response to sugar and simple carbohydrates.

If you look at the Krebs Cycle, your body can derive energy from protein, carbs, or fat. The only difference is that your body replaces glycogen with ketone bodies generated in the liver from protein and/or fats when your carbohydrate intake is low.

I personally don't buy into carb cycling. I give my clients the simple plan of replacing grains, beans and potatoes with green vegetables and replacing the caloric intake with fat. It usually takes them a few weeks to a month to break the habit. High carbohydrate intake is never healthy (google search deadly quartet for some great info relating many modern diseases to hyperinulinemia) so I try to get them to a carb intake of no greater than 40% of total calories.
 
DD's post is spot on.

Eliminate processed foods and drinks with carbohydrates in them and do even a tiny bit of exercise and you will drop weight incredibly fast. It really is THAT simple. Its just hard to get yourself to actually do it consistently.
 
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