I know food is everything, but is there been anything that helped you going down in weight other the food habits?

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Stress helped me lose 20 pounds in three months last year ^.^

    I wouldn’t recommend it.

    • jeffw@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Wait until you find out about terrible stomach viruses! I did that in about a week. Silly hospital had to rehydrate me with all that water weight, but I still came out way lighter!

  • Sixty@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    One thing the diet industry hates:

    Fasting. Hard to make money off not eating food.

    It’s also highly effective and safe so long as you educate yourself properly before beginning.

    I did 14 day fasts with an electrolyte slurry, psyllium husk, and multi vitamins. Take a month off, eat well balanced meals, repeat until goal weight. I lost ~15-20lbs each fast doing it a total of three times to hit my goal weight. Each time is less, because the daily caloric requirement to maintain your body decreases with your weight.

    After that, I started gym/weight training.

    edit: and never eating junk food or drinking sugar ever again. That includes fruit juice and dairy milk. Unsweetened Coconut “milk” for me now. Processed grains massively reduced too. Basically, flour. Honestly flour probably inflated the waist line for me more than sugar.

    • Libb@jlai.lu
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      3 days ago

      Fasting. Hard to make money off not eating food.

      FFS, don’t give them ideas!

      Now with exclusively made for you daily AI motivational messages! 2 months free if you subscribe annually. Fast better, fast with your wallet!

      ;)

    • badbrainstorm@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Yes, came to say fasting. Start with intermittent. Work up to OMAD (one meal a day). Then push it further out to 48 hr. plus depending on your weight, with just water, vitamins, electrolytes.

      Autophagy is an amazing benefit of it to look into as well. Kicks in hard around 48 hrs, depending on how much sugar and carbs you have to burn off. Which is also why a ketogenic diet is good when you aren’t fasting.

      Green tea, coffee, tumeric are good at stimulating autophagy too, if you want to dirty fast

      • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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        3 days ago

        I prefer to eat two meals a day. It feels like a sustainable lifestyle instead of just a temporary fix. Normally, I have only breakfast and lunch. If I deviate from that by having something in the afternoon, my weight begins to increase gradually.

  • edric@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    I was also gonna say fasting, intermittent fasting to be specific, and cooking at home more. But it seems that’s not answering your question because it’s a “food habit”. So instead, I would recommend:

    • Sugar substitutes. Yes they can make you gassy/poopy. It’s trial and error to find the right substitute and right amount to use, but once you get it, you’ll be able to avoid a ton of sugar. For example, a teaspoon of stevia on my coffee is fine. Monkfruit instead of sugar but only half as much for savory dishes works for me. Allulose for home made ice cream is fine as well. And so on.

    • Eat water-rich food to make you feel full but not consume a lot of calories. Celery and cucumbers are good snacks and can be paired with other food.

    • A bit more pricey, but shiratake is basically zero calories and comes in noodle, rice, or cube form.

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Finding a brand of protein bar that you genuinely enjoy eating is a huge deal.

      I have my preferred brand and when I have 1 or 2 I feel like I just had some chocolate bars, while its still a fair chunk of calories its also 50g of protein and not much fat or sugar.

  • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I’m very, very susceptible to addiction, but the thing that makes it easiest for me to curb a habit is to pretend I’ve already moved past it. If I think about junk food, I intentionally think of overly sweet, salty and artificial foods and (internally) express my distaste. With smoking, I think of the smell of an ashtray in the rain; with drinking, I think of cleaning up day old beer with a hangover.

    Saying “I don’t really have a sweet tooth” is what made me lose my sweet tooth.

    • daddy32@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      This is very good strategy. Like the infamous “fake it till you make it”. But actually vocalizing it makes it even more powerful.

      If anyone remembers the movie Closer from 2004, there’s a scene where Clive Owen’s character refuses a cigarette while almost failing at it. He settles it with a phrase: “I’ve given up.”. You can see he is not completely sure about that, but now that he said it out loud, he made it true.

  • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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    3 days ago

    Not eating works pretty well, though I understand it’s probably harder for someone with a desire to eat.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    3 days ago

    The timing of the day in which I eat certain things. I lost 15kg over a year just by cutting sweets and carbs after 4pm. I still ate them, especially in the morning.

    And talking about morning - “breakfast like a king, supper like a beggar” also contributed to that weight loss.

    Nowadays I am not strict but whenever I see myself going over my weight I first take those two measures up before making any calorie cuts

    Edit: although these are food habits, so I don’t know if it really answers your question. Exercise is the other thing that helps, you don’t even need a lot of it

  • marquisalex@feddit.uk
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    3 days ago

    Weigh yourself consistently (i.e. same time, same outfit) - I find it easiest to do straight after jumping out of the shower in the morning, post-poop and pre-breakfast, but ymmv. And the important part, record it. I have smart scales, which makes life easier, but absolutely not essential. There’s something very motivating about watching the line go down - and will quickly highlight if you’re on the right track, or if you need to cut back a little more.

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      It sounds super counter intuitive but I recommend newbies weigh themselves multiple times a day for the first few weeks or months and write down the date and time of each new low (or use a tracking app) to get used to the idea that your weight fluctuates wildly throughout the day.

      Just because you got a bad weigh-in doesnt mean the diet didnt do anything all week. A salty carb heavy meal last night (that was still within calories) can fuck up a weigh-in bigtime.

  • I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Eat less. It sounds obvious, I know. But prepare your meal as normal, divide it in half and put half in a container in the fridge. Eat the other half, then distract yourself for half an hour. If you’re still ravenous, heat up the other half and have it. But you probably won’t be. And you’ve got your next meal ready to go!

  • Libb@jlai.lu
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    3 days ago
    • Daily walks. I started barely being able to walk more than a few steps, I was in a really terrible shape. Nowadays, I will walk at least 8km daily. More as often as I can. It feels too good. Exercising regularly and in the long-run is key.
    • Eating healthier food, aka fresh fruits, veggies, real fresh bread and NOT eating industrial pre-processed food anymore. Like none at all. No ‘just this one time’ or ‘just one byte’. No more feeding myself with ready-made dishes, no more fast-food (I still ate delicious burgers and fries mind you… just all hand-made with fresh food), no industrial sweets or whatever either. And no industrial beverage either, aka no soda not even light.
    • Not being an asshole with myself. I failed many times at keeping my motivation. No blaming and no hating (I was already punished enough by all that wasted time it meant for me to fall back into my bad habits) but I kept on going while trying to understand how/why I failed (so I would not do the same mistake again).

    I halved my weight and I still eat plenty (even chocolate, pastries or things like that, just… a lot less and never industrially made), I replaced me eating shit (literally, industrial are feeding us shit) by me eating actual food (and enjoying preparing it), and I also retook control my body, muscles and joints, by starting to move it… like it is was designed to. We’re not designed to sit on a couch or in front of computer all day long (be it to work or to play).

  • 🦇SalviaDivination🦇@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Enjoy experimenting with cooking and food prepping a lot more to find new healthy Staples you like with more vegetables, protein.and healthy fats (edited). Eat more fermented foods. Don’t buy junkfood/sweets, cook or bake healthy versions of junkfood instead. But avoid artificial sweeteners, they mess with your gut biome. Add less sugar to things. Just look for zero added sugars on packages. Bam, easy. 🙃

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Hyper-fixating on something keeps me away from the kitchen, for better or worse. Same with sleep ¯_(ツ)_/¯

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Coconut cream + coconut water = great sugar killer. Judt get the water with no added sugar and dilute it like 1/2.

    Try it, seriously. Its like sucking at the titties of the coconut Goddess. Closest we’ll ever come to Nectar of the gods

  • daddy32@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Weighting every day at the same time. Using a smart weight that logs the measurements. Using software that smoothens out the readings, so you don’t stress about day to day changes. Don’t want to advertise, but combination of Withings scale and trendweight website works great for me. And ultimately, combination of fasting and exercise is ideal for me. Every calorie spent and every calorie not eaten helps.