“Stick it out!” – Heidi pushed through a 12 WEEK weight loss plateau!

“Stick it out!” – Heidi pushed through a 12 WEEK weight loss plateau!

weight loss plateauFor the first time in my life I feel like I am doing the right thing by my body (and mind).

Starting from the time I was a small child I had issues with food. I had a parent who would say things like “Do you really need to eat that?”. She was also always trying some crazy diet or weight watchers, slim fast etc. I remember thinking I needed to be doing slim fast shakes too when I was 8 years old.

When I was 9 years old I began to make myself throw up after eating a large meal or if I over did it on junk food. That continued until I was 14 when I discovered the gym. I would spend hours upon hours working out but took a pause from bulimia. I also took up smoking to help control my hunger (I was smart one…)

I continued on with this until I was in University when I began to make myself throw up again as well as exercise for hours on end. I looked pretty good too. I was lifting heavy weights but also doing hour of cardio per day. I was a student at the time so I had the time that I could put into that, but I wasn’t ever really happy with myself or my body (looking back I would kill for that body now but not how I was maintaining it).

After University I got married and quit the gym because we couldn’t afford it and didn’t live near one anymore. I put on 55 lbs in no time. I just ballooned right up and couldn’t mentally handle it. I started making myself throw up even more, sometimes ten or more times per day. I was still fat.

My husband and I decided it was time to have babies and I decided it was time for me to confess my deep dark secret to him. I didn’t want to live like that anymore. He was sweet and supportive. I sought counseling because I didn’t want to bring a child into this world while I was treating my body that way. I committed to ditching the Bulimia and after 18 months became pregnant with my daughter.

weight loss plateau

Within 6 weeks of having her I knew I wanted to make a change. I dieted (low calorie), and started running as well as spin class and got myself down from 245 to 186 (with no real shape yet to my body). At this point I got pregnant again with my son and went back up to 235 despite doing spin and eating better during this pregnancy.

Now, one year later I am down to 178 lbs but I look a million times better and I feel a billion times better. Around the end of April 2012 I started reading about “Eat more to weigh less” on the Myfitnesspal forums. It all just made so much sense to me. It seemed to reasonable and like something I could stick with for the rest of my life. So I upped my calories! At this point I was already lifting heavy weights as well but on low calorie diet there is really only so much your body can do in terms of recomposition.

So TMI but my whole life I have been constipated. When I upped my calories I immediately became regular and also had more energy and I was able to increase the weights I was lifting exponentially. I also dropped 5 or 6 lbs right away (I had previously been on a weight loss plateau). Then the weight loss slowed to a grinding halt for 12 weeks. Now, most people would give up and go back to their 1200 calorie diets, BUT I knew in my heart heart that I needed to stick this out. I NEEDED to. For my children’s sake. I NEED to be a good example for them, a healthy example. So I just plugged away at it, day in and day out. Was it frustrating to not see the scale budge? Absolutely. 12 weeks!!! And then finally in the 13th week I started dropping weight again. And in the mean time I was seeing changes in my body, both how I looked and how I felt. I was stronger and happier and my libido was even coming back.

I started seeing a naturopathic doctor who has a machine to monitor lean body mass and metabolism. Both of those numbers were low for me. weight loss plateauFor the past 5 months I have seen her monthly and each month I have lost pounds of fat and maintained my muscle mass or even put on muscle! On a low calorie diet this would be pretty well impossible.

Another important thing for me was increasing my protein amounts to 1 gram per pound of bodyweight. Since increasing my calories and protein I have not felt the urge to binge or overdo it really at all. Everything just seems more balanced. It has been 8 months so far and I have not looked back once despite the plateaus or the weight gains here and there because I am smaller, fitter and happier and I know this is the way to go. And in fact, this is how my thin/athletic friends live their lives as well.

This was very long winded but the moral of the story is that you need to stick it out. Even if you hit a weight loss plateau and don’t see a loss on the scale for months, there are other more important things happening in your body. Not to mention the fact that you are worth more than a number on the scale!

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share? Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it! Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

“This is a precious and life changing process” – (Kelsey’s update)

“This is a precious and life changing process” – (Kelsey’s update)

Follow Kelsey’s journey from the beginning: part 1, and part 2
life changing ***UPDATE – 22 DECEMBER 2012***

 

Weight = 137 lbs (-7.6 lbs)
Leg = 23 inches (+0.5 inches)
Waist = 30.5 inches (+ 0.5 inches)
Hips = 35 inches (+0.5 inches)
Chest = 32.5 (-1 inch)
Arm = 12.5 (-0.5 inches)

 

 I have now been on EM2WL since 1 June 2012, so it will be 7 months on 1 January 2013!!  
 The benefits so far:-

  • being able to eat more and not feel guilty
  • putting proper clean foods into my body
  • more energy
  • stronger (both body and mind)
  • a much more confident individual
  • a lot more self worth…I no longer base it on a number!
  • being able to enjoy the precious time I spend with family and friends and not constantly having this little voice in my head telling me “don’t eat that, you’ll get fat”
  • acknowledging that everyone is a different shape and size and accepting that my body is built for strength and independence!
  • being able to run 3 miles – I have one leg shorter than the other as you can see in the picture so that is a task in itself!

life changing I am listing no burdens because I don’t believe that EM2WL is a burden, I think it does have a few hard points about it like feeling bloated etc but I wouldn’t say they equate to burdens. Therefore I think this process is in itself precious and life changing.

My future goals are to run the Race for Life in May/June 2013 and complete the Insanity programme which I am starting on 31 December 2012. I am going to do it 3 times a week and run 3 miles once a week so I should hopefully be finished by 1 June 2013 which is when I will update you with my final results/1st year of EM2WL. I will update you again in March 2013 as to my progress and take some more piccies. 

Love to you all and I hope the New Year brings you all happiness and hope :)


Kels xx

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share?  Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it!  Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

Celebrating the Milestones ~ The Long Haul update

Celebrating the Milestones ~ The Long Haul update

To follow Nicole’s journey from the beginning: part 1 2 3, 4

Just had to share this update with you all….

refeedFirst, a little note: I am now into my 7th month of EM2WL and my refeed.  It’s been a very bumpy process with multiple NSV’s along the way as you know and I have come to expect that it will be approximately next spring before I will have healed my metabolism completely and be able to start a successful cut process.  Cut so far has only maintained and I’m bouncing around the same few pounds (still incredible considering that I’m eating at least a 1000 more cals a day than I used to) so I’ve decided to do a bulk this winter.  I plan to start at the end of this month along with Cathe Friedrich’s STS program and continue to refeed my body, build muscle and work on my metabolism.  I will do the pyramid (1,2,3,2,1) and will not cut again until Meso 1 at the end…at least that is the plan.  That should put me in cut just before spring with nearly a year of metabolism repair.  (You might be a little overwhelmed by the fact that I seem to need so long to heal – I had to come to terms with it myself after weeks of fighting it – but remember, I came from a severe diet/exercise history…it is going to take time to FULLY repair the damage)

Now, that being said…I wanted to share the most recent victory with you that proves my metabolism is healing because it was such an awesome thing to me.

refeedI just got back from an 8 day vacation in Mexico. Previous vacations have always ended in my gaining at least 5 – 7lbs. No exception…and always while eating very little, exercising like crazy and basically not being able to fully enjoy my vacation the way it was intended. Needless to say, I was freaking out that I would put on more weight and I still hadn’t lost the reset weight and it took some time for me to come to terms with that so that I could enjoy my vacation. But, this year was different.

I weighed myself before I left. Then I went and completely relaxed and enjoyed my vacation. I did not go to the resort gym, or try to swim off cals or walk off cals. I just did what I wanted, rested when I wanted, enjoyed my excursions and relaxed. And I ATE. A LOT. I didn’t watch macros, or worry about how many cals were in those 3 desserts I just ate in one sitting followed by a margarita or two. I didn’t worry about fried foods or breads or sauces or the fact that I just had a hotdog and tortilla chips for a snack…

refeed

“I just ate what I wanted…didn’t gain an ounce!”

I just ate what I wanted. I was so incredibly full every day that by the time I got home I couldn’t hardly imagine eating another bite. Of course, I still woke up starving the next morning, but whatever…lol.

Here’s the greatest part. I weighed myself when I got back…and I didn’t gain an ounce. I weigh EXACTLY the same as I did when I left. My body dealt with all those extra cals, regulated my eating naturally enough and my energy that it all balanced out perfectly in the end! This is proof that my metabolism is truly, and wonderfully healing to a natural, healthy state. And that is beyond awesome to me. I may not be losing any weight yet, but I knew going into this process that it would likely take me months of refeeding and building up my metabolism before a cut would work for me (even if I hoped otherwise) and I am thrilled with every milestone I achieve in this journey. For me, this is a big one.

If you are like me, coming from a severe diet/exercise history, take your time and refeed your body. Watch for the milestones. You may need months of healing before you will see success at cut (which sucks-believe me, I know, but it may be necessary)…Just remember to celebrate the NSV milestones along the way because those are just as important and just as awesome.

 

refeed

Have an EM2WL transformation to share? Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it! Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

“We don’t have to starve ourselves to lose weight!” ~ Lulu

“We don’t have to starve ourselves to lose weight!” ~ Lulu

lose weightI guess you could say my story started when I was 15 years old. I was shy, dorky, and pudgy – a bit of a late bloomer, really. One day I looked at myself in the mirror, was disgusted with what I saw, and decided to pretty much stop eating for awhile. I dropped a lot of weight, my confidence skyrocketed, I started going out with my first boyfriend, and I couldn’t believe the joy of being slim. Not eating felt easy with all the stress of high school. Life felt good! After awhile I relaxed a bit, ate a lot of food with my boyfriend, and all the weight came back on fast. Before my graduation I broke up with my boyfriend, was dismayed with the weight gain, stopped eating again for even longer this time, started aerobics and was tiny again by graduation. And there you have it. I have just described the yo-yo pattern that would plague me for the best part of the next decade of my life.

Of course, back then starving myself worked. My metabolism wasn’t damaged, the cardio was new to my body, and I felt amazing. Slowly but surely, the weight started creeping back on (I am definitely not slim by nature), so I would up my cardio, and lower my calories. Over the next few years I felt like I was fighting a losing battle. I did aerobics and step classes morning and night, I didn’t eat much and had insane sugar cravings, so when I did eat it would be to devour an entire pack of lollies in one go. I tried strength training with a personal trainer with terrible results. I had no idea why everyone else seemed to eat so much and stay slim, and I was working around the clock getting nowhere fast. lose weightI would lose weight, gain weight, lose weight, gain weight, until a horrible relationship/breakup saw me through the lowest period of self-esteem I think I’ve ever experienced. Looking back on some writing I did at that time, I was in a very dark place. I had never eaten so little in my life. I started experiencing heart palpitations during aerobics, I would feel shaky all day. Things came to a head when I’d been for a huge run in the morning, consumed only one glass of no-fat milk, and fainted during a routine flu shot later that day. When I came to, the nurse told me that my pulse had been very weak, I freaked out and fainted again. I went home and cried and cried and cried. The only way I could stay thin was by starving my body so much that I was slowly killing myself. And I wasn’t even that thin, you couldn’t have even called me skinny. It felt like I was even failing at anorexia. I told myself that living was more important, and that if being pudgy meant living, then pudgy it was. I started eating again, but the relentless cardio didn’t stop. For the next five years I yo-yo’d up and down, the same five kilograms every time, on a small 5’3 girl. I would lose it, people would compliment me. I would relax, put it back on, my clothes would get tight. I would lose it again. I tried the cabbage soup diet, low carb, meal replacement shakes – you name it, I tried it. I would drop weight so quickly (fluid, obviously), stick with whatever it was for a couple of weeks, give up and binge, find another diet to try. I was totally, ridiculously stuck. Some nights I would just cry. My weight felt like the hardest battle in the world. And at the same time I hated myself for putting so much emphasis on the way I looked.

lose weightFast forward a couple of years to meeting the love of my life. Someone who loved me and my body so wholesomely and transparently that I finally began to believe there was more to me than what I weighed. I still yo-yo’d, he still loved my body at every turn. I was coming out of my early twenties and seeing the world a lot differently. I was so burnt out after 8 years of relentless, punishing cardio, I needed a break. I took a year off exercise. For a whole year, I watched my hard bits go soft, and my soft bits get softer. But somehow I knew that if I didn’t do this, nothing would ever change. He still loved me. When I stopped fitting into my biggest clothes, I knew I was ready to go back. I started exercising again slowly. My relationship with food was still pretty crappy, but I felt better. I was still the queen of fads, however. I got obsessed with hot yoga, then obsessed with running, then obsessed again with aerobics. I found out I was going to be on TV and I knew I “had to get serious” again with my food. I went online to research rapid fat loss, spoke to people in the fitness industry who I thought could give me expert advice. I was back on super-low carb and super-low cal, but I knew I needed a way to track what I was doing. I found the myfitnesspal app, set it to the magical 1200 and knuckled-down. I was so proud of myself, I was being so strict. I would brag to my boyfriend about how healthy I was eating, but go to bed starving. Some days I was netting 700. Who cares what MFP said about this being too low, a huge calorie deficit was a huge win, right?! Wrong, obviously. Yes, I lost, but barely, enough so that I felt ok on TV, but not enough. I was had pudgy areas, the fat just wasn’t going anywhere. Something was very, very wrong and again, I just didn’t understand why it was just so damn hard for me.

lose weightI started reading the forums to get some answers and very quickly came across the EM2WL group. I read, and read and read. Read the starvation studies, read about my BMR, read about how I had been doing serious damage to my poor metabolism for the best part of a decade. Everything suddenly made perfect sense. Yes, I was terrified to increase my calories, but I knew I was ready for the lifelong change. I went straight to 1800 and in those first few days, the pure joy of eating full meals was enough to bring tears to my eyes. I couldn’t believe I could eat this much, and that it was still a calorie deficit. I realised the importance of strength training. I re-joined the gym and ordered the New Rules of Lifting for Women. I started straight away. From that very day, I knew that I had made a lifestyle change. I repeated over, and over to myself (and still do to this day): “Have patience. This is going to take time. Imagine what you’re going to look like in 3 years”. I still look in the mirror today, see the small changes that come with a small calorie deficit, and remind myself of the same things. Every day he touches my back or my leg, in disbelief of how strong and firm my body is feeling, yet I know he would love me know matter what. And I know I will too. I have come to realise, very sadly, that I abused my body relentlessly for 10 years, I am still learning to forgive myself. But I love myself far too much these days to ever go back. I’m not perfect, some days I get impatient and contemplate a bigger deficit for a quicker change, but I know it’s not worth it in the long run. Why compromise my metabolism for a short-term gain? I always want to be able to eat this much. There is no point compromise my strength training now that my muscles are flourishing.

Another huge thing that has happened to me is the focus on my macros. I used to hear people talking about “fueling” their workouts, and eating to suit their training, but I never understood how they could do it, to me that sounded like “eat cardboard and run”. Previously I’d had such a flawed relationship with food that when I was actually eating, it would be sweet, fatty and the highest of carb for instant gratification. If I wasn’t eating all day, when I did eat, it was going to be good. But I learnt through EM2WL that that if I wanted muscles, I needed protein so I started looking for ways to increase it.  lose weightSome of the best advice I ever received from Kiki & Lucia was to shoot for my protein macro every day, and the rest should fall into place. This was so true!! I’m now successfully eating at a ratio of 35% protein, 30% carb, 35% fat. I never, ever thought I could be one of “these people” and still enjoy my food. Also since the day I increased my calories, I have never felt deprived again. I don’t think I’ve had a single binge since.

Some days I get a bit emotional thinking of where I’ve been, and where I am now, and just want to fly over the other side of the world to give Kiki & Lucia the biggest hug that I can possibly give. These women, through their patience, goodness and selfless enthusiasm, have undoubtedly turned my destructive relationship with food and my body into a passion for health and fitness that I’ve never experienced. They have taught me patience and given me the tools to continue eating well and getting stronger and fitter for the rest of my life. All I want to do now is help spread the word to women especially, that we don’t have to starve ourselves to lose weight. I have become so passionate about the cause. And I can finally say that my body is looking healthier and firmer than I’ve ever seen it. Imagine what it will look like in 3 years!

 

 

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share? Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it! Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

“This is worth sticking to!” – Mrs. Mofasa (an EM2WL testimonial)

Hi everyone! I’m Mrs Mofasa and here is my story.

EM2WL testimonialI started EM2WL in March. I jumped right into it cause for one, I loved the name of the group. Eat more, why not? Weigh less. Oh yeah! The first two months I was trying to get the hang of everything going from the crazy 1200 cal diet my doc gave me to my BMR. I loved it, but I was gaining weight back. I knew why – cause for 6 months I ate 1200 cals, worst mistake of my life. I should have went to a nutritionist instead of my fam doc. I’m just so blessed that I found this group, it changed my life.

I did get upset when I gained those pounds I worked so hard to get off, but this is worth sticking to. It’s been 7 months since starting EM2WL and I love it. I can’t believe I survived off 1200 cals. I’m never going back there again! As of now I’m 157.4, the lowest I been since I started my journey last year in September. I was 202lbs. Now I have 7.4 lbs til my goal weight and my cal intake just keeps increasing! (I eat over 2000 cals a day!) Yes, I love that! Also, I use to burn over 1000 cals a day tryna lose weight, but I realize I only can burn no more than 600 cals a day and still lose weight — which is not a problem at all 60 mins a day of exercising and I’m done. I’m a wife and mother of two children. When I was eating at 1200 calories, plus doing high burns, I didn’t have that much energy to keep up with my family. I was tired most of the time. Now that I eat more – and most of the time have low calorie burns – I have so much energy because I realized I need to have more fuel (food) in order for my body to function properly.

EM2WL testimonialI weigh in every month and every month I’m pleased to say I lose something, which I’m happy with. Anything lost is a greatly appreciated loss. Slow and steady wins the race. I used to give myself time limits like, “I’m going to lose this much by this time”- not no more cause I realize my body gonna work how it works! We go through so many changes that there is no need to set a limit when this is a lifetime journey!

OK I’m gonna stop rambling, but I can go on! I really just wanna say Thanks to Lucia and Kiki! You both are life changers! Cheers to eat more 2 weigh less!

 

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share? Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it! Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

Alicia’s progress 1.5 months after upping her caloric intake

Alicia’s progress 1.5 months after upping her caloric intake

caloric intakeAfter two major surgeries, I found myself lacking muscle and feeling sluggish. Months earlier, a friend of mine brought EM2WL to my attention. Realizing that my caloric intake was so low and was actually doing more damage to my body was amazing and depressing in the same breath.

While recovering from surgery and unable to lift or kickbox, so I focused on my diet. I am a clean-eating vegetarian, so I have to fight to ensure that I ingest healthy and clean proteins. Here is a sample menu of what I eat:

 

Breakfast:
Vegan protein shake (Protein, steel cut oatmeal, wheat grass, banana)

Snack:
Almonds
Fruit – usually strawberries

Lunch:
Plant based protein (lentils, beans… whatever)
Whole grain (ezekiel brand) pita or corn tortilla
Veggies
Salad
Olive oil salad dressing

Snack:
Boiled Egg Whites
Veggie

Dinner:
Plant based protein (lentils, beans… whatever)
Brown Rice
Veggies
Salad
Olive oil salad dressing

Yes, I eat all of that in one day… The serving sizes are great and I take in anywhere from 110-140g of protein.

Ok, so fast forward to 2 weeks post the last surgery, I took the picture on the left with the blue/green shorts. I started on heavy weights only. Cardio was limited because I was still in recovery. I would lift about 4x per week and then allow for recovery the other three days. After week four, I incorporated Nike Training Club and Kickboxing 3x per week while lifting 3x per week… Some of the cardio days overlapped with the weight training days. Super sets, HIIT, and heavyweights (especially leg press) were and still are my friends.

Picture in the pink top was taken 1.5 months after the picture on the left. Now, just to give you a little history, I have always worked out; therefore, my muscle memory is fabulous… Nonetheless, I still put in the work via proper diet and weight lifting.

My next picture will be taken 1.5 mos from now… Hopefully the transformation will continue!!!!

 

 

Have an EM2WL transformation to share?  Willing to let us tag along on your journey? We’d love to see it!  Be featured on our Transformation/Journey page by submitting your story to Success@EM2WL.com

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