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Mental block

MANDY2910

Member
Ok ladies and gentleman… I have steadily increased my portion sizes as tolerated since surgery 7 weeks ago. It stands to reason that my calories would increase as well. Logically I know that the amount of calories I ingest is not super critical when you are eating 3 ounces of food at a time, but I get almost panicky when I track my food and I start getting close to 500 calories. Why that number bothers me I don’t understand. I keep telling myself that I have to feed my body to keep losing weight but as I increase my intake it just makes me more and more nervous. I still feel no hunger but I also don’t feel any sensation of “full” either. I’m sure I’m not the only one who has ever had this issue. Just another diseased thinking process I guess.
 
I’m glad you brought this up, I’ve been having the same issue Mandy! Like I have said in this forum before, this whole process is so psychological. I am feeling hunger, though, I guess more of a void/ache if it’s been a while since I’ve eaten. I also get a definite ache when I’ve hit around 4 oz. I track everything, and that calorie total messes with me. Like you said, we need to keep feeding our body to keep losing. I’m experiencing a stall right now that is most likely due to this reason. I can’t get under #200 for the life of me!
 
I have decided to stop tracking for awhile and just stick to the plan I was given and listening to my body’s signals. I weigh everything out already so as long as I’m on plan I need to just chill out and quit worrying about it so much.
 
I am 4 weeks post op, and have been wondering the same thing. I plan to go back to the gym this week, but I’m afraid it will stall progress.
 
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You might find it helpful to read about "adaptive thermogenesis" at federal site citations:


Suthy is right, that the psychological aspect of weight loss or obesity is powerful and can control your ability to see accurately. The bottom line is extremely ordinary: burn more calories than you take in. That means movement of some kind must be paired with calories eaten.

That's why tracking is important, and that tracking should be done physically, pen to paper. Every bite. Every crumb. Once you know what you're eating, and you're realistic about it, you can change the size or amount accordingly. People who cook or clean up after meals often taste, or clean up leftover bits on the family plates by nibbling. This is the "human garbage can" routine where we are in denial about how much we eat because we only guess about how much is on our plate or stirring spoon.

If we were that able to be accurate, we never would have become obese and needed surgical intervention in the first place.

And starvation dieting is the worst thing you can do, because our bodies kick into adaptive thermogenesis to keep us from starving. The less you eat, the more your body's starvation response will kick in to hang on to calories.

You can pair your hunger pangs with any sort of movement, even walking in place while watching tv or stirring a pot, or sitting in a chair, moving your knees as if walking. After a while, you may even be able to develop an association with hunger and movement, where your sense of pain from hunger goes away as soon as you start to move deliberately.

This was the hardest thing for me to do after surgery, but I did it, and can testify it works. It's a pain in the ass, but after a while, it even becomes comforable.
Amen❤️
 
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