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I hike a lot , almost everyday, basically am fit *and* fat.
I hike with the dog anywhere from 30 minutes to 90 minutes, averaging 45 to an hour, almost daily. I have a history of being pretty athletic, even though I've slowed down in middle-age. I eat mostly whole foods, mostly made from scratch, but with binging a real culprit for wieght gain. I understand the calorie in and out thing. But , if I eat less , I know it will affect my stamina for hiking. The only other option is to go further, but then I get so sore , my back begins to ache and I'm out for a couple of days. (and Doggo really doesn't like that!)
I've found that for me to exercize moderately, I go for an hour hike in the hilly dirt roads around here, most every day... and try to push for a second hike in the afternoon. Sheesh, goodthing I'm self employed, it takes so much time to stay exercized... and I'm still talking about 50 pounds I need to lose. Something has *got* to give.... |
I've seen a lot of posts about how losing weight is 80% food, 20% exercise. And while I'm not sure about how true that is, I do know that you've got daily exercise down pat. And from your posts you eat mostly healthy foods, it's just the portions that spiral out of control.
I think you might be surprised just how far you can hike and move while eating a little less. Mind you, I'm not talking about shaving off 1,000 calories to begin with or anything, but rather just keeping track and just starting off by taking 100 or 200 calories less than you usually do. Keep up the daily hikes. Keep up the mostly whole foods lifestyle. Monitor your calories for a few weeks. Maybe not even make changes, yet. Simply watching. |
Thank you Faerie, that is wise advise. Of course, I realize I'm eating too much, and getting your 'approval' so to speak, that my exercize is legitimate for even losing weight, it's just screamin' obvious that I'm going to have to do with smaller portions. I think the portion size is so psychological, and when one is motivated, truly, one doesn't feel the difference between 1 piece of ww toast with pb, or 2, and shaving off a few trips to the kitchen for a snack. I'm clearly suffering in the modivation department. If I could lose just 3 pounds, I'd feel a jolt, but I am steadily gaining. I'm posibly just peri-menopausal in my perspective of food with a ravenous appetite, which doesn't help a bit.
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As much as I wish I could bottle up motivation with a side of whole wheat bread that would cause 3 pounds to instantly drop off the scale and send it on over your way, a hug will have to do :) :hug:
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If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always got.
It sounds like you're active. That is good! It sounds like your body has adapted to your hiking. I agree you might need to tweak the food, but I would also encourage you to tweak your exercise. Do something new to shake your body out of its adaptation. Maybe lift weights or hike very vigorously and then recover, hike vigorously and recover. Good luck! |
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I almost always think I want twice as much, before I eat whatever it is. Then I find I can be satisfied with just a modest amount, actually. You possibly could also experiment with reducing the quantity of starchy and sugary carbs you are eating. For many people, these are an appetite-increaser; whereas eating a diet that proportionately is more about lean meats, veggies, and good fats reduces appetite. Simply changing the balance of your diet may change your appetite naturally. |
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So, a little less food, a little more exercize, and no sugar ! (Um.... starting tomorrow morning, after my birthday cake is finished ) :D:D:D |
I think you ought to take a look at this as well. Exercise is great, but more won't compensate for poor eating habits, and we wouldn't want you to injure yourself in trying to burn everything off.
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Insanity = Doing one thing over and over again and expecting a different result
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I am a lifelong hiker. I grew up white water rafting and have guided several trips. I've snowboarded, mountain biked and snowshoed... all while fat. Additionally, the foods that made up my diet were relatively healthful and whole.
I've never hesitated to take on adventures and during the summers I lived on the trails. However, I could never quite crack that "code". It wasn't until I adjusted my intake and accepted that my body will revolt against certain foods (breads and pastas) that I actually lost weight. And the first summer after losing all that weight I made it to the top of my first 14-er (picture of triumph in profile ;)) So I really do agree with Faerie, that you're body might surprise you in what it's able to handle on less food. |
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:lol: Sorry! I know you know that already. I'm the Queen of stating the obvious sometimes.....and in retrospect, I'm not sure it is always helpful. |
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For me, tracking calories and everything was completely overwhelming, so I worked on portion control and eliminating trigger foods and that helped tremendously. I am a terrible tracker. I like "mental notes" ;) Wow! 2 hikes a day! I would give just about anything to get any in (blast you, winter!:mad:). |
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