Kawazaki wrote: Sat Mar 06, 2021 11:24 am
Glibtor wrote: Sat Mar 06, 2021 6:19 am
Throughout my teens to mid 20s, weighed a constant 80kg.
Drinking, partying, then quitting drinking and smoking, and woke up one day and realised a personal "best" - 148kg. I'm 6'3" btw.
I hate dieting, but tried every single diet out there. Best I could do was to lose 10kg.
Also no time/ too lazy to exercise.
Realised I'm wasting my time. Decided I'm going to use mind over matter and think myself slimmer.
Broke the 100kg barrier this morning

All this in 5 years.
I only eat white bread, I'm a chocoholic. I hate exercise. I hate just about all vegetables and mainly stick to rice, potato, meat and pizza and pasta.
I do work a lot harder, despite being desk bound, I always help out in despatch when there are physical intermediate work to be done. This just helped me lose the last 10kg though.
But I eat what I want. My whole life I've always just ate 1 meal a day - supper. But everything in moderation now, no more seconds (or thirds). 200g steaks instead of 500g.
Think yourself slim. No idea why I never thought of doing this myself years ago.
Reading it now, I realize why it sounds very hocus pocus like.
Didn't mean it like that sorry. In my defense I was a bit high at the time.
What I was trying to say was, traditional dieting didn't work for me. And I hated it in any case.
So I focused more on how I eat, instead of what I eat. No more second servings; old me would've done thirds or more. Preferred 500g steaks when dining out, now going for 200g. Smaller portions - one's body quickly becomes used to that.
I don't like veggies in general, but still eat it. Wife makes it, I have no choice than to eat it. But i didn't stop eating any of my favorite foods. Also, not as many take outs, maybe once per fortnight, a opposed to every third day.
Still eat chocolate when in the mood. But not daily, also a a treat once per week.
Although I hate exercising, I'm making up for it by doing more physical labour.
WIth "mind over matter", I meant, I'm concentrating more on thinking about losing weight and adapting eating patterns as needed (thinking when you can or cannot have that chocolate bar for instance), instead of focusing on keeping to specific diets or formal eating plans or exercise regimes.