So... Today I've been reading many of the awesome posts and appreciating what an informed, motivated and supportive group this is and first just want to say thanks to everyone for sharing your experiences, insight and support here!!
It was so helpful to me to read about your experiences and the diligence you've found necessary to maintain or even lose weight in your 40s 50s and beyond. Since my hypothyroid diagnosis a couple years ago it's been quite a journey to feeling almost 100% and becoming acquianted with the reality my metabolism will likely never be the same and requires an even more diligent nutrition relationship. I've always had a penchant for healthy food and weighed the same/maintained the same 115ish lbs with low-mid teens bodyfat all the way into my early 30s and now with my reduced AND aging metabolism am faced with the choice of how important achieving much less maintaining an old number on the scale really is or isn't.
At just 36 it's not fun and makes me nervous if or how much worse this could get if I don't "figure it out!", but it helps to read from those of you who've successfully committed to your health and weight and maintained as you've gotten older.
I'd love to hear from any hypothyroid folks who've found that successful balance and ability to achieve and maintain the weight you were accustomed to prior to thyroid issues as it is still such a work in progress for me (I suppose it always will be! ) Exercising 5-6 times/week (varied and lots of Cathe - STS/Gym Styles/High Reps/Intensity) and eating 80% clean is not enough anymore as I continue to watch the scale increase and it's very difficult to be much more stringent. When I have been able to lose a few pounds it has required extreme clean eating - like basically perfection with NO cheats and that's just not sustainable or perhaps I presently lack the motivation and discipline for sustainability.
I looked back on my post from a couple years ago when I first started really gaining weight and then was diagnosed and realized I've gained 7 pounds in two years. despite my intense exercise and already good eating habits. It's discouraging and depressing. I know I need to eat even less in addition to eating clean. Guess I should be grateful I was small-ish to begin with but it's still a scary trend.
I get my labs back again tomorrow but suspect they are adequate enough as I don't feel "bad" or sluggish just tired of getting pudgier
Well.. thanks for listening and again for the support!
It was so helpful to me to read about your experiences and the diligence you've found necessary to maintain or even lose weight in your 40s 50s and beyond. Since my hypothyroid diagnosis a couple years ago it's been quite a journey to feeling almost 100% and becoming acquianted with the reality my metabolism will likely never be the same and requires an even more diligent nutrition relationship. I've always had a penchant for healthy food and weighed the same/maintained the same 115ish lbs with low-mid teens bodyfat all the way into my early 30s and now with my reduced AND aging metabolism am faced with the choice of how important achieving much less maintaining an old number on the scale really is or isn't.
At just 36 it's not fun and makes me nervous if or how much worse this could get if I don't "figure it out!", but it helps to read from those of you who've successfully committed to your health and weight and maintained as you've gotten older.
I'd love to hear from any hypothyroid folks who've found that successful balance and ability to achieve and maintain the weight you were accustomed to prior to thyroid issues as it is still such a work in progress for me (I suppose it always will be! ) Exercising 5-6 times/week (varied and lots of Cathe - STS/Gym Styles/High Reps/Intensity) and eating 80% clean is not enough anymore as I continue to watch the scale increase and it's very difficult to be much more stringent. When I have been able to lose a few pounds it has required extreme clean eating - like basically perfection with NO cheats and that's just not sustainable or perhaps I presently lack the motivation and discipline for sustainability.
I looked back on my post from a couple years ago when I first started really gaining weight and then was diagnosed and realized I've gained 7 pounds in two years. despite my intense exercise and already good eating habits. It's discouraging and depressing. I know I need to eat even less in addition to eating clean. Guess I should be grateful I was small-ish to begin with but it's still a scary trend.
I get my labs back again tomorrow but suspect they are adequate enough as I don't feel "bad" or sluggish just tired of getting pudgier
Well.. thanks for listening and again for the support!