Good morning Folks;
I am 46, 5'8", 280#. I recently climbed a flight of stairs and had to sit down at the top because I was out of breath.
I did some research, and found out that one cookie is the same as 20 minutes of running; so it seems obvious that most weight loss will come from not stuffing crap into face. Although I am reading that muscles that are "in shape" burn more calories than flabby muscles, so exercise is definitely needed.
Now, problems; I'm not having trouble reducing what I eat. I'm making smaller meals, and I'm no longer buying snacks. What happens is that about 4-6 hours after eating I get so hungry that I'm nauseous, and have a very pronounced feeling of exhaustion and weakness. I have tried to get through this with coffee, and 5-hour energy, but that just leaves me exhausted and jittery. The weakness is so bad that just standing and moving around is a chore; so the thought of going to a gym, or even just walking a couple of miles, is almost torture.
For meals, I've been eating the same thing every day; Breakfast is 2 eggs, scrambled with skim milk and a 1/8 cup cheddar cheese. Lunch is a Salami on wheat, dry. Dinner is a chicken breast with mixed vegetables. I drink water, except for breakfast which is milk, and about 4 cups of coffee through the day.
Is this something that will pass? That I just have to power through while body adjusts? Or am I doing something wrong? I have not started exercising yet, because I'm barely able to stay awake.
I am very motivated to loose weight, but I can barely function like this. When I started this diet I went to bed right after eating, and would sleep 10-12 hours. I'm forcing myself to stay awake now, but its basically just sitting there being tired.
Thanks for any advice!
Starting weight loss, having trouble
Moderators: Boss Man, cassiegose
Re: Starting weight loss, having trouble
Hi Argent, good to talk to you.
This kind of system might work for you. It's something I've posted before.
Breakfast
Option 1.
Bowl of Whole-grain Cereal and 1 rasher of Bacon, fat trimmed off and scrambled Eggs, (2 Egg Whites + Yolk)
Option 2.
Protein shake, small portion of Nuts, (excluding higher carb ones like Cashews, Chestnuts and Grapenuts), + Apple. Give the Apple 10-15 minutes to digest to improve digestion.
Snack
Option 1.
Portion of Turkey + Orange
Option 2.
Small Portion of Peanuts, some Chicken + Raw Carrott.
Lunch
Option 1.
Large Beef Sandwich with trimmings, I.E. Tomato, Lettuce, Cucumber etc.
Option 2.
Bowl of Chicken Soup, + Pot of yoghurt.
Snack
Option 1.
Turkey + Cashews
Option 2.
Ham + 2 large Tomatos
Dinner
Option 1.
Pork with mashed Potato.
Option 2.
Chicken and Rice
Option 3.
100g Halibut + Broccoli
Snack
Option 1.
Beans on Toast
Option 2.
Ham Sandwich, no trimmings.
Easy on the bread with both options.
You could add a few things to certain meals, like Sea Salt, Cracked Black Pepper, Parsley, Mustard, Herbs, Garlic.
As for the training you could do a schedule something like this.
Squats, 2 sets, 10 reps
Lunges, 2 sets, 10 reps
Deadlifts, 2 sets, 10 reps
Bench Press, 2 sets, 10 reps
Bent over Rows, 2 sets, 10 reps
Shrugs, 2 sets, 10 reps
Planks 30 seconds.
You would do that 3x a week every other day.
In relation to what to use, go for the second smallest barbell on the squats and deadlifts and the smallest on bent over rows.
Use the second smallest dumbbells on bench press and lunges and the smallest ones on shrugs.
Then every 2 weeks increase the weight a little bit and then after around 6 weeks, you'll be ready to lift close to max lifting for reps, bearing in mind you don't need to do failure training, as it's not necessary and wastes more energy.
This is how your schedule could look per week
Day 1. Weights
Day 2. Cardio
Day 3. Weights
Day 4. Day off
Day 5. Cardio
Day 6. Weights
Day 7. Day off.
This prevents you doing 5 days straight and 2 days of nothing, as I think that's allowing too much consecutive taxation and 2 days of your body doing nothing, slowly starting to adjust to it, before 5 days of grind again, which might take the edge off progress potential, so the 5 split days should be better for you.
This kind of system might work for you. It's something I've posted before.
Breakfast
Option 1.
Bowl of Whole-grain Cereal and 1 rasher of Bacon, fat trimmed off and scrambled Eggs, (2 Egg Whites + Yolk)
Option 2.
Protein shake, small portion of Nuts, (excluding higher carb ones like Cashews, Chestnuts and Grapenuts), + Apple. Give the Apple 10-15 minutes to digest to improve digestion.
Snack
Option 1.
Portion of Turkey + Orange
Option 2.
Small Portion of Peanuts, some Chicken + Raw Carrott.
Lunch
Option 1.
Large Beef Sandwich with trimmings, I.E. Tomato, Lettuce, Cucumber etc.
Option 2.
Bowl of Chicken Soup, + Pot of yoghurt.
Snack
Option 1.
Turkey + Cashews
Option 2.
Ham + 2 large Tomatos
Dinner
Option 1.
Pork with mashed Potato.
Option 2.
Chicken and Rice
Option 3.
100g Halibut + Broccoli
Snack
Option 1.
Beans on Toast
Option 2.
Ham Sandwich, no trimmings.
Easy on the bread with both options.
You could add a few things to certain meals, like Sea Salt, Cracked Black Pepper, Parsley, Mustard, Herbs, Garlic.
As for the training you could do a schedule something like this.
Squats, 2 sets, 10 reps
Lunges, 2 sets, 10 reps
Deadlifts, 2 sets, 10 reps
Bench Press, 2 sets, 10 reps
Bent over Rows, 2 sets, 10 reps
Shrugs, 2 sets, 10 reps
Planks 30 seconds.
You would do that 3x a week every other day.
In relation to what to use, go for the second smallest barbell on the squats and deadlifts and the smallest on bent over rows.
Use the second smallest dumbbells on bench press and lunges and the smallest ones on shrugs.
Then every 2 weeks increase the weight a little bit and then after around 6 weeks, you'll be ready to lift close to max lifting for reps, bearing in mind you don't need to do failure training, as it's not necessary and wastes more energy.
This is how your schedule could look per week
Day 1. Weights
Day 2. Cardio
Day 3. Weights
Day 4. Day off
Day 5. Cardio
Day 6. Weights
Day 7. Day off.
This prevents you doing 5 days straight and 2 days of nothing, as I think that's allowing too much consecutive taxation and 2 days of your body doing nothing, slowly starting to adjust to it, before 5 days of grind again, which might take the edge off progress potential, so the 5 split days should be better for you.