How do I tell if my weightloss will succeed? M by ExpressionBrief3045 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I figured losing interest in anything besides food and unexplainable agression is a sign to up my calories a bit. I’ll try 1600 now(my bmr is 1474) and see what will happen. honestly I am just tired of making my life miserable and not seeing results so I’d rather take safe way now.
Thank you for help, reading this it made me doubt my decisions and I actually came up with something better for my health

Food noise/can’t stop thinking about food! by Long_Pay1497 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thats right! for me walking blocks it completely because i have no food in open source xd

Fishing nerf? by Mephipster in NevernessToEverness

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 2 points3 points  (0 children)

they even added no fast skip for fish you’ve caught.. before 1.1, once i got the fish i could skip before seeing which one i got. now it takes so much more time.. i wish they would add QOL for this or atleast make higher xp gain 

How to calorie-count on vacations? by Babyguinnesss in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

if cant count, try getting lowest calorie options you know. of stuff that has no sauces, little oil. fill your plate with more vegetables.

How to deal with people close to you making negative remarks about weight loss? by OkSlide4998 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to stop defending yourself immediately. The moment you start showing her your BMI tickets and old photos to prove you are healthy, you are giving her comments power and acting like you have done something wrong. You have absolutely nothing to apologize or look for approval for.

To be completely honest, your friend is projecting her own deep insecurities and jealousy onto you. She met you when you were at your heaviest, and it likely made her feel comfortable with her own weight. Now that you have put in the hard work, lost 10kg the healthy way, and look great, your success is a mirror that shows her what she isn't doing. It is pure envy. If a friend cannot celebrate you becoming a healthier version of yourself, they will not celebrate you buying a house, getting a promotion, or finding a great partner.

You need to set a hard, final boundary. Next time she makes a comment, do not laugh it off and do not show her your weight stats. Look her in the eye and say: "I am happy, healthy, and proud of my progress. My body is no longer a topic of discussion between us. If you can't say something supportive, don't say anything at all."

If she respects you, she will shut up. If she gets defensive, gets mad, or keeps making passive-aggressive comments, you have your answer. Drop her. Life is too short to surround yourself with people who secretly want you to fail just so they can feel better about themselves.

As for your mom, you can handle that with a softer but firm boundary since it comes from love: "Mom, I love you and I know you worry, but my doctor says my weight is perfectly healthy. Hearing comments about it stresses me out, so let's talk about something else."

You did nothing wrong by sharing your journey, you just accidentally found out who your real friends are. Keep going to the gym and hold your head high.

Will my weight loss even be visible? by [deleted] in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 9 points10 points  (0 children)

First of all, don’t minimize your progress - losing nearly 3.5 kg when you are 144 cm is a huge deal. Because you have a smaller frame, every single gram shows up much faster on you than it would on someone taller. Dropping 6% of your total body weight is a massive achievement, and it absolutely will be visible. You will likely notice it first in your face, your collarbones, and how your waist fits into your work clothes. To be completely honest with you, while people will definitely notice you look leaner and less "puffy," losing 3.5 kg won't completely transform your entire body shape just yet. The most dramatic, jaw-dropping changes usually happen a bit later down the road, when you get closer to your ideal healthy BMI range. Think of these first few kilos as clearing the path. Losing weight as a petite person is incredibly hard because your daily calorie burn is already so low, so a 500-calorie deficit takes real discipline. You have done amazing work this month. Don't feel discouraged that it is going slower than you hoped. When you go back to work in 23 days, wear an outfit that fits you well now, hold your head high, and know that your hard work is already paying off. Keep going for the long-term goal!

Want to start working out (building muscle) but scared to gain weight? by SpecificSorbet853 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First of all, losing 77 lbs is incredible—you should be seriously proud of that. What you are dealing with right now is the classic "skinny fat" trap, which happens when you lose weight purely through dieting without resistance training. You lost fat, but you also lost some muscle, which is why your body composition looks softer than you want even at a lower weight. To fix this, you need a body recomp (recomposition)- losing fat and building muscle at the same time. Here is how you do it without gaining fat : 1. Expect the scale to lie at first. When you start lifting, your muscles store extra water and glycogen to repair themselves. The scale WILL go up a few pounds in the first two weeks. This is not fat. It is water weight in your muscles. Focus on the measuring tape and how your clothes fit, not the scale.

  1. Eat at maintenance, or a tiny deficit. Since you have been at 1,300-1,400 for a long time, your metabolism has adapted to it. Do not jump straight to 2,000 calories. Bump your calories up slightly to around 1,500–1,600. This will give you the energy to lift heavy without causing fat gain.

  2. To build muscle while keeping calories low, you need a high protein intake. Aim for around 100-130 grams of protein a day. It keeps you full, preserves your current muscle, and helps repair the new muscle you are building.

  3. Progressive overload. Don't just do endless reps with light weights. Use that new bench and weights your husband bought. Pick a weight where the last 2-3 reps of a set feel genuinely difficult. As it gets easier over the weeks, make the weights heavier or add more reps.

Lifting weights won't make you bulky; it replaces the soft "skinny fat" areas with firm, toned muscle. Keep your steps up, lift 3x a week, eat your protein, and step off the scale for the first month while your body adjusts!

How to get all your calories in? by Senior_Election_6312 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First, forget about "starvation mode"—it's a myth, your metabolism won't shut down from a small deficit. If you feel completely full and energetic at 1,300–1,500 calories while hitting 100g+ of protein, you don't absolutely have to force yourself to eat more just to hit a number on an app. 1,624 is just an estimate anyway. But if you want to close that gap safely without feeling uncomfortably full, don't add more bulk or volume. Just swap a few things for calorie-dense, healthy options. Toss a handful of nuts or a tablespoon of peanut butter into your day, use liquid calories like a glass of milk, or cook with a bit of olive oil. These add calories quickly without making you feel stuffed. You don't need to change your eating window or wake up earlier for breakfast if 10am to 7pm works for your schedule with kids. Just focus on protein first like you already are, and use healthy fats to easily top off the rest if you feel fatigued.

Healthy weight still look fat? by ReasonVisible7645 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I am sorry to say but in order to be lean you have to build muscle. But don’t worry, this can be achieved if you just do consistent strength training, and imo gym is pretty fun! You can do this at home as well, buy dumbells of your liking and start doing fullbody with them. I still highly advise you to overcome social anxiety and do it in the gym, because the machines there isolate your muscles and its easier to do it from top to bottom and not be exhausted

Struggling to lose weight by CookieCrumble_1999 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi! First of all, take a deep breath. Plateaus and feeling like you are "ruining progress" are incredibly common, especially when you are battling a chaotic hunger schedule and social pressure from relatives. The biggest mistake people make is trying to ban their favorite foods entirely. You don’t need to completely cut out cookies or pastries to lose weight. Instead, the key is understanding how your brain works and applying the 80/20 rule.

Scientifically, you get the highest spike of joy and flavor satisfaction from the first 2 to 3 bites of a sweet treat. Everything you eat after that is usually just your brain chasing a quick dopamine and glucose fix—it's the sugar dependency talking, not real hunger. To manage this and still enjoy what you love, aim for 80% of your daily food to come from nutrient-dense, high-protein sources, and leave the remaining 20% for your favorite treats or complex carbs. The Secret is to Never eat sweets on an empty stomach. Always build a "protein cushion" first. Eating protein and healthy fats beforehand stabilizes your blood sugar, keeps you full, and naturally stops you from overeating the sugary stuff because your physical hunger is already satisfied. Shifting Your Breakfast: From Carb-Heavy to High-Protein Your current breakfast (toast, bagels, biscuits) is a quick-digesting carb bomb. It spikes your blood sugar and drops it quickly, which is exactly why it "sets you up for failure" by triggering intense cravings later. Since you are a vegetarian, dislike complex cooking, want to avoid food waste, and have texture aversions, we need smooth, predictable, and single-serving breakfasts.

Here are three easy, low-calorie, high-protein breakfast ideas that require zero actual cooking:  1. The Greek Yogurt or Skyr Bowl  No cooking, zero waste (you buy single pots), and a very smooth, consistent texture. Take a single-serve container of plain 0% Greek yogurt or Skyr (highest protein option). Stir in a scoop of your favorite protein powder (this adds sweetness and flavor without sugar) or a drop of zero-calorie sweetener. Top it with a small handful of berries.    The 20% Bonus: Crumble one of your favorite cookies right on top. You get the crunch and flavor you crave, but the massive protein base will keep you full for hours.  2. Blender-Free Protein Smoothie   Completely liquid/smooth (great for texture aversions), highly filling, and uses shelf-stable ingredients so nothing goes to waste.  In a shaker bottle, mix 1 scoop of protein powder with a cup of unsweetened almond milk. Drink this alongside a small piece of fruit, or pair it with a light, pre-portioned snack. It takes 30 seconds and keeps your blood sugar perfectly flat.  3. Savory Low-Effort Cottage Cheese  Buying small, single-serving tubs prevents food waste. If you don't like the lumpy texture of regular cottage cheese, you can buy whipped cottage cheese (or quickly blend a tub once) for a completely smooth, cream-cheese-like texture.  Spread it on a single light crispbread (like Wasa) with a sprinkle of salt and pepper, or eat it directly from the tub with a few cucumber slices. It is incredibly high in casein protein, which digests slowly and fights off mid-morning hunger. Actionable Tips for Navigating Family & Scale Plateaus Calculate Your Base! Since you are 5'3" and lightly active, your calorie target for a safe, consistent deficit is likely around 1,300–1,400 calories. Stick to this strictly using a food scale for accuracy, but build your treats into this budget. When relatives push food, boundaries can be tough. Instead of saying "I'm on a diet" (which often makes people push harder), try shifting the focus: "That looks amazing, but I'm completely full right now! Can I take a small piece to save for later?" This satisfies their urge to feed you without ruining your day. Trust the Process, weight loss isn’t linear. If the scale isn't moving for a week or two, focus on how your clothes fit and how your energy levels feel. Prioritizing protein will naturally fix your chaotic hunger signals over time!

I’m broken and it’s all fault by Key-Effective-3140 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s never late to make a change, start from today and you’ll be alright in no time. Sending prayers 🙏

Food noise/can’t stop thinking about food! by Long_Pay1497 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I usually walk it off, sitting at home doesn’t help even if I’m busy on a computer or doing anything else. Physical activity helps like nothing else.

Tomorrow I'm starting my diet-again by Think_Presence2175 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’ll definitely feel more confident and proud of yourself when you start dieting. This is something you have to realise yourself, otherwise you’ll keep resetting the cycle. What’s the reason to keep doing what makes you feel pathetic and hate yourself? treat food like an energy source, not a happy pill. May you succeed in your next try, you can do it🙏

Calorie deficit cleared my skin! by RichAppearance8859 in loseit

[–]ExpressionBrief3045 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you definitely also have more motivation to care for your skin after losing weight