Quote:
Originally Posted by Heather
I was overwhelmed when I started, so I just picked a couple of habits I thought I could change and started there. I started packing a lunch and snacks for work everyday (so I would stop eating from the fast food counter and the vending machine) and I started paying attention to portions. That lasted a few weeks, and then I started adding in other things. I started calorie counting, and then started adding in exercise, and then I started paying attention to what I was eating, etc!
So, you can start by baby-stepping! Just make a COMMITMENT to whatever you choose, and make it something both realistic to change and something you could do for the long haul!
This is very good advice.
There is actually an advantage to having a lot of weight to lose - to being more than 100 pounds overweight, say. It doesn't take a lot of work to lose in those circumstances. All you have to do, really, is not be a pig. That sounds flip but when you are just getting started it really can be that easy.
Small changes add up - grab an apple instead of hitting the vending machine when you want a snack. When you are preparing yourself a meal, serve yourself 3/4 as much as you would have before, and drink a glass of water instead of having seconds - or just have seconds of the vegetables. Say "no thanks" to dessert, or eat another apple instead. If you used to put half & half in your coffee, switch to 2% milk.
Move just a little more than you used to. Take a walk every day if you are completely sedentary now.
These aren't really difficult changes to make, they don't require a lot of knowledge or research, and only a little bit of planning, but the best thing is you will start losing weight right away, and will have success to build on as you develop your long-term plans. Eventually these small changes won't be enough, but by that time you'll have lost 25 or 30 pounds and you'll be motivated to step it up.
Remember, all you have to do to lose weight is eat less and exercise more. Everything else - the tips, the plans, the counting, the psychology - are just the games and tricks we play with ourselves to achieve those two objectives.
If you try to change everything at once and put yourself on a serious and restrictive plan, you might be setting yourself up for failure. Instead, take advantage of the one benefit of being very overweight - if you are in the habit of eating like a horse and you don't exercise at all, then eating less and exercising more is relatively easy. So make small changes right away and get yourself on the right track while you research the best ways to get on a long-term track of eating less and exercising more.
Best of luck.