Desurage wrote:
Do your weight times 10
I'm 338(now) so 3.380 calories per day, this is a very quick BMR estimate.
This is not how much you eat. No. You eat 2000 calories per day. Then reduce by 200 everyday until you hit 1200, which is 400 per meal. Calories are easy to understand, just look at the package and measure out a serving size and thats how many calories per item you have. Get a little weight scale for the meat stuff. Buy Chicken Breasts(almost pure protein, other cuts are cheaper but more fattening), Ground Beef(lean is best but its more expensive), frozen veggies(no sodium, fresh is better if you are rich), Beans(beans are really healthy and cheap), Tuna(in water, also cheap and healthy, no more than one can a day though because mercury). Cottage Cheese and Greek Yogurt are good too. For good fats I eat half an avocado and a 1/2 cup of pistachio with shells a day which is 260 of my 1200 calories and both have protein in them.
This diet sacrifices nothing. I lost 30 pounds so far doing this.
As for exercise the important thing is that you can do it regularly, not so much the intensity. After four weeks of doing the same exact time/intensity/type you increase one of those three, as your body figures out how to do it more efficiently and it doesn't have as much impact anymore.
I think this is the best diet plan so far. My suggestion is that you don't focus on the weight loss goal and instead try to eat more healthy, keeping in mind the effects that every food you eat have on your health. I am on a gluten free diet and I have lost a lot of weight, but I don't think that necessarily has to do with being on this diet. I don't avoid red meat because you need some of it to get your recommended iron intake. Drink either skim milk or 1% milk if you absolutely hate skim milk. Do not eat any fast foods (i.e. fries, burgers, even the salads might have very fattening dressing). Do not drink a lot of alcohol. Make most of your diet fruits and vegetables; eat fruits when you need a sugar fix. Fruits have fiber in them along with sugar, which helps digest the sugars. This is why eating/drinking anything with refined sugar/corn syrup is unhealthy; there is no fiber to accompany the sugars and they are way too concentrated for your body to digest them easily, so they are more likely to go into fat reserves instead. Avoid eating a lot of potatoes, corn, and white rice. I would suggest not to eat those commercial cereals, either, as they may have a lot of sugars added and may not be whole grain. Perhaps a gluten-free diet would be good but it's hard to get onto unless you have an actual allergy to gluten, where bad reactions to foods would be an incentive in itself.
I have lost a lot of weight with diet alone, without any purposeful exercise. Frankly, I'm not organized enough for that...
Oh, and also, no vending machine/convenience store snacks. Those are usually packed with fat. When I really want some, I go with the Lay's baked chips, which are I believe 40% less fat than their standard potato chips.
_________________
Leading a double life and loving it (but exhausted).
Likely ADHD instead of what I've been diagnosed with before.
Last edited by MathGirl on 20 Mar 2012, 4:51 pm, edited 2 times in total.