Okay, I am a lifelong diarist and can’t but take notes of what’s happening, and for my “weightloss journey” (how I hate that expression!) I’ll do it here, hoping to get some insights and encouragement from other members now and then.
I am (I think) at week three of 5:2, and things are going well. I am using fddb info (a German site) to add up all the calories and to keep track of my weight, and I am now at 96.6 kilos as opposed to slightly over 100 kilos when I started. This is very encouraging indeed.
While doing 5:2 to lose weight, I am trying to get as much information as I can about successful weightloss – because we all know that people, most people, tend to regain what they’ve lost, so I think the only thing that can protect me in this respect is lots of knowledge, and lots of self-reflection.
The most important things I’ve learned so far is:
– keeping weight off is darnedly difficult. I myself have gone on diets twice and regained moderate amounts back -the second time on a LCHF diet, which made me feel very good, and then I got pregnant, got sick at the sight of a protein and could only eat processed carbohydrates for seven months. While loathing them. Oh the fun!
– it is not impossible, but requires a lot of effort, planning and determination (the wonderful author of justmaintaining.com, whom you can’t but admire, compares her weight management to another unpaid part-time job.)
– carbs are a problem, especially the highly processed ones, “empty calories” one and all. But people’s sensitivity to carbs varies. I think I am somewhat sensitive to them, I usually eat a low carb diet and don’t have lots of cravings, but when I start on sugary stuff or bread, I can’t stop myself. My mother, bless her endless optimism, says “Well, you just eat a piece of chocolate and then you put it away, I don’t know what’s so difficult about it.” I hate that kind of advice by now – well-meaning slim people of the “I don’t know, I can eat everyhing without gaining weight, what is all this obesity about?” variety, who give overweight people advice based on their – enviable – situation. I can’t have a piece of chocolate and put the rest away. I can have a piece of chocolate and then the whole bar. And for this very reason my life hack concerning sweets is: Do not have them at home. Ever. If you must, buy a little and eat it as a meal. It’s not perfect, but then WHAT is in this dismal vale of tears etc. etc.?
– Calories in, calories out is NOT sufficient, since the body is way more complex than that. Calorie reduction over a period of time is not sustainable and will lower the body’s basal metabolic rate, so if you start to eat “normally”, you will gain everything back. So, you can’t just lose the weight and go back to whatever you ate before. Science doesn’t know a lot about weightloss, and much of the information is based on studies that are not good science (i.e. small sample, questionable setup). -> Consequence: one has to cobble together one’s own weight management thingie, based on individual experience, whatever scientific knowledge there is, and possibly huge bucketfuls of the Grace of God.
I’ll stop writing here because a) this is a monster post, nothing of which is remotely new or insightful and b) I need to find out where to buy sun protection for my south facing balcony. Last summer, the second warmest since they started writing down such things, was a drag. I cannot, can NOT go through this kind of torture again. Last summer I could step on the tiles of the balcony until 10 am. Then I burned the soles of my feet. Awful. So good bye and good luck with your various fasting plans.
11:31 am
10 Mar 16