Our BetterMost Community > Chez Tremblay
I Wish I Knew How to LOSE You--The Weight Loss Thread (check first post)
Brokeback_Dev:
--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on January 05, 2010, 01:16:04 pm ---5 a.m. is a good time to exercise, friend!! More exercise and you'll sleep better, I promise you!
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My Gym opens at 5:30am. Often think about going then but never do. The encouragement helps for sure Friend Lee. Also I like to eat raw vegetables as a snack with no dip! And I sometimes use smaller saucers rather than a dinner plate.
They say artificial sweetners are really bad for you. Does anyone no about that? I have been really good about staying away from "real" sweets. I'll google it.
Omg I took a look in the mirror today and I jiggle. Ewe No Way! Im in my sweats and off to the gym now. My normal gym partner just called said she's not going today. That was the call I was waiting for before I left.
Plus I really think sitting at my computer reading and posting is really effecting my muscles. There's such a fine line between pain and wanting to strengthen my muscles. I hurt either way although the latter is worse. Any suggestions?
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: southendmd on January 05, 2010, 02:34:00 pm ---Welcome to the club, Katherine.
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Thanks, Paul!
--- Quote ---Katherine and Meryl, can you give a quick blurb on how the WW point thingie works?
--- End quote ---
In Weight Watchers, you count points, not calories. You pretty much need a WW book (or two, or a membership on their website) to get the exact points for any particular item, and the formula supposedly based on calories, fat grams and fiber grams. But one point roughly translates to about 50 calories. Vegetables, broth, tea, coffee, and a few other things are zero points.
You get assigned a daily points goal based on your weight, age, gender and level of activity. The idea is to eat exactly that many points a day. You also get 35 points a week to use whenever you'd like (5 a day, 35 all at once -- whatever). Excercise earns you more points.
You're encouraged to consume a certain amount of dairy, a certain amount of healthy fats and a certain amount of water every day. Other than that, there are few dietary guidelines. You could eat all your points in chocolate, if you wanted. But you'd quickly realize that you don't get much food that way -- you have to be creative to get satisfying amounts of food while staying within your points allocation.
Members also may weigh in once a week and attend a half-hour WW meeting. I do that, because the meetings can be kind of fun and showing up helps me feel a sense of responsibility and commitment that I can't summon as well on my own.
But you can also do it all online, at www.weighwatchers.com (I feel like I'm posting spam! :laugh:).
All of this you can do on your own, of course, and I always feel a bit resentful that I'm having to pay for it. But it does work.
Monika:
--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on January 05, 2010, 03:20:44 pm ---Be careful, friend! Because low fat, sugar-free stuff does NOT equal low calorie or healthy always. Take, for instance, sugar free soda. I'm convinced there is hardly anything worse you can put in your body than that...it leaves you craving bad stuff and gets your system all out of whack. Plus, those imitation butter spreads like margarine. Stay away from those, far away!! What goes on my bread (what little I eat) is pure olive oil, with a little balsamic vinegar and za'tar spice added. That, or dijon mustard (the kind that has no mayo or sugar in it). As a general rule, I advise everyone to avoid processed foods, ennithing in the frozen aisles (except frozen fruits and vegetables), prepared foods, juices, drinks in bottles, and ennithing Starbucks!! (except straight black coffee). Instead of juice, have a piece of fruit. Instead of pizza or frozen dinners, have a salad that you make yourself. Instead of bread, cook up some wheat berries, barley, brown rice, or bulgar. And so on.
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I totally hear what you're saying Lee, and you're right about what you're saying. But, if I'm honest with myself, I know I could never maintain that kind of lifestyle. I lack both the discipline and passion for it. and I don't like to cook. SO what I'm trying to do instead is to find better alternatives food wise, not necessarily the best, but better alternatives that I believe I can live with in the long run.
Of course, the best solution would be to have a private chef. What do you say, Lee? O0 :D
(Everything you wrote about sounded absolutely yummy!)
southendmd:
Dev, any luck with going to the pool? That sounded ideal for you.
Katherine, thanks for the succinct primer on WW. I've known friends who have done very well with it.
I'm not sure we can replicate it here, but we can try to provide a sense of community, if not commitment!
southendmd:
Has everyone done their weigh-in?
This is our point zero. We have set our goals. I suggest we do our next weigh-in on Monday, February 1. People can post their progress then, or pm me, and I'll update the first post.
Keep up the ideas, tips, controversies. We'll keep supporting one another here.
Nice turnout! We can do it, Brokies!
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