Styleforum › Forums › Lifestyle › Health & Body › In need of help
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

In need of help - Page 3

post #31 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by kwilkinson View Post
I am 20, and in my junior year of college. I also work a fulltime 50-60 hr a week job. I need to lose weight badly.

When I was in HS, I was in Cross Country (16:30 club, I might add), played soccer in HS & 1 yr of college, and played basketball. At my best weight I was 5'11", 175, at 12% body fat.

Now, I've let myself slowly get far far overweight. I used to have acid reflux, and would throw up after every meal (in a completely non-intentional way, so i'm not bulimic or anorexic) and i got on prescription to end that. I started to gain weight after i lost my acid reflux b/c i was still eating as much but wasn't throwing up every day.
After i got done playing soccer my freshman year, i kind of stopped working out. My whole life i'd been in shape and pretty cut, and now it's ridiculous the shape i'm in.

I am now 5'11" and weigh in at 240. Please don't post comments just telilng me how shit and worthless I am, because that doesn't help anything and makes you look like an asshole.

I realize that what I need is a full lifestyle change, but it is hard for me, because I work 50-60 hours a week, and then i come home and do homework for most of the night (studying a double major in poli sci and business mgment, with a double minor in history and english).

Like I said, I need help. I don't necesarrily need to have a 6 pack or anything, and i don't want some 4 week diet plan, i need some solid advice for how to make a lifestyle change that will help me become more healthy, lose weight, and become a better person.

Thanks so much SF'ers, i know you'll come through for me.


a thing that helps me is by announcing to all those around me (and respect me) that i am going to lose weight little by little and announce it seriously.

one of the things that motivate me to carry through something like that is pride, or just saving face.

when i announce i am going to lose weight seriously and then they dont see any progress, i dont like that others will or perhaps not take me seriously next time or that i am just a joke behind my back.

so that pulls me through.

i strongly urge you not to eat anything 4 hours before you go to sleep. eat a good dinner and DONT eat anything afterwards.

it can be hard the first few weeks, but you get adjusted to it and then it just becomes habit.

that is the key , make certain changes habit.

it is the first 12 days or so that is hard to change and then it becomes relatively easier afterwards.
post #32 of 39
kwilk, and another thing, if you arent doing it already,


i strongly urge you to go for a walk every single day.

even for 20 minutes. in your school clothes whatever, around campus whatever.

let it be a daily thing.

trust me, not only is it good for you healthwise, but you will see a marked difference in your leg shape, and hip area after a couple of weeks.

that sort of thing, seeing results, is one of the things that motivate the continuing of a diet or exercise plan.
post #33 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nil View Post
Yup. The vast majority of people who solicit advice like this never do a damn thing to improve themselves. It's easy to tell who these people are because they make excuses in their initial post on why they can't get into shape. Example:

Yeah, and smug posts belittling people who struggle with it, while offering no useful suggestions, are a big help.
post #34 of 39
kwilk, hope my advice helped.

and while something is better than nothing, i'm not a big fan of walking as exercise unless it's serious uphill walking. walking is a means of transport; steady-state walking is not a great form of exercise.
post #35 of 39
Hi Kwilkinson,

Elliptical machines can be good, but for under $500 you usually get pretty cheaply made machines. I'm not an expert on that subject, so I won't claim to be one. I think you'll see better results if you go to a gym and use other machines and weights in addition to the elliptical.

I see you've already checked out your school's gym hours. That would be the first thing I would have recommended to you. That sucks that it is closed when you have the time. You should talk to whoever is in charge of the gym/athletic department. First off, tell him/her that it would beneficial to you if the gym had additional hours. If enough students do this, eventually they'll open it up. Second, ask him if your school has some sort of guest program with another Chicago college and if you can use that school's gym. This was years ago, but I went to Loyola and at that time, you could use the gym at DePaul and UIC with your Loyola ID. I have no idea if they still honor that.

Next, it may be worth your time to look at some commercial gyms in your area. Most of them have deals for college students. I would recommend Xsport Fitness, just because they're open 24 hours so you'd definitely find hours to work for you. There's no shortages of gyms...Bally's, etc. See what works for your time & budget. Just be careful in signing up for a long contract. One-year would be acceptable, but I would say three-years is not. Also check out your neighborhood YMCA. It's non for profit and give really good deals for students.

As stated in this thread, diet is very, very, VERY important.
post #36 of 39
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by thekunk07 View Post
kwilk, hope my advice helped.

and while something is better than nothing, i'm not a big fan of walking as exercise unless it's serious uphill walking. walking is a means of transport; steady-state walking is not a great form of exercise.

It has helped thus far, thanks. It's only been a few days, but I feel a little... cleaner? I guess is the word I'm looking for.

Anyway, yes, since the year has passed that I've posted the original post I've been through cycles. I've lost 10-15, then gained 15. At one point I had lost quite a bit, but then it started coming back. For the last 4 weeks, I've been running every other day, just started to lift this week, and have cut out all pop. Maybe I'll stick with it this time and maybe I won't. I'd like to say I would, and that I have every hope that I will, but given how the year has gone since my original post, I obviously cannot promise anything. Anyway, to all you lovely people who've posted about me being a piece of shit for not losing weight already, thanks ya'll. You're such an encouragement.

And to Whacked, for starting all of this--- WTF man. You dick!
post #37 of 39
It would be a far better use of money to get a power rack, weights, bench off craigslist (with powerblocks if possible) and do cardio outside. You could score all of them for 500-700 bux and it would save you from having to go to the gym/pay gym memberships. Do that, get your diet in check, drink water, maybe look into an EC stack and you're good to go. Check out the bodybuilding.com forum for more info. <edit> just saw your post above but responded to the original post - I still think it's relevant though
post #38 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by kwilkinson View Post
haha i've never drank alcohol. Even if I wanted to, I don't think i'd be able to find the time to drink.

:roofles:

By the way, I can never find time to exercise. I do make time to drink, however, while I'm at work.
post #39 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by kwilkinson View Post
It has helped thus far, thanks. It's only been a few days, but I feel a little... cleaner? I guess is the word I'm looking for.

Anyway, yes, since the year has passed that I've posted the original post I've been through cycles. I've lost 10-15, then gained 15. At one point I had lost quite a bit, but then it started coming back. For the last 4 weeks, I've been running every other day, just started to lift this week, and have cut out all pop. Maybe I'll stick with it this time and maybe I won't. I'd like to say I would, and that I have every hope that I will, but given how the year has gone since my original post, I obviously cannot promise anything. Anyway, to all you lovely people who've posted about me being a piece of shit for not losing weight already, thanks ya'll. You're such an encouragement.

And to Whacked, for starting all of this--- WTF man. You dick!

dude, there really are only two alternatives.

A. Remain overweight (at 21????) and let it rule and potentially ruin your life. Admit you have no control, and remain "a piece of shit"

B. Take control, and do something about it, and become a better man while you're at it.

Those are your only two choices. Seriously. That's it.

Think about it, you are not healthy and you're still very young. Where are you going to be when you're 40? Morbidly obese? Diabetic? Dead from a heart attack?

Anyway, read this. You don't have to become a bodybuilder, but it's a good look at what motivates some.

http://www.t-nation.com/free_online_..._christmas_bob

Quote:
Guest Atomic Dog
Merry Christmas, Bob
by Chris Shugart


The Atomic Dog is a weekly feature that isn't necessarily about weight training or bodybuilding. Sometimes it's about sports in general, sex, women, or male issues of some kind. At times it's inspirational, but it can also be informative, funny, and even a little weird, but hopefully, always interesting and a little controversial. We hope it reflects the nature of Testosterone magazine in that, just as no man is completely one-dimensional and only interested in one subject, neither are we. If it makes you think or laugh "” or even get angry "” it's served its purpose.


Merry Christmas Bob first appeared in Testosterone #136 and it was hugely popular, causing author Chris Shugart's head to swell to alarming proportions. He was immediately admitted to the hospital where cutting-edge doctors enlisted the entire Texas A & M cheer leading squad to take turns sitting on his face in an effort to compress his swollen head. It was touch and go for awhile, but thank heavens, he survived. Here's the article as it appeared in issue #136:

"So, what are you doing for a living these days?" Bob asked me. We're sitting on the couch at one of those tedious holiday get-togethers, you know, the ones where you're supposed to be nice to family members you never see except during major holidays and funerals. I think Bob is my wife's brother-in-law's second cousin or something.

"I'm the assistant editor and a writer for Testosterone magazine," I say. Bob looks at me with a blank expression on his face, as if I'd just told him I sell handmade testicle warmers beside the freeway and was looking to open franchises across the nation.

"It's a bodybuilding magazine," Isay.

Blank expression. Deer caught in the headlights. Ronnie Coleman doing trigonometry.

"Oh," Bob finally says, "I heard you were, like, one of those bodybuilder guys or something. So, what's that like, you know, working out every day and stuff? I just don't have time to lift weights all day, but I have been meaning to get rid of this beer belly." He takes another sip of beer. "What do you suggest?" Sip.

At first I was a little offended. I wanted to grab him up and say, "You can't tell I'm a bodybuilder?! Look at my ass! Now, if that's not a nice round squat-built piece of sirloin, I don't know what is! You think that comes naturally? I can crack walnuts with this puppy! Wanna see? Huh, punk? Do ya? Do ya?"

Then I realize this just might cause a scene and could cost me several Christmas presents. I was planning on returning any presents I got and using the money to buy a power rack, so I didn't want to jeopardize this gift getting opportunity. I also realized that old Bob probably had a certain preconceived image of a bodybuilder and I just didn't fit that image. I'm not gorilla huge; I weigh about 205 at 5'11" right now. (When I first started lifting I was a pudgy 159, so that's not too shabby.) Also, I wasn't wearing clown pants, a fluorescent string tank top, a hanky on my head and one of those little fanny packs. And isn't that what real bodybuilders are supposed to wear?

Bob continued to sit there drinking his Natural Light, smoking a cigarette and waiting for an answer, oblivious to the fact that he'd come this close to seeing some serious walnut- crunching ass power. I tried to figure out how I could explain to the average guy what the typical T-Man does and why he does it. How could I get him to understand what it is we do, how we feel, how we live? So I took a deep breath and told him something like this:

"Well, Bob, I guess you could use the term bodybuilder if you really need a label for what it is we do. Most of us actually don't stand on stage and compete, though. We lift weights and manipulate our diets so that we'll look good naked. Sure, it's healthy too, and we'll probably live a longer and more productive life than the average guy, but mostly it's about the naked thing. Truthfully, it goes beyond even that.

"Let's be honest here. We do it because of people like you, Bob. We look at you sitting there with your gut hanging over your belt and we watch you grunt and groan just getting out of a chair. Guys like you are our inspiration, Bob. You're better than Anthony Robbins, Bill Phillips, Deepak Chopra, and Zig fucking Ziglar all wrapped up into one. We love it when guys like you talk about not having time to exercise. Every time we see you munching on a bag of potato chips, you inspire us. You're my shot in the arm, Bob, my living and breathing wake-up call, my own personal success coach.

"You want to know what it is we do? We overcome. We're too busy to train, too, but we overcome. We're too busy to prepare healthy meals and eat them five or six times a day, but we overcome. We can't always afford supplements, our genetics aren't perfect, and we don't always feel like going to the gym. Some of us used to be just like you, Bob, but guess what? We've overcome.

"We like to watch 'normal' people like you tell us about how they can't get in shape. We smile and nod sympathetically like we feel your pain, but actually, we're thinking that you're a pathetic piece of shit that needs to grow a spine and join a gym. You smile sheepishly and say that you just can't stay motivated and just can't stand that feeling of being sore. (For some reason you think that admitting your weaknesses somehow justifies them.) We listen to you bitch and moan. We watch you look for the easy way out. Because of people like you, Bob, we never miss a workout.

"You ask us for advice about diet and training and usually we politely offer some guidance, but deep inside we know you won't take our advice. You know that too. We smile and say, 'Hope that helps. Good luck,' but actually we're thinking, 'Boy, it would suck to be you.' We know that 99% of people won't listen to us. Once they hear that it takes hard work, sacrifice and discipline, they stop listening and tune us out.

"We know they wanted us to say that building a great body is easy, but it just isn't. This did not take five minutes a day on a TorsoTrack. We did not get this way in 12 short weeks using a Bowflex and the Suzanne Somers' 'Get Skinny' diet. A good body does not cost five easy payments of $39.95.

"We like it that while you're eating a candy bar and drinking Mountain Dew, we're sucking down a protein shake. You see, that makes it taste even better to us. While you're asleep we're either getting up early or staying up late, hitting the iron, pushing ourselves, learning, succeeding and failing and rising above the norm with every rep. Can you feel that, Bob? Can you relate? No? Good. This wouldn't be half as fun if you could.

"We do it because we absolutely and totally get off on it. We do it because people like you, Bob, either can't or won't. We do it because what we do in the gym transfers over into the rest of our lives and changes us, physically, mentally, maybe even spiritually. We do it because it beats watching fishing and golf on TV. By the way, do you know what it's like to turn the head of a beautiful woman because of the way you're built? It feels good, Bob. Damned good.

"When we're in the gym, we're in this indescribable euphoria zone. It's a feeling of being on, of being completely alive and aware. If you haven't been there, then it's like trying to describe color to a person who's been blind since birth. Within this haze of pleasure and pain, there's knowledge and power, self-discipline and self-reliance. If you do it long enough, Bob, there's even enlightenment. Sometimes, the answers to questions you didn't even know you had are sitting there on those rubber mats, wrapped up in a neat package of iron plates and bars.

"Want to lose that beer belly, Bob? I have a nutty idea. Put down the fucking beer. I'll tell you what, Bob. Christmas morning I'm getting up real early and hitting the iron. I want to watch my daughter open her presents and spend the whole day with her, so this is the only time I have to train. The gym will be closed, so I'm going out in my garage to workout. You be at my house at six in the morning, okay? I'll be glad to help you get started on a weight training program. It'll be colder than Hillary Clinton's coochie in there, so dress warm.

"But let me tell you something, Bob. If you don't show up, don't bother asking me again. And don't you ever sit there and let me hear you bitch about your beer belly again. This is your chance, your big opportunity to break out of that rut. If you don't show up, Bob, you've learned a very important lesson about yourself, haven't you? You won't like that lesson.

"You won't like that feeling in the pit of your stomach either or that taste in your mouth. It will taste worse than defeat, Bob. Defeat tastes pretty goddamned nasty, but what you'll be experiencing will be much worse. It will be the knowledge that you're weak, mentally and physically. What's worse is that you'll have accepted that feeling. The feeling will always be with you. In the happiest moments of your life, it'll be there, lying under the surface like a malignant tumor. Ignore it at your own peril, Bob.

"Don't look at me like that either. This just may be the best Christmas present you'll get this year. Next Christmas, Bob, when I see you again, I'm going to be a little bigger, a little stronger, and a little leaner. What will you be? Will you still be making excuses? This is a gift, Bob, from me to you. I'm giving you the chance to look fate in those pretty eyes of hers and say, 'Step off, bitch. This is my party and you're not invited.' What do you say, Bob? Monday, Christmas morning, 6am, my house. The ball's in your court."

Okay, so maybe that's not the exact words I used with Bob, but you get the picture. Will Bob show up Monday? I don't know, but I kind of doubt it. In fact, Bob will probably take me off his Christmas card list. He probably thinks I've got "too much Testosterone," like that's a bad thing. I think Bob is just stuck in a rut, and as the saying goes, the only difference between a rut and a grave is depth.

The way out of the rut is to make major changes in your life, most of which won't be too pleasant in the beginning. The opportunity to make those changes seldom comes as bluntly as I put it to Bob. Most of the time, that opportunity knocks very softly. What I did was basically give Bob a verbal slap in the face. You can react two ways to a slap. You can get angry at the person doing the slapping, or you can realize that he was just trying to get you to wake up and focus on what you really want and, more importantly, what it'll take to get it.

If you're a regular T-mag reader, I doubt you need to be called out like Bob. But maybe you've caught yourself slacking a little here lately. Maybe you've missed a few workouts or maybe you started a little too early on the usual holiday feasting, like, say, back in September. Just remember that the time to start working on that summer body is now. The time to get rid of those bad habits that hold you back in the gym is now. You want to look totally different by next Christmas? Start now. This isn't because of the holidays or any corny New Year's resolutions either. The best time is always now.

Christmas day I want you to enjoy being with your family and friends. I want you to open presents, sip a little eggnog and have a good meal. But if your regularily scheduled workout happens to fall on December 25th, what will you be doing at six o'clock that morning?

That's what separates us from guys like Bob.



© 1998 "” 2002 Testosterone, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Health & Body
Styleforum › Forums › Lifestyle › Health & Body › In need of help