Question:
Is there anyway to Start Losing again after 3yrs I have gain 35lbs
Inever reach my goal weigh, I never got out of the 200lbs mark. I was 289, when I had my surgery, I went down to 217. Never could go below that. Now I am a 250lb again. I was thinking about Jenny Craig, but I need to find out if I can start to lose again with out going to a specialty center. — Patdean (posted on April 7, 2009)
April 8, 2009
It really depends on the surgery you had whether a diet center will really
help...Often the surgery you had has the BEST dietary rules and basics over
any other diet out there! If your surgery was one that is only restrictive,
then yes any diet would be great! To lose weight you have to diet and
exercise...Even with RNY, you have to go back to basics and cut calories if
you've begun eating too much. You will never lose weight like you did the
first year...It's not going to move that quickly and the plateaus that
frustrated RNYers with rapid weight loss are far worse after that time is
over...and we forget that they happen and often give up before we realize
it's working. We just need to give it time and stick to it! Just go
leaner, cut out any simple carb snacks and sides and replace with more lean
protein and/or complex carbs...Cut 500 cals a day to lose 1 pound a
week!Kick up your exercise! to double or triple that number. Complex carbs
to stay fuller longer and when exercising...Eat mainly dense protein for
your three meals...with veggie sides. If you begin weighing and measuring
food you will be quite happy to see that one serving is enough to be
satisfied! Keep a food log of all you eat and calorie tally to track your
progress and know where you can cut back or add...This is how I lost a ten
lb gain...It took me about 4 months because I was sick too and was not
allowed to exercise or tax my heart at all and that was a HUGE set back for
losing weight!! LOL It was really slow! But I did it by being consistant
with staying on track with the basic rules...Before this, I was drinking
with my meals, eating sugar and simple carbs (which I didn't realize how
much hungrier I felt from eating them), snacking/grazing, eating slider
foods that didn't keep me full...I learned that it's okay to feel a little
hunger without having to satisfy it immediately...I actually welcome a
little hunger now so I KNOW it's real and not head hunger! Don't aim for a
full feeling, but rather a "not hungry" or satiated feeling
instead. Feeling full means you over ate! That will help you cut back in
portions and still be satisfied! That's the reason to measure and weigh
food! Learn what you need! Then you won't over eat by accident even! I
pull out my scales all the time and check my visual "guesses". I
KNOW what 4 oz of chicken looks like but if I start letting 4oz become 5oz,
when I only NEED 4 oz...I add extra calories I don't need! Those are the
ones you want to cut out to lose again and it's really simple...Slow, but
it can be done! Excerise makes it go faster too because you burn calories
as well! Don't forget to eat a little snack before and after a work out for
energy. If your body thinks it's starving, it's going to be MUCH slower
results...If you do it healthy and without putting your body in starvation
mode, it comes off more slow but surely! Good luck! Oh and if you are
eating any sugar/simple carbs regularly, you need to cut them out
altogether for now until you gain control and can add them back
moderately!(Once or twice a week, rather than daily) Good luck!
— .Anita R.
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