Marquel 31 Posted May 21, 2013 I had surgery 1/24. I started at 237, today I'm 199. So 38lbs down. Which I am happy with but I would be so much further is I ate right and worked out. But I don't. I eat anything just smaller amounts and I'm so tired all the time I have no motivation to work out! I get frustrated when I don't lose weight but I know it's because of my bad habits. Is anyone else struggling? 1 Kelsan reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mysleevemylife 158 Posted May 21, 2013 I just wanna say that you are worth what it will take to focus & make it happen. U gotta want it badly, bad enough to sacrifice, sweat, & sometimes maybe even cry. U can do this. Be creative with your food & just get a game plan together so that you will eat well BUT be satisfied, too. Cause being satisfied is very important. I'm willing to give tips via inbox if you'd like. Here for ya!! 1 Kelsan reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Webchickadee 716 Posted May 21, 2013 Yes. We ALL struggle! The biggest struggle of all is what you are experiencing right now. The MENTAL game. This surgery is a tool to help you change your habits, your lifestyle and your mindset. If you don't "get in the game" from that perspective, you won't succeed long term and you will not be the healthy person you want to be. The fact that you are posting about this struggle means you are aware of it. That's great news! If you know it, and admit it to yourself, you can change it for the better! From a nutritional perspective, the reason you are probably not feeling energetic enough to exercise is because you are not eating the right food to fuel your body. You are losing weight, but you may not be losing fat! It is much easier for your body to break down muscle tissue to scavange energy than fat. So if you don't provide your metabolism enough Protein to maintain and build muscle (which is built using protein), you will lose baseline muscle. We already lose muscle just by aging. Don't rob yourself of your strength, stability and future core health by eating junk instead of Protein now! The rules are: 1. Protein first 2. Vegetables next 3. Carbs if (and only if) there is room left in your stomach and your daily nutritional alottment You need to make a realistic daily nutritional guideline for yourself (see a NUT if you can, or talk to your surgeon's office for some guidelines). Then start tracking everything you put in your body (and I mean every bite, every sip). Are you meeting your baseline requirements? They are often something like this: 60+ g of protein daily 600-800 calories per day (this will climb as time goes on - I currently eat appox. 1100 cal/day, and I'm 1 yr post-op) carbs <60 g per day min. of 64 oz of Water per day These numbers will vary greatly from surgeon to surgeon and NUT to NUT. But the baseline is similar and the most important part is to know what you're eating and have a goal you reach for EVERY DAY. That doesn't mean you can't treat yourself to a bit here and there (no one is perfect and we need to be human about this). But if you allow something outside of the plan, do it consciously, "earn" it with extra exercise, and don't make it a habit! You must do this EVERY DAY for months at a time (I'm 1 year post-op and I log everything, every day). It will become normal, and you will find you don't slip off-track very often when you hold yourself accountable for every bite. Lastly, you must find a way to incorporate exercise into your daily routine. Start with walking. After a while, as you get better at it, you will want to push yourself more and perhaps run, or do organized sports, or ride a bike, or hike. There are thousands of ways to push your body to a better athletic condition, and it makes you feel GOOD. Believe me. It's about changing your lifestyle so that it becomes your "new normal". Then you can truly say you did everything you could to succeed, and feel good about the effort AND the results. And about your fantastic, healthy, energetic body. 2 Kelsan and SCS reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
courtoomp 107 Posted May 21, 2013 First, stop and congratulate yourself for having lost 38 pounds and for coming here for help! Okay, now think about what you're saying. You are eating smaller portions of normal food? GASP...like a 'normal' person?! So you aren't only eating Protein and no carbs. That's okay. There are many here who are successful eatin a varied and unrestricted diet. But you mention unhealthy habits...rather than a varied diet are you instead just eating 'junk' food or food with little in the way of nutritional value? Are you getting enough Protein as per your nutritionist? My vote is don't stress over the diet unless you 1) aren't seeing results, 2) aren't meeting basic energy requirements and/or 3) have low energy. Sounds like you're meeting criteria three. And for that I would think about making small changes that will give you more energy for meal planning and for exercise. A small change may be meal planning for a week, chatting everything you eat and seeing where you can improve, packing a lunch three times a week for work, etc.No need for a whole makeover when small changes will do. I personally think exercise is what gives me the energy to care about my food intake. I realize that may seem backward. Can you stay awake 10 min later three times a week and stretch? Stretching loosens the muscles and relaxes you and at least for me primes my body to crave working out. Then you can add in small bits of exercise. Doesn't need to be all or nothing. Just my thoughts. But you can do this and give yourself credit for all accomplished so far. 1 Kelsan reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gmanbat 5,889 Posted May 21, 2013 Exercise...find something you like and do it. Make it fun..you can do it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anniemay 150 Posted May 21, 2013 I am a newbie but I worry about this. I could see going down this path and I didn't give up 85% of my stomach to do that. You can do this. You were strong enough to take the step. Now do the same and reset. 1 Kelsan reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kelsan 117 Posted May 21, 2013 I've been wondering this same thing, so thanks for making this post! Also thank you so much to the great responses. I've learned a lot right here. 1 anniemay reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Marquel 31 Posted May 21, 2013 Thank you everyone!!! You all are so great to pass this positive energy my way! I am looking forward to making some changes. Thank you again! 1 DonRodolfo reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites