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Originally Posted by antz.bin This is easier said than done with just portion control. I can't imagine how I would feel not being full after a meal. No wonder people gain their weight back.
It has been easier to just fast for 1 meal and then eat what I want till I am full. Easiest way to be in calorie deficit. |
Calorie deficit doesn't mean you eat whatever you want to. You cannot eat 2000 calories just in fat for instance!
But, you can eat low calorie dense foods, with enough protein and other macros, but fat.
For example, french toasts in just egg whites. Separate the yolk out. Mix few berries or bananas. You can have as many as 6-8 breads with the above and it really fills your stomach. Calorie wise, not much. Fat wise, not much either.
Then again, for lunch, never go chicken-brocoli-rice, as that can't be sustained.
I have up to 2 small cups of rice (uncooked), a mix of all sorts of veggies/non veg (either) with pulses for lunch. Again, not a lot of calories.
If I have extra from the day, I use same foods for dinner (I eat by 8 PM at most), or if in a really good mood, then chicken base pizza it is! At times, protein ice cream before hitting the bed.
I actually never suffer in terms of food. I love everything I eat, just optimized. Also, I don't completely avoid samosas/momos/jalebis either. Just control how many to eat.
I merely reduced oil by say 30% (going by the ration figures), replaced sugar with sugar free powder (not for tea, but kheer, sewai etc) and made the above changes along with strength training.
I have lost 13 kg in 7.5 months (about 1.5 kg per month) while having gained 700g-800g muscle (varies across different machines).
My target is reducing fat and not losing on muscle.
If you really want some recipes on low calorie dense food, you can look at greg Doucette (be warned, he is a bit loud), Simon Miller, Johnny Shreve and Chris Heria (from the world of Kalisthenics).
I managed to get a few diets in full by watching their youtube channels and I have absolutely loved the journey. My HDL/LDL are in super good condition now, my heart is probably in a much better condition because of 5-6 km walks daily and I feel less tired everyday.
This is something I can sustain. Many more can too, as I see around me, who took the journey along with me.
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Originally Posted by graaja Agree. Many people do not sustain IF. IMHO, the reason is that they start IF with a mind set of using it to loose weight. When they make up their mind that this is a good lifestyle and believe in that lifestyle, they can easily sustain for life.
Even calorie restriction has the same drawback. Unless you have a good control of what you eat and how much you eat .....
My intent is not to argue with your concept of calorie restriction. Yes. Calorie restriction works. But beyond some point it stops working. As long as it works for you, there is nothing wrong in following this lifestyle.
As long as you are able to maintain your health and fitness, it does not matter what path you choose  |
I absolutely agree with the overall theme of discussion here. I tried intermittent fasting, but couldn't sustain it. And yes, I completely blame my own lifestyle for it. It wasn't happening for me and I wasn't liking it.
Also, I don't work as hard as villagers do, on a daily basis, at least physically.
Hence I opted for the longer route, which takes probably a bit longer to reach your desired weight range and then stay there/build from there and hurts way less and something I can happily follow.
My only point is that, we, in the pursuit of health and fitness, forget health (the 1st word) and only try to work on fitness and hurt ourselves by doing things in a way they weren't meant to be done in.
Health is wealth and if IF works in the long term for everyone, so be it. In my (family's) case, IF couldn't be sustained.