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a 100 year
THis is my newest project .. for the new year. I would really like some support on this goal, I could use a few people to favorite this page and check up on me every so often.
Check it out.
http://100year.wordpress.com/
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
That's awesome! You have my support!
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Re: a 100 year
You''ll make it. Its only hard the first 2 weeks to a month. Once you get passed that you will already start feeling like a new person. Thats not long at all. Just keep reminding yourself of that and dont over do it.
:gj: :gj: :snake: :gj: :snake: :gj: :gj: :gj: :snake:
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Re: a 100 year
I lost almost 100 pounds in just over a year. And my best piece of advice.....No, fartin around, just do it. And when you want to quit. Just remember......... It's only one year. You got this!!!!!!!!
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Re: a 100 year
The motivation to keep going is hard. I have had trouble with it at times, and now that I'm only 10 pounds away from my "I'll be content then, but still want to lose more" weight, it's almost harder cuz now I think I can cheat a little more.
With the running though, going outside is alot different from what I've done on the treadmill, but I've found that saying "Well I've down it for 5 mins, why can't I just do that again?" It seems to work until I get the "stitches" pain, then I start walking on an incline.
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Re: a 100 year
I would say, its possible, but you cant really have cheat days. Perhaps I am wrong, but it seems to me you have to be strict.
Brandon
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Re: a 100 year
Since you are at the beginning and haven't started yet, I will offer you some information to help you do this the healthy way.
First thing you should do is find out what your EER (Estimated Energy Requirement) is. This will tell you what the minimum number of calories you should eat just to maintain healthy brain function. If you don't eat enough to keep your body alive and healthy, especially over a year, there are possible repercussions. Keep in mind if you spent every day lying in bed your body is still burning calories and you would need to eat calories to support the process of burning calories for energy. My EER based on my weight, height and activity level is in the range of 4-5,000 calories just to give you an idea of how ridiculously low the magical 2,000 calorie diet listed on every food label is, and it's most likely that way so they can round down the bad numbers.
Your diet should consist of 45-65% of calories taken in from carbohydrates, 20-35% from fats and 10-35% from proteins. Remember there are good fats, like monounsaturated and polyunsaturated. The bad ones to look out for are saturated and trans fats. Trans fats are tricky because a label could say zero but if it has 0.4 grams per serving or less, they can round down. Also remember that they choose what the serving size is. Look for partially hydrogenated oils in the ingredient list as that is the process that creates most trans fats found in food. Trans fats are really bad for you but that takes some chemistry to explain. Fish and vegetable oils are great sources of healthy fats.
Now for some math regarding your goal of 100lbs. There are 3,500 calories per pound of fat. So your goal is to burn 350,000 calories above what you're eating. That's 960 calories burned per day over your calorie intake. So look at what effort you will need to add to your normal daily routine to achieve that number. If I run 6-7 miles in an hour on a treadmill I will burn about 1,000 calories. You can do things like parking your car farther away and walk with purpose instead of letting your feet fall in front of you to keep you from falling over. Intensity is an easy way of burning more calories. If you have stairs in your house, go up them faster, take two steps at a time. The idea here is to burn more calories doing what you're already doing by going harder at it. Supplementing that with a morning run should get you to where you want to be.
Eating healthy without exercise or exercising without eating healthy will make it very hard to reach your goals. Keep a good balance of both and I am confident you can do it.
One tip to keeping yourself accountable to your friends, family and readers would be to keep everyone posted weekly or biweekly on your progress. I'll use an example I just saw on Julie and Julia and she used 435 recipes/365 days (Not positive on the recipe count). So on January 1st you'll start at 100lbs/365 days. Let the count down begin.
Two guys on The Biggest Loser this season lost over 100lbs in under 10 weeks, I think 7-8. While you might not be able to follow the 6+ hour workout regimen that they had or have trainer telling you exactly what to eat and have a fridge that magically fills itself with the right types of food, you are giving yourself 5-6 times more time to get it done. It's absolutely possible.
Good luck. You CAN do it.
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by BrandonsBalls
I would say, its possible, but you cant really have cheat days. Perhaps I am wrong, but it seems to me you have to be strict.
Brandon
Cheat days actually rev up your metabolism if you eat right for a week. If you're eating healthy and pure, then you throw in a sort of sweet, your body says "WTH is this?!" and burns it super quick, and keeps that up for a while to make sure none of it is left in the system. I've talked to several personal trainers, and they all recommend to have 1 cheat day a week. Don't cheat all day, just give yourself a treat. Does a body good :)
IMO, I wouldn't do it in the beginning. I'd start the cheat days after about a month of eating right. If you really want to figure it out, personal trainers will have alot more information.
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Re: a 100 year
Good luck! If you are determined then you can absolutely do it.
I am trying to go the other way, however... I want to eat better and gain a little more muscle mass next year. I like being thin but there's nothing wrong with being thin and cut ;)
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by withonor
Since you are at the beginning and haven't started yet, I will offer you some information to help you do this the healthy way.
First thing you should do is find out what your EER (Estimated Energy Requirement) is. This will tell you what the minimum number of calories you should eat just to maintain healthy brain function. If you don't eat enough to keep your body alive and healthy, especially over a year, there are possible repercussions. Keep in mind if you spent every day lying in bed your body is still burning calories and you would need to eat calories to support the process of burning calories for energy. My EER based on my weight, height and activity level is in the range of 4-5,000 calories just to give you an idea of how ridiculously low the magical 2,000 calorie diet listed on every food label is, and it's most likely that way so they can round down the bad numbers.
Your diet should consist of 45-65% of calories taken in from carbohydrates, 20-35% from fats and 10-35% from proteins. Remember there are good fats, like monounsaturated and polyunsaturated. The bad ones to look out for are saturated and trans fats. Trans fats are tricky because a label could say zero but if it has 0.4 grams per serving or less, they can round down. Also remember that they choose what the serving size is. Look for partially hydrogenated oils in the ingredient list as that is the process that creates most trans fats found in food. Trans fats are really bad for you but that takes some chemistry to explain. Fish and vegetable oils are great sources of healthy fats.
Now for some math regarding your goal of 100lbs. There are 3,500 calories per pound of fat. So your goal is to burn 350,000 calories above what you're eating. That's 960 calories burned per day over your calorie intake. So look at what effort you will need to add to your normal daily routine to achieve that number. If I run 6-7 miles in an hour on a treadmill I will burn about 1,000 calories. You can do things like parking your car farther away and walk with purpose instead of letting your feet fall in front of you to keep you from falling over. Intensity is an easy way of burning more calories. If you have stairs in your house, go up them faster, take two steps at a time. The idea here is to burn more calories doing what you're already doing by going harder at it. Supplementing that with a morning run should get you to where you want to be.
Eating healthy without exercise or exercising without eating healthy will make it very hard to reach your goals. Keep a good balance of both and I am confident you can do it.
One tip to keeping yourself accountable to your friends, family and readers would be to keep everyone posted weekly or biweekly on your progress. I'll use an example I just saw on Julie and Julia and she used 435 recipes/365 days (Not positive on the recipe count). So on January 1st you'll start at 100lbs/365 days. Let the count down begin.
Two guys on The Biggest Loser this season lost over 100lbs in under 10 weeks, I think 7-8. While you might not be able to follow the 6+ hour workout regimen that they had or have trainer telling you exactly what to eat and have a fridge that magically fills itself with the right types of food, you are giving yourself 5-6 times more time to get it done. It's absolutely possible.
Good luck. You CAN do it.
HOLY JEEZ!
*takes notes*
Are you some sort of nutrition god?
To everyone else, thank you for your kind words. I am currently just getting the blog ready for the 2010 challenge. Writing some here and there, posting random stuff. Come Jan 1 ... business time begins.
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Re: a 100 year
Bariatric surgery will do it. :)
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by dsirkle
Bariatric surgery will do it. :)
IMO surgery is last resort, I think he has a great goal and I might take his idea and follow it myself!
YOU CAN DO IT:gj:
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Re: a 100 year
I have ginormously high cholesterol so exercise and dieting right are something that I need to watch out for too. It's difficult when you start but once you start seeing results you're going to want to keep doing it.
I would also recommend do something you really love in terms of exercise--because if you hate it, it's just going to be that much harder. Running takes a heck of a lot of discipline and I can't even imagine doing it because I'm about as big a sofa spud as you can get. But with aikido, I'll trudge through rain and snow just to get to a class because I LOVE it. If you love water, or your kids love water (if you have any) or another friend of your's loves water, go swimming at your local YMCA twice or three times a week, do a few laps at the beginning and then play games like water tag or something, you'd be amazed at how you don't even realize you're burning calories until you see the results. When you're watching TV or on the computer, every ten minutes do a few leg and arm lifts, it's really helpful trying to inject some physical activity into everything you do. I find martial arts a good way to burn even though you don't realize it at the time, and aikido especially since you're not restricted by belt designations to what techniques you can practice and can't, and since you always have a partner to throw and throw you, you're going to enjoy it as a physical practice than some other ones.
Don't keep foods you know are harmful in your fridge, if you don't buy it, chances of you eating it when you're hungry are lower. If you're hankering for something sweet, go for a sorbet, or even better, freeze a banana/some grapes. If you drink clear soup (miso, chicken, vegetable) before you eat your meal, you'll eat less.
Learn to listen to your body, when you're full but not bloated and stop. The first couple times is kind of like, "I think I'm full, but I'm uncomfortable not being bloated..." because we like that feeling of being bloated but afterwards you'll find yourself uncomfortable BEING bloated and naturally eat less. If you're still hungry after, give yourself an hour or two and then eat a small meal again.
A lot of people eat out of boredom, which is a really bad habit and one that I found really hard to kick. But if I take up my time with things I have to do around the house, cleaning, mopping, washing dishes, buying things, fixing things, and just generally keeping busy, I don't even think about food until i slow down and it's meal time.
Drink. Lots. Of. Water.
Starving yourself isn't going to do anything, just make you miserable. But finding alternatives you can use is better. Cook with pam. Replace half your usual portion of pasta with frozen veggies/squash. Don't buy ready made food, cook it yourself (cooking will make you less hungry the longer you cook, I have no idea why, but it does.) Don't think about finishing everything on your plate, you can always save it for later.
I don't count so much as calories as I do what I'm eating. Ingesting an 80 calorie apple is different from ingesting 80 calories of butter, but even so, I have no idea how people can even reach a 2000 calorie daily diet. The things I cook, including 3 meals a day and snacks barely tops the 1000 mark but everyone's body has different needs.
Try looking up tips from the internet as well, but don't give in to those fast-solution or crash diet kinds of things, it rarely ever works and the repercussions aren't worth it.
Good luck!
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Re: a 100 year
Oh, and don't shop for groceries when you're hungry, you're likely to splurge. =3
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by Samuel
HOLY JEEZ!
*takes notes*
Are you some sort of nutrition god?
To everyone else, thank you for your kind words. I am currently just getting the blog ready for the 2010 challenge. Writing some here and there, posting random stuff. Come Jan 1 ... business time begins.
God? Heck no. Expert? Hardly. A guy who took a nutrition class to fill a transfer requirement? Yep. I found the information in the class to be very useful and eye opening. I retained more data from that class than any I can remember. I got over 100% on all but one test. Off the top of my head I can't tell you what every vitamin and mineral are used for or how their deficiencies or toxicities effect the body, but I know they exist and can be severe. Probably the most important class I will ever take and it has nothing to do with anything I am interested education wise.
I want to challenge you to something right now! Are you up for it!? You set a goal and a start date. That's good, but starting something like this on a specific day thereby cutting off a lot of things you are used to suddenly is very hard. I say start now. Use this week to start making some small adjustments. I don't care what it is, but change something right now that will help you with your goal.
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by p3titexburial
I have ginormously high cholesterol so exercise and dieting right are something that I need to watch out for too. It's difficult when you start but once you start seeing results you're going to want to keep doing it.
I would also recommend do something you really love in terms of exercise--because if you hate it, it's just going to be that much harder. Running takes a heck of a lot of discipline and I can't even imagine doing it because I'm about as big a sofa spud as you can get. But with aikido, I'll trudge through rain and snow just to get to a class because I LOVE it. If you love water, or your kids love water (if you have any) or another friend of your's loves water, go swimming at your local YMCA twice or three times a week, do a few laps at the beginning and then play games like water tag or something, you'd be amazed at how you don't even realize you're burning calories until you see the results. When you're watching TV or on the computer, every ten minutes do a few leg and arm lifts, it's really helpful trying to inject some physical activity into everything you do. I find martial arts a good way to burn even though you don't realize it at the time, and aikido especially since you're not restricted by belt designations to what techniques you can practice and can't, and since you always have a partner to throw and throw you, you're going to enjoy it as a physical practice than some other ones.
Don't keep foods you know are harmful in your fridge, if you don't buy it, chances of you eating it when you're hungry are lower. If you're hankering for something sweet, go for a sorbet, or even better, freeze a banana/some grapes. If you drink clear soup (miso, chicken, vegetable) before you eat your meal, you'll eat less.
Learn to listen to your body, when you're full but not bloated and stop. The first couple times is kind of like, "I think I'm full, but I'm uncomfortable not being bloated..." because we like that feeling of being bloated but afterwards you'll find yourself uncomfortable BEING bloated and naturally eat less. If you're still hungry after, give yourself an hour or two and then eat a small meal again.
A lot of people eat out of boredom, which is a really bad habit and one that I found really hard to kick. But if I take up my time with things I have to do around the house, cleaning, mopping, washing dishes, buying things, fixing things, and just generally keeping busy, I don't even think about food until i slow down and it's meal time.
Drink. Lots. Of. Water.
Starving yourself isn't going to do anything, just make you miserable. But finding alternatives you can use is better. Cook with pam. Replace half your usual portion of pasta with frozen veggies/squash. Don't buy ready made food, cook it yourself (cooking will make you less hungry the longer you cook, I have no idea why, but it does.) Don't think about finishing everything on your plate, you can always save it for later.
I don't count so much as calories as I do what I'm eating. Ingesting an 80 calorie apple is different from ingesting 80 calories of butter, but even so, I have no idea how people can even reach a 2000 calorie daily diet. The things I cook, including 3 meals a day and snacks barely tops the 1000 mark but everyone's body has different needs.
Try looking up tips from the internet as well, but don't give in to those fast-solution or crash diet kinds of things, it rarely ever works and the repercussions aren't worth it.
Good luck!
Before I respond to anything here, check the bold. Water is so important. Not to mention that beverages are one of the biggest contributors to calorie intake and the worst contributor to nutrients. If you can cut out sodas (especially) and most juices, anything sugary, you will be off to a great start. One thing you'll notice is that you will eat more. That is a good thing, you'll want more food, so make sure it is nutrient dense. Fruits and vegetables are the best thing.
p3titexburial, I'm just expanding on the ideas you have presented, not attacking you.
Cholesterol...Sounds like a bad word, right? There are good cholesterols and bad ones. LDL's, low density lipoprotein, are the bad cholesterols. They transfer cholesterol to your body for storage. HDL's (high density lipoprotein) transfer cholesterol from storages in your body to your liver for processing to get rid of. Saturated and trans fats will increase your LDL (bad cholesterol) and decrease your HDL (good cholesterol). Polyunsaturated fats, monounsaturated fats and exercise can increase your HDL, thereby lowering your cholesterol.
Exercises that you find fun are going to be a lot more effective than ones that feel like work. If you don't like running there might be something that you enjoy that could replace it.
p3titexburial, either you're eating more than you think you are or you're very tiny, because 1,000 calories isn't enough for almost anyone.
Calculate your EER
Set the activity level to sedentary if you want to know the minimum calories you should intake. Setting higher activity levels will tell you what you should eat to maintain your current weight.
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by withonor
Calculate your EER
Set the activity level to sedentary if you want to know the minimum calories you should intake. Setting higher activity levels will tell you what you should eat to maintain your current weight.
Thanks for that! I've been eating about 2000 (Give or take 200) calories on my good days, and that says I should be eating 2500. I'll have to pass this on to some friends!
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Re: a 100 year
Thank you all for your advice and support. I have a lot to think about.
Also .. it seems I have inspired?
http://100lbsin2010.webs.com
That was just started but a lady in my office. the emails I got was "Come and join my website. Thanks to Sam - I have a mission for the new year. I stole his idea, but going to provide him with as much support as I can and I hope you guys can do it for me!! "
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Re: a 100 year
I'm quite tiny--4"11 and 110lbs. No worries, I know it seems strange but I think there's also some family influences in it. Not sure on the levels of each for my cholesterol but high enough for my doctor to freak out on. It runs in my family though, so I gotta watch out for it.
On the 1000 calorie thing:
A normal meal for me would be a bowl of white rice (or red, or brown depending on what my mom's feeling like making, or what's in my pantry) sauteed veggies (usually bok choi, spinach, or carrots, with PAM as oil, soy sauce, garlic), some steamed fish (rice wine, soy sauce, pepper, ginger) and a bowl of soup (miso, radish, bean sprout, seaweed etc). The meat gets switched around a bit but it's never a hunk of meat, usually strips with salted veggies, sometimes a tofu or shrimp dish. If I have this for 2 meals a day (probably around 500 calories total each meal) and have my usual steamed egg and fruit in the morning for breakfast, it literally barely tops 1000, probably 1300 if I'm pushing it. I don't eat many sweets (I get sugar migraines) and cake and pastries were never a big thing. Snacks (if I'm peckish) that are around the house are usually dried fruit, dried tofu skins, dried squid, octopus (cephalopods beware) pretty much anything that can be dried and seasoned. We eat early--5 is normal dinner time.
I'm going to try out that EER, it looks really interesting. Thanks!
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Re: a 100 year
What is
Estimated Energy Requirement (EER)?
EER is an estimation of how many Calories you need in a day based on your height, weight, and physical activity levels. I've used this in some of my Client Nutrition Studies, and I've found that not everyone needs to meet the equation's results exactly. Everyone's body utilizes energy differently, so if your body is very efficient at using energy, then you won't need to be that close to the result. <b>For example, one person's result was 2100 Calories per day, but if they were to eat that much, they would gain weight. They actually kept a steady weight around 1400 Calories.</b> So this equation may seem like it doesn't work very well, but it's a good starting point to see how your body reacts to energy.
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That might be where I am at this point. I'd probably gain weight if I kept to the 1943 calories it calculated.
But recently, after doing exercise, I'd get some crazy hunger pangs so I've been eating more than usual. I think the body's really quite amazing in knowing what it needs and when.
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Re: a 100 year
Anyone following this?
Link again - http://100year.wordpress.com/
Down 10 pounds in 13 days.
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
That's great news Samuel! Keep at it!
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by Samuel
15 pounds in 19 days
thats great dude!
just leaving out ketsup, potatos, pastas, and breads surely helps alot! sure they are better than candy but a sugar is a sugar
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Re: a 100 year
18 pounds in 20 days.
I got on the scale this morning, saw the weight, and literally yelled "SHUT UP!" at the scale, like it was lying to me. I checked 5 times in a row, still 3 more pounds lost since yesterdays weigh in.
I don't know how that works, but I will accept it. :banana:
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Re: a 100 year
A little over 20 pounds down right now. (20.8 to be exact)
Not going at the same pace, but the numbers are still going down. YAY!
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Re: a 100 year
Keep up the hard work Sam. It will all pay off in the end...
I haven't been on here in a couple months, but when I logged in and found this thread, I went and read all your blog posts... I had planned on making weight loss my goal this year, but have yet to start my journey... (I'm thinking due to lack of inspiration myself) But I really like your blogging idea and I think I'm going to start one of my own...
My suggestion regarding weigh ins though would be to pick one day a week and a certain time of day for your weigh ins. That way you can track progress weekly and hopefully avoid some of those disappointed feelings that come with water weight fluctuation...
Anyway, just wanted to say congrats and that I will be following your blog and your progress as you go. And maybe once I get mine set up and start my journey, I'll be brave and put the link up here as well...
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by Inknsteel
Keep up the hard work Sam. It will all pay off in the end...
I haven't been on here in a couple months, but when I logged in and found this thread, I went and read all your blog posts... I had planned on making weight loss my goal this year, but have yet to start my journey... (I'm thinking due to lack of inspiration myself) But I really like your blogging idea and I think I'm going to start one of my own...
My suggestion regarding weigh ins though would be to pick one day a week and a certain time of day for your weigh ins. That way you can track progress weekly and hopefully avoid some of those disappointed feelings that come with water weight fluctuation...
Anyway, just wanted to say congrats and that I will be following your blog and your progress as you go. And maybe once I get mine set up and start my journey, I'll be brave and put the link up here as well...
Thank you very much for your support and nice comments.
I have thought of weighing in only on a certain day, but to be honest, the having to report daily helps me to watch my weight constantly. I fear my mind would go "I have like 3 days before I have to weigh in, sure .. I'll have that cookie!"
Anyway, I hope that you can set and reach your goals. It is a daily struggle, but I am one this roller coaster already, and I can't leave now!
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
I am down 25 pounds, almost 26.
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Re: a 100 year
Almost at 30 (29.4)
Also, this song is stuck in my head.
YouTube - Placebo - Burger Queen (english version)
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Re: a 100 year
At 34 even.
http://100year.wordpress.com
Thanks for all the support so far you guys, it means a lot to me. I don't know whether keeping this thread updated is the right thing to do or not, but if people don't mind I will keep doing it.
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
Congrats on the weight loss! :gj: Keep us updated!
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Re: a 100 year
I had a huge hiccup, but I am back into the losing side again.
Check it out!
http://100year.wordpress.com
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Re: a 100 year
I think it's awesome, It will inspire other people to do the same :gj:
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Re: a 100 year
Wow, 43 pounds! You've lost more than me and I've been working out for almost a year! Granted, I only need to lose about 10-15 more and I'll be at my goal.
Congratulations, and keep it up!
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Re: a 100 year
Go, Samuel!
Very good job. We're all so proud of you!
Aaron
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Re: a 100 year
As of this morning, 50.2 pounds lost.
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Re: a 100 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by Samuel
As of this morning, 50.2 pounds lost.
Grats!
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Re: a 100 year
Congratz on making it to the halfway point Sam! Keep on working hard and I'm sure you'll reach your goal. 100 in a year is not just possible, but inevitable for you... I'm anxious to see what the final number is on 12/31/10! :gj::gj::gj:
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Re: a 100 year
Gawd I can't wait for the darn lakes to unfreeze. It's finally warm enough out for me to be happy doing outdoor recreation and I want to use my canoe. It just takes freaking way too long for all that darn ice on the lakes to melt! It's broken 60 degrees multiple times this past week and I think there are still multiple inches on the minneapolis metro lakes.
I find the best way for me to maintain a happy body is to be active outdoors, but I'm not much for winter.
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Re: a 100 year
Picture time.
http://100year.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/day76.jpg
That was taken tonight. I think I look thinner .. not thin, but thinner.
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Re: a 100 year
Awesome progress! Keep it up! And, yes, you do look thinner.
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Re: a 100 year
really good stuff! good luck man!:gj:
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Re: a 100 year
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Re: a 100 year
Took it tonight .. classic me thinks.
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Re: a 100 year
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