logo
'I lost 4 stone in a year but still eat takeaways by changing just two things'

'I lost 4 stone in a year but still eat takeaways by changing just two things'

Daily Mirror2 days ago
Losing weight is hard but there are a few easy things you can do to shed the pounds - and now I've completely changed my health
As soon as I turned 30, I thought my life would now be in decline. The energy of my twenties faded into a distant memory - walking up the stairs felt like an Olympic challenge, going to the shops required the same amount of mental preparation as London marathon runner (I imagine) and, worst of all, I felt the lust for life slipping out of my hands.
I weighed 115kg (18 stone, 1lb) exactly one year ago. Compounding the physical difficulties of being medically overweight, my mental health started a sharp decline. Where I would normally walk into a room and be able to talk to anyone, I felt myself hiding in the corners.
My patience declined with my loved ones and felt myself snapping at them more, as exhaustion and self-hatred began to squeeze the air out of everything I loved. Clothes clung to my stomach and everywhere I went, I pulled my top away in hopes people wouldn't see. But, exactly one year ago, I had enough of feeling like I wasn't enough. The time for change came - with the assistance of an app. And I lost four stone in that one year, so I now weigh 89.3kg (14 stone).
Through all the research, I finally turned my attention to what I assumed was the diet advice flavour of the month: intermittent fasting. The process involves having an 'eating window', typically 16 hours of fasting for eight hours of not fasting, but can be altered to sort the lifestyle, from 14:10 to 12:12. Some people - including the late Dr Michael Moseley - also suggest the 5:2 method of restricting calories to 500 calories for two non-consecutive days.
Now, as someone who lives to eat like the parents in Spirited Away, committing to fasting sounds like I might as well chop out my own tongue. But there are several ways to help - one of those is the Simple app, which I have tested out fully here.
The app, with the help of the AI Avo, sends notifications to remind you of the fasting window, as well as providing tips and tricks for how to fast, nutrition and more. This is particularly useful for me, a man with a colander where his brain should be.
I also made sure I was eating in a deficit - now, this isn't a crazy deficit, nor should it be for anyone planning their own weight loss journey. According to the NHS, the recommended daily calorie intake (for the average person) is 2,500 calories for men and 2,000 for women. Humans need to eat in a deficit to lose weight, so the body uses its fat stores instead of the energy straight from the food.
To work out what the deficit should be, you need to look at what your 'Basal Metabolic Rate' is, which can be done via calculators like this from Diabetes.co.uk. While a technical term, it just means the amount of calories you need for your body to function without including exercise. If you're active, you then need to add a few hundred extra calories. That's where something like a smartwatch helps as it tracks your energy expenditure - I use the FitBit Versa 4.
However, Simple guides users through this process and works out how much you need to eat through their quiz. Mine worked out to be 2,400 calories a day to lose 1-2lbs a week.
Then, you need to track your calorie intake per day. This was the first of my two major changes that helped me lose four stone in a year at a healthy rate. I know, I know, who can be bothered? This is exactly what I thought, especially as I was using a manual tracker like MyFitnessPal. The app, while free, doesn't have a complete database of food, but I will say the barcode scanner saves a lot of frustration.
Simple does have a solution in its capabilities as well - with a photo, Avo can analyse a photo of your food, pull out the ingredients and provide you with a nutrition score. I would love to sit here and tell you that you can eat whatever you want as long as you fast, but if you want the health bonus alongside the aesthetic changes, you're going to have to get the right nutrition.
Avo does sometimes mix up the sizes or products in the photo - AI's, a human invention, are fallible like us too - but you can make corrections really easily. To make my life easier, I bulk buy chicken breasts for the week and absolutely drench those bad boys in seasoning. Then by the time I pop one in the air fryer, it's been marinating for long enough to be absolutely delicious. (Aldi pre-mixed seasoning is 89p per pot, you're welcome). I also bulk cook things like Bolognese or chilli so I've always got something ready.
But this is where the fun bit comes in: I still ate takeaways every week. I still ate pizza, I still bought myself treats. I limited myself to one big treat a week but the secret is, as long as you are under calories, you can eat whatever you want and still lose weight. I couldn't believe it either. For me, it was making sure I was consistent all week, rather than perfect. If you eat too much one day, don't worry, just pick yourself up the next day instead - don't feel bad, we are all human beings and food is delicious.
The next big change I made was getting at least 10,000 steps a day. I do go to the gym four times a week and swim twice a week now, but last year I was going three days and not getting my steps. It's difficult to overstate how much getting my steps in has changed my life - the energy bonus came from this, not going to gym, and it also meant I had the energy to start swimming every week. It's now my favourite activity of the week.
For those looking for exercise inspiration, users can try couch to 5k programmes on apps from both BBC Sounds for free and Nike Run Club. Nike Run Club has 4.8 stars out of five on the Apple App Store.
One year later, I am healthy and I am much happier. Nothing feels like too much effort - I feel like I can benchpress the sun some days. Not every day will be perfect as no one is. Whenever you get knocked down, pick yourself back up and start again, it's the only way to get towards the healthier and happier life. I still go out drinking once a week (I'm from Essex so trust me when I say... I go out drinking), I still get a kebab or Wingstop. But the rest of the week I am committed. That's how you lose weight and keep it off. I hope you smash it too.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gonorrhoea at all-time high as NHS rolls out 'world first' treatment
Gonorrhoea at all-time high as NHS rolls out 'world first' treatment

Scotsman

time34 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Gonorrhoea at all-time high as NHS rolls out 'world first' treatment

Cases of gonorrhoea are at the highest levels since records began 🚨 Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Sexual health clinics will now be able to offer a free vaccine to patients at highest risk of gonorrhoea. The 4CMenB vaccine will help protect those most at risk of gonorrhoea — potentially avoiding up to 100,000 infections. Diagnoses of gonorrhoea have reached their highest levels since records began. A new vaccine will be offered to those at most risk of gonorrhoea, in a world first from the NHS. Cases of gonorrhoea are at the highest levels since records began, with 85,000 cases of the disease reported in England in 2023, three times higher than that of 2012. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This vaccine will protect thousands of people and help combat increasing levels of antibiotic-resistant strains of the disease. The 4CMenB vaccine, which will be available from August 4, will help protect those most at risk of gonorrhoea. Potentially avoiding up to 100,000 cases of the infection, while easing pressure on vital NHS services. Sexual health clinics will now be able to offer a free vaccine to patients at the highest risk of Gonorrhoea. | Pexels, Chokniti Khongchum Consultant Epidemiologist at the UK Health Security Agency, Dr Sema Mandal, said: 'This rollout is hugely welcome as we're currently seeing very concerning numbers of gonorrhoea, including even more worryingly antibiotic-resistant gonorrhoea. The vaccine will give much-needed protection to those that need it most - making the UK a world leader in the fight against gonorrhoea. 'Sexually transmitted infections aren't just an inconvenience – they can have a major impact on your health and your sexual partners, so if offered, I strongly urge you to get these jabs; you'll be protecting yourself as well as others. Don't put it off and regret it later.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What are the symptoms of gonorrhoea? Not everyone will experience symptoms of gonorrhoea. If you do have symptoms, they will usually start around two weeks after being exposed, although they sometimes do not appear until months later. Symptoms of gonorrhoea, according to the NHS, can vary depending on where you have the infection. Symptoms of gonorrhoea in a woman can include: a yellow or greenish discharge from your vagina burning pain when you pee pain in your lower abdomen bleeding between your periods (this is rare) Symptoms of gonorrhoea in a man can include: burning pain when you pee fluid or discharge coming out of your penis sore testicles Gonorrhoea can affect other parts of your body that come into contact with semen or vaginal fluid. This can cause: Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad pain, itching and discharge from your anus (bottom) a sore throat eye redness, pain and discharge What is 'super gonorrhoea'? 'Super gonorrhoea' refers to gonorrhoea strains that are resistant to antibiotics, making them harder to treat. Whilst still rare, concern has been growing about their prevalence. Between June 2022 and May 2024, 15 drug-resistant cases were detected in England, including five that were found to be extensively drug-resistant.

I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?
I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?

The Guardian

time34 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

I found it agonising to quit smoking. So why are people ignoring the new treatments on offer?

If there was a five-minute nuclear warning, I'd run straight to my local shop and buy a pack of cigarettes. Even now, after all these years. I stopped more than a decade ago – note that I say 'stopped' rather than 'gave up' because the latter implies a sacrifice, and I have been brainwashed (OK, hypnotised) not to use the term. But you are never really a non-smoker. You are just a smoker who is currently not smoking. In your soul, you are forever one of the people who leave the table after eating to go and have a conversation outside, even if you physically stay put these days. So, as someone who found it difficult to quit, it's baffling to hear that although two stop-smoking medications have been available in the UK since 2024, only 0.2% of those attempting to give up have used them, according to an analysis of NHS data on smoking in England. Cytisine (which also goes by cytisinicline) is a plant-based product that has been used in eastern Europe since the 70s and may appeal to those who prefer a natural option over a synthetic drug. It mimics the effects of nicotine, and tricks your brain into thinking you've had a cigarette. Varenicline – withdrawn in 2021 over concerns about impurities, but now reformulated and rereleased – can apparently reduce the urge to smoke, make you enjoy it less when you do and ease withdrawal symptoms. I tried everything when it came to my struggle with Silk Cut. Patches, gum, lozenges – I carried on smoking while I wore, chewed and sucked them all. I read the world-famous success story The Easy Way to Stop Smoking by Allen Carr (no, not that one). I attended the NHS in-person sessions, three times, to no effect. I was a triple failure, and oddly proud of it for a reason I still don't quite understand. I had neurolinguistic programming, where the man shook my hand as he greeted me, asking, 'And how long was it that you smoked for?' 'Oh, I still smoke now. I just had one outside,' I volunteered cheerfully. He tutted and told me that for some clients, talking about smoking in the past tense like that was all it took. I scoffed at those weaklings as I walked to my train afterwards – in a cloud of smoke, obviously. The closest I came to victory back then was a hypnotist recommended by a friend, with the caveat that he sounded so much like Cliff Richard it was hard to take him seriously. She didn't mention that he worked out of an extremely insalubrious portable cabin at the back of a building site. As I knocked on the tin-can door (while simultaneously putting out yet another last ever cigarette), I reasoned that if he murdered me, I would technically have given up smoking, therefore this would have been a success. Reader, he did not murder me. In gentle, dulcet tones, he told me I felt sleepy, while I felt embarrassed for him because I definitely wasn't hypnotised. When he 'brought me round' he asked me how long I thought I'd 'been under'. I'd been thinking about what to have for dinner the whole time, so stifled a giggle as I told him: about 10 minutes. He replied that it had been two hours. The next morning, it occurred to me that I hadn't even thought about smoking, let alone done it. Thrilled, I sent another friend, who had the same experience. However, a year later, almost to the day, we both started smoking again. I went back for a do-over but it didn't work. In the end, I probably spent about as much on trying to stop smoking as I had on cigarettes, and the thing that finally worked was free: boring old willpower. It was agony. Personally, I would have bitten the doctor's hand off if they could have given me a treatment that worked. And while of course no treatment is 100% effective, as I found out, stopping smoking is hard and gruelling. The more options people have, and the more visible and accessible these options are, the better. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

I've been left with a gigantic hernia the size of a football – docs said my symptoms were just a ‘bad back'
I've been left with a gigantic hernia the size of a football – docs said my symptoms were just a ‘bad back'

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

I've been left with a gigantic hernia the size of a football – docs said my symptoms were just a ‘bad back'

Find out everything you need to know about Graham's condition below FOBBED OFF I've been left with a gigantic hernia the size of a football – docs said my symptoms were just a 'bad back' GRAHAM Shepherd has been left with a hernia the size of a football after doctors dismissed his symptoms as a "bad back". While the 65-year-old has been awarded a payout after suing the NHS, he's said his and his family's lives "will never be the same again". 5 Graham Shepherd started suffering with back pain, but doctors just treated him with painkillers Credit: SWNS 5 He was eventually diagnosed with an 11.5cm abdominal aortic aneurysm Credit: SWNS 5 As part of complications he's been left with a stoma, mobility problems and a large abdominal hernia Credit: SWNS Graham developed the gigantic bulge - described as the biggest doctors had ever seen - when it ballooned after an aneurysm ruptured. He had visited his GP multiple times and gone to hospital twice complaining of severe back pain as well as weight loss over a nine week period. Graham said a lump on his stomach was also pulsating - but doctors failed to carry out a full examination and sent him home with painkillers. The result of an MRI scan was incorrectly recorded as clear before he was eventually diagnosed with an 11.5cm abdominal aortic aneurysm 64 days later. The dad-of-one was told by doctors he had been a "walking time bomb" and underwent emergency surgery. But he developed complications, including a torn bowel, suspected to have been caused by painkillers he had been advised to take for his back pain. Graham spent more than seven weeks in intensive care and has been left permanently disabled as a result of his ordeal. The former chief foreman is unable to work after being left with a stoma, mobility problems and the large abdominal hernia. Graham's wife, Sarah, 44, has also been forced to give up her job as a healthcare assistant to become his full-time carer. Lawyers have now secured Graham an undisclosed settlement after two doctors and a hospital trust involved in his care denied liability. I lost 14 stone and finally had my loose skin removed, but it was totally botched and I look like I've been left with a permanent hernia Graham, of Stourbrige, West Mids., said: "I was in pain for months. "It started in my back and gradually spread to my abdomen, groin, and down my left leg. "I could barely move and spent most of my time lying on the settee. "I knew something wasn't right and the lump I found in my stomach was pulsating in time with my heartbeat. "When they diagnosed my aneurysm, the doctors told me it was one of the biggest they'd ever seen and I was a walking time bomb. "They believed it had already ruptured several times. I knew something wasn't right and the lump I found in my stomach was pulsating in time with my heartbeat Graham Shepherd "Because it was leaking it had probably relieved some of the pressure and had stopped it fully rupturing and killing me. "I was told that you could probably only fit a cigarette paper between the aneurysm and my spine and that it had worn my spine down." Graham's emergency surgery went well, but afterwards he felt three pops inside of him. It turned out his bowel had perforated. He continued: " I needed another emergency surgery and was told I'd need a stoma. At first, I refused. I was devastated. "Sarah had to convince me it was the only way to save my life. "It wasn't a case of staying in hospital, getting better and going home. "I've been left with permanent nerve damage, muscle wasting in my leg, I can't work and Sarah has had to give up her job to care for me. "My stomach is unsightly and I have a stoma that can't be reversed. I've been told any further surgery on my abdomen would be very risky and complicated. "Our lives will never be the same again. "I just hope that by sharing what happened to me I can help raise awareness so others don't have to suffer." 5 After suing the NHS Graham has now been awarded a payout Credit: SWNS 5 Graham has been told further surgery on his abdomen would be very risky and complicated Credit: SWNS Jenna Harris, the lawyer at Irwin Mitchell representing Graham, said: "We firmly believe that those involved in Graham's care failed to conduct appropriate examinations and arrange and report back on a MRI scan in a timely fashion, especially in light of Graham complaining of symptoms associated with an abdominal aortic aneurysm. "If Graham had received the care we say he should, we believe his condition would have been diagnosed sooner and he wouldn't have gone to suffer life-changing complications. "Nothing can make up for Graham's ordeal but we're pleased to have secured this settlement allowing him to access the ongoing support he requires. "An abdominal aortic aneurysm can be life-threatening, especially if they rupture. "Therefore, it's vital people are aware of the possible signs. Early detection and treatment are crucial in managing the condition and preventing potentially fatal complications."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store