Hi Everyone
I am 28 and 5'6" and 160 lbs.
I have never truly been on a diet before. I always just ate whatever I wanted and thought I looked fine. My weight slowly rose from 125 (when I thought I looked the best) to what it is now. Ever since I got up to about 145 I started to not feel very good about my looks and would decide to start a diet but didn't really stick with it for more than say a day. I would just give up and say I looked fine but really didn't. So I've been slowly creeping up these past few years, feeling terrible and feeling even worse when relatives would ask if i was pregnant.
Once the scale topped 160, I decided I needed to do something. Not so much because of the weight itself, but the fact that the weight gain had accelerated quite recently and it alarmed me. I believe it has been due to a promotion and a sudden increase in stress and responsibilies. So I didn't say anything to anybody the first day, I just mentally said to myself "okay starting now, you're changing the way you eat." I was in the middle of a cookie and just stopped eating it. It's been a week, and my resolve is as strong as it was that moment. 1.5 lbs. lost so far...
I think my biggest weaknesses have been alcohol and my morning bagels. I didn't feel like I was consuming that many calories, until I thought about it. A daily routine might consist of a bagel with cream cheese for breakfast; an average lunch of a salad or sandwich with a coke; an afternoon snack of one (sometimes two, yikes) candy bars or bags of chips; and dinner would be some rich, delicious homecooked meal with several glasses of alcohol. My overall eating habits had stayed the same, but those little habits had sneaked in. So I broke down the problem areas: too much alcohol (3-600 extra calories a night), soda and sweets (empty calories), and that daily bagel (i just found out that one plain is over 300 calories).
I haven't been doing anything crazy. I just decided to cut way down on my carbs, eliminating soda and candy altogether, no bread and very little pasta and rice, plus no more than one alcoholic beverage a night (if at all). I have been concentrating on eating plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables, lean meats, yogurt and cheese, and drinking tea and coffee with no sugar (in lieu of all that soda) and snacking on nuts here and there. Then for mindless snacking I keep the fridge stocked with sliced raw veggies. The first two days I craved bagels and pizza, but stuck to my guns. It got easier as the week progressed. Yesterday I realized I wasn't really craving anything of the sort. I was just like, "ok i can do this." It's really just a matter of making a series of healthy choices
I had a few weak moments. Tuesday I had a croissant, and yesterday I had a cookie. but other than that it's been great. I look forward to the coming months and getting to that ideal weight and hope to be able to incorporate those other foods back into my life in a healthy way. However, long term goals are no more soda ever, and no more bagels (at least not as part of my regular routine, 350 cal. yikes!)
I am 28 and 5'6" and 160 lbs.
I have never truly been on a diet before. I always just ate whatever I wanted and thought I looked fine. My weight slowly rose from 125 (when I thought I looked the best) to what it is now. Ever since I got up to about 145 I started to not feel very good about my looks and would decide to start a diet but didn't really stick with it for more than say a day. I would just give up and say I looked fine but really didn't. So I've been slowly creeping up these past few years, feeling terrible and feeling even worse when relatives would ask if i was pregnant.
Once the scale topped 160, I decided I needed to do something. Not so much because of the weight itself, but the fact that the weight gain had accelerated quite recently and it alarmed me. I believe it has been due to a promotion and a sudden increase in stress and responsibilies. So I didn't say anything to anybody the first day, I just mentally said to myself "okay starting now, you're changing the way you eat." I was in the middle of a cookie and just stopped eating it. It's been a week, and my resolve is as strong as it was that moment. 1.5 lbs. lost so far...
I think my biggest weaknesses have been alcohol and my morning bagels. I didn't feel like I was consuming that many calories, until I thought about it. A daily routine might consist of a bagel with cream cheese for breakfast; an average lunch of a salad or sandwich with a coke; an afternoon snack of one (sometimes two, yikes) candy bars or bags of chips; and dinner would be some rich, delicious homecooked meal with several glasses of alcohol. My overall eating habits had stayed the same, but those little habits had sneaked in. So I broke down the problem areas: too much alcohol (3-600 extra calories a night), soda and sweets (empty calories), and that daily bagel (i just found out that one plain is over 300 calories).
I haven't been doing anything crazy. I just decided to cut way down on my carbs, eliminating soda and candy altogether, no bread and very little pasta and rice, plus no more than one alcoholic beverage a night (if at all). I have been concentrating on eating plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables, lean meats, yogurt and cheese, and drinking tea and coffee with no sugar (in lieu of all that soda) and snacking on nuts here and there. Then for mindless snacking I keep the fridge stocked with sliced raw veggies. The first two days I craved bagels and pizza, but stuck to my guns. It got easier as the week progressed. Yesterday I realized I wasn't really craving anything of the sort. I was just like, "ok i can do this." It's really just a matter of making a series of healthy choices
I had a few weak moments. Tuesday I had a croissant, and yesterday I had a cookie. but other than that it's been great. I look forward to the coming months and getting to that ideal weight and hope to be able to incorporate those other foods back into my life in a healthy way. However, long term goals are no more soda ever, and no more bagels (at least not as part of my regular routine, 350 cal. yikes!)

