Progress— size 14 to size 4, 197 pounds to 130

christianmormon

New member

I hope I did this right!

Starting weight was 197, size 14. 5’3 for reference.

I didn’t diet at all. I made significant lifestyle changes.

I ate fast food once a day at my peak weight, plus multiple sodas. I was very sedentary.

I started slow. I cut out soda except for one a week, and stuck to the perimeter of the grocery store when shopping. I cut out almost all processed food. If I didn’t prepare it myself, it wasn’t eaten. This part was surprisingly easy at first. I was motivated. When I looked at it as getting healthier rather than getting thinner, it made a huge difference. Mentality matters, ladies!!! I started couch to 5k at this point too. That was harder. I was so embarrassed at how hard it was to run. I got a used treadmill on Craigslist and used it because I didn’t want anyone making fun of me out in the real world.

Changing my relationship with food became difficult after a few months. It was hard to force myself to eat. Logically, I knew I needed food to survive. I knew not eating would have detrimental effects and slow down progress. Again, mentality matters. Be kind to yourself! You wouldn’t starve a friend you’re trying to help lose weight. You would give them heathy food and insist they eat it! Also about six months in I decided I needed to lighten up on my food rules. I was so unhappy. I missed soda and creme brûlée and pizza. This is when I decided to do what my grandma does— eat what you want, but smaller portions. This is ultimately what works for me. 90% of my meals are healthy veggies and fruits. The last 10% are small portions of the things I love. I will not spend the rest of my life not eating lasagna. Will not. It was at this point that things really started to go right. Not depriving myself, allowing some calories. My mindset improved and I just kept getting fitter.

About a year in, I was running 3 miles 5 days a week. This is when I added kettle bells. Man alive do I love kettle bells. I started doing kettle bells after my runs, which was WAY too much for me. I switched days, kettle bells on some and running on others, and that made a significant difference. I had a lot of trouble with energy and anxiety on my rest days so I started doing Yoga with Adrienne on those days. Highly recommend her! The yoga has helped with my running too!

A typical work out for me now, two years later:

M- run 3 miles
T- kettle bells- 2 sets of 15 swing squats, 2 sets of 15 goblet squats, 2 sets of 15 2 handed squats, 2 sets of 15 racked squats (one on each arm), plus whatever body weight exercises I’m in the mood for.
W- yoga with Adrienne
Th- run 3 miles
F- KB
Sat- yoga
Sunday- official rest day but sometimes I run if I feel like I have to have to

Typical food for a day:
Breakfast is black coffee with a splash of almond milk, maple brown sugar oatmeal, hard boiled egg

Snack would be 100 calorie bag of kettle corn or a piece of fruit or carrots and hummus

Lunch is either leftovers or a salad. Typical salad would be lettuce, sugar snap peas, sliced almonds, red onion, grilled chicken or seared tuna, oil and vinegar. Sometimes a piece of sour dough if the store put it out hot just when I get there

Snack would be another hard boiled egg and crystal hot sauce. I love hard boiled eggs. So much.

Dinner would be whatever, pizza or pasta or steak or chicken, plus a vegetable. The veggie MUST be 70% of my meal with the less healthy option being a smaller portion

Sometimes I’ll have an Outshine bar for dessert. Or true dessert for dessert. Like I said, I’m not gonna live the rest of my life not enjoying food.

I drink mostly water and will have a couple Dr. Peppers during the week.

One of the biggest, most important changes I made was how I spoke to myself. I wasn’t allowed to call myself names or be mean. You wouldn’t tell your friend or your sister she is a fat pig. Don’t tell yourself that shit either. Another big thing I learned was not to beat yourself up on the days you mess up. Some days you’re gonna eat a ton of crap. It’s easy to be like, well, I blew it. May as well call it quits. Every day is a fresh start. If you have a bad day, brush it off and declare a mulligan. One bad day is not going to destroy a month of hard work. It just won’t.

Little things I also do that may or may not help. I park far far away and walk to the store. I take the stairs. I stop eating when I’m satisfied, not when I’m full. If some food gets wasted, that’s okay. I don’t have to eat it just because it’s sad that it will get tossed. My body is not a garbage disposal. My goal was never to be a fitness model, only to be healthy.

Oh! And my best NSV? My rest heart rate is 65 now. Fuck yeah!
 
@christianmormon I really love how sustainable the changes you made are! It’s a way I could see myself living. I love that you talked about being kinder to yourself I think that’s super important. Congratulations on your success it’s inspirational ❤️
 
@christianmormon You are awesome! I love your mindset and I can’t agree with you more-it’s a mentality. If you embrace it and make getting healthier a priority then you will have success. I am in that mindset after a couple of years of personal setbacks.

Congrats to you! You are an inspiration!
 
@christianmormon You said in a previous comment “I can remember the specific post even” – the one that motivated you the most.
Well. Yours will be my specific post. And I hope to be someone’s future specific post.

This is my first time commenting on this sub, that’s how hard your story hit me. I was literally sitting on the couch berating myself for even craving my Dr Pepper, thinking “can’t I have just ONE a week?!” ... and here you are, one-soda-a-week-ing it up!
My SW is a bit higher than yours, but I’m 4” taller so I feel it’s safe to relate to your beginning. A week and a half ago I started walking 2 miles 4x/week, which is honestly the most active I’ve ever been. I don’t know if it will lead to running or what, but I’m outside and off the couch. I’m tracking food and just trying to navigate the massive learning curve that is calories/nutrition and just what’s best for me.
My point is I feel like I stumbled on your post at just the right moment, and although I’m on my own journey, I feel a huge connection with yours and think it will be very helpful to mine. Thank you ♥️

(Feels good to finally interact with the community I’ve admired for so long.)
 
@christianmormon Congrats! I lost 15 pounds in a month by just not drinking soda and not eating fast food. I changed my mentality to eating healthy, not being on a "diet" and it's really helped me with my overall relationship with food. Keep it up girl!
 
@christianmormon we are very similar in approaches, what we learned, etc. in a long journey from a plus size to size 4. but the thing that stood out most to me is that you also say "man alive" hahah.

Seriously, well done!
 
@christianmormon This is so inspiring for me. I'm sitting at 5'3" and 192 lbs. And often talk very down to myself and during yoga will just stare in the mirror about unhappy I am looking at myself.
So seeing that someone was able to do it is so awesome to hear.
 
@christianmormon Girl you aced it! 💪🏼 this is exactly the type of message I love reading. I’m super lucky and have always enjoyed exercise and managed to keep healthy, but I understand from people around me how hard changing that mindset is for some people. I’ll be sharing your story as inspiration to others as you’ve smashed it out the park! Especially with not cutting out what you love and just getting in the fruits and veggies. It’s not dieting, it is just a good healthy human diet.
Mega pleased for you and your progress 💪🏼

P.s impressed you can do kettlebells so much, I hate the damn things!
 
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