How You Can Lose 50 Pounds In 90 Days

As a nurse, we hear about the obesity epidemic more now than ever. You see it in your patients and sometimes in yourself. As nurses, we are looked up to by our patients and should represent the image of health. Yet, this is often not the case. . If you are struggling with losing weight, you are not alone out there. Today, I am going to give you five ways you can start becoming a fat burning machine. Nurses General Nursing Article

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Decrease Your Sugar Intake

I know you have heard this before and probably more times than you care to remember, but it works. Depending on your body type you should have the percentage of calories in your diet from carbohydrates be somewhere between 10 and 30%. I must say, it can be hard to separate yourself from carbs since, as sugar burners, we crave them so often. And, let's face it, they are everywhere. They are cheap and convenient, which makes them even more irresistible. But you must resist. I want to challenge you to pull back on the sodas, fruit juice, bread, processed food and items with added sugar. If you are unsure if something has added sugar in it, then read the labels. Even whole wheat bread turns to sugar once you eat it and gets broken down in the digestive tract. Be intentional about lowering the amount of sugar in your diet and carbohydrates and I believe this will make more of a difference for weight loss than anything else you can do.

Increase Your Good Fats

So, I just asked you to decrease your carbohydrates, and many nurses will say "So now what do I eat?!" You have three options: meat (grass-fed, wild-caught), vegetables, and some fruits (remember: beware of your sugar intake). Next, fill in the gaps with "GOOD" fats. Examples of good fats would include coconut oil, avocado and avocado oil, butter (not margarine), almond butter, nuts (avoid peanuts), olives, full- fat yogurt, organic half and half or heavy cream, and egg yolks just to name a few. I don't know about you, but these are some of my favorite foods. "BAD" fats would include vegetable and seed oils such as canola, peanut, soybean, cottonseed, and sunflower oil. These are pro-inflammatory omega six fats which increase inflammation in the body.

The key to any sustainable weight loss strategy is to feel satisfied, or full, while you are on your journey. Fat is how you make that happen. Fat is the key to having your weight loss experience be enjoyable instead of dreadful. Because if it is dreadful, you will not maintain the weight loss once the 90 days is over, or heck, even complete the 90-day challenge. I know fat has gotten a bad rap over the last fifty years, but just try it. You will be glad you did.

Sleep Better

When it comes to weight loss, nobody hardly ever mentions sleep. As nurses, we work all kinds of weird hours and are expected to work longer hours than most other professions. So what does a good sleep routine look like? I would recommend you take 1 to 3 mg of melatonin an hour before bed, wear a sleep mask and keep your bedroom very dark. You should not be able to see your hand in front of your face. Minimize use of electronic devices an hour before bed. I would also suggest blue light blocking glasses and/or put your electronic devices in night mode. Keep the bedroom at 68 to 71 degrees because this helps your body to cool down allowing it to get ready for rest. Don't do any exercise, not even walking, right before you go to bed. Save exercise for when you wake up. Also, limit alcohol before bed since it inhibits your body's ability to get in a deep REM restorative sleep.

Reduce Your Stress

Stress comes at us from many directions in our daily lives. Acute stress is fine for the most part, but it is when it becomes chronic that it becomes a problem. Honestly, by implementing the other four points made in this article, you will greatly reduce your stress level. For myself, I have to pick my battles. Some battles do not need to be fought to win the war (low stress). There are situations and other adults that would get to me in my younger days which I no longer allow to steal my inner peace. I would invite you to try techniques such as guided meditation (start with a few minutes a day), music or if you are feeling stressed go for a walk. Often if I am stressed about something and go for a walk, it will calm me right down as long as I leave my mobile device at home. Sleep, nutrition, and exercise all play a big part in helping you to control your stress levels.

Move More

I know what you're saying, "I move enough at work. Why would I want to move when I am at home or on my days off?" The only reason I give for this is the benefits from movement do not necessarily come from doing it all at once but from doing it frequently throughout the day. In other words, it is not good for you to sit, or stay stationary, for more than an hour at a time. This can consist of doing five minutes of moving around in between forty-five-minute study sessions. Also, I want to say movement does not have to involve lifting weights at a gym or running on a treadmill. Lifting weights is beneficial, but exercise has to be fun. You are the only one who can determine that. If what you are doing for exercise is not fun then it is not sustainable. I still do a lot of exercise on my own because I find that works better for me and offers fewer distractions. But if you have trouble motivating yourself to workout on your own, then I would recommend you workout with a group. Join a meetup group (which are mostly free) that does hiking, kayaking, or yoga. Or you can join a gym or do Crossfit where the workouts are made up for you. Currently, my routine involves forty-five minutes of weight lifting three days a week in a home gym, thirty minutes of walking every day with a twenty-pound weighted vest, and five fifty yard sprints one or two times a week.

I hope you have found this article inspiring and enlightening. Being overweight is not a disease itself, as is commonly believed. In my opinion, it is only a symptom of an unhealthy lifestyle. I understand losing weight is easier for some than others, but I feel confident the choice is yours to choose a healthier lifestyle by applying the five points mentioned above. As nurses, we should know better than any other profession that you do not realize how important your health is until you lose it. Today, I want to invite you to come along on this journey with me to a healthier lifestyle. Don't do it for me, but do it for yourself, your patients, family and anyone who loves and cares for you. It is always easier to prevent a disease now by adopting a healthy lifestyle instead of trying to reverse the damage later.

Check out this helpful video: Meal Prep for Nurses... (added by staff) 

Maybe if all the negative people posting would TRY what is suggested..instead of just complaining....my husband and I did whole30 he lost 30+lbs(I lost 12) in 30days by eating fruits, vegetables, proteins, healthy fats. No sugar, no dairy, no grains, no alcohol.....quit complaining that it's 'impossible' it's definitely possibly you just have to have enough self control to try ;)

I'm a vegetarian who does no refined sugar, no dairy, no eggs. I eat loads of carbs in either whole fruit or whole grain forms. My carb intake is about 60 percent of my daily calorie intake and I'm actually healthier than when I carb restricted. Though I get that plant based isn't for everyone.

I lost 210 pounds in one day.

i kicked the first husband out.

I don't entirely agree about the claim of 50 lbs will happen in 90 days (so everyone relax lol) nor do I like the promotion of organic and grass fed only due to the unintentional discouragement it might cause to those who cannot afford it. Other than that, I want to encourage any promotion of better health. And for most, the recommendations in the OP would be a huge improvement.

A diet consisting of only 10% carbohydrates is ridiculous. A healthier number is closer to 45-55%. There are plenty of good carbs, and we absolutely need carbohydrates. Also, many people eat plant based diets and don't want to eat dead animals. We aren't all necrovores ;)

I am insulin resistant, and a 55% carbohydrate diet would fast track me to diabetes, but I don't think that means it's bad for everyone. Nutrition is not one size fits all, and I believe that different people can thrive on different macro balances.

Maybe if all the negative people posting would TRY what is suggested..instead of just complaining....my husband and I did whole30 he lost 30+lbs(I lost 12) in 30days by eating fruits, vegetables, proteins, healthy fats. No sugar, no dairy, no grains, no alcohol.....quit complaining that it's 'impossible' it's definitely possibly you just have to have enough self control to try ;)

I've kept 30 pounds off for 4 years. I'm not coming from a point of laziness; I've actually done a lot of research on weight loss and what works and what doesn't, and I realize that one person's experience (even if it's mine) does not equal good science. The idea that overweight people lack "self control" is a really harmful one. The post-weight-loss Biggest Loser contestants lacked satiety hormones, not self control.

I am insulin resistant, and a 55% carbohydrate diet would fast track me to diabetes, but I don't think that means it's bad for everyone. Nutrition is not one size fits all, and I believe that different people can thrive on different macro balances.

I'm T2DM. I eat about 60% carbs. Almost no fat, except for whole avocados or nuts. I think the combo of the macros and which ones and how much matter quite a bit. It doesn't seem like it should work, and I have know people it doesn't work for, so yeah.. I think there's more than simple calories in less than calories out that people chant at me all the time.

Specializes in Emergency Department.

Try this book, gives the research behind what he says. I have the book and his other ones and think they are excellent. I am pre-diabetic and my fasting blood sugar went from 6.5mmols/l to 4.9mmols/l and I lost 12 pounds in 2 weeks using it.

This is not an endorsement merely one persons experience.

Amazon.com: the 8 week blood sugar diet

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

Dear OP,

while the advices you gave in your article are harmless enough, the stated goal of minus 50 lbs in three months is not even remotely possible, let alone safe one. Being a med/surg nurse with oncology experience, you must know what does it take to keep a person who ACTUALLY is in "fat burning mode" alive, like in cases of postoperative hypermetabolism.

I would like to remind you that adding 40% to basal metabolic rate even short term is not possible without life support. It happens, for example, in cases of severe burns with life-long complications and high early and late mortality

The Hypermetabolic Response to Burn Injury and Interventions to Modify This Response

I am leaving alone the fact that so many of your fellow nurses would probably feel not "enlightened" but deeply hurt, as they could barely move because of chronic pain (caused by their bodies being torn and worn after years of bedside care), cannot afford to "eat healthy" and consider 1 min going potty as their time to relax.

Please enlighen yourself by reading at least that good old McCance book before making impossible statements.

Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.

The only way I could lose 50 pounds in 90 days is through amputation.

No thanks.

Specializes in Critical Care.
Cutting carbs? Hah! Between my MDD, GAD, ADHD, and chronic pain, I live on carbs.

I agree if you cut carbs too much it can affect your mood and cause depression. I do think some people, probably the 2/3 of America that is overweight or obese have some insulin resistance and would be better off on a high protein, low carb diet. But I also think part of the problem is simply sugar addiction which they say is harder to stop then cocaine addiction.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
The idea that overweight people lack "self control" is a really harmful one.
I concur. Although I now fall into a normal weight range for my height (130 pounds), I have had severe insulin resistance since puberty. Those who have never dealt with insulin resistance scratch their heads and say, "If only those fatties would exhibit self-restraint! If they're not hungry, why do they keep eating?"

Insulin resistance sets up a vicious cycle of biochemical reactions in the body that keep you feeling ravenously hungry during every waking minute. Although I'm not a diabetic, Metformin was the only thing that curbed my hunger and helped me derive some energy from the food I was eating.

Those who have never had a weight problem can blame the fat person for his/her lack of self-control. However, the fat body habitus is often a proxy for another insidious issue transpiring within the person. Insulin resistance does not react well to a "move more, eat less, calories in, calories out" prescription, which causes the person to feel hungrier than ever.

Milder cases of insulin resistance can see weight loss with a carbohydrate-controlled diet combined with some exercise to stimulate insulin sensitivity within the cells. Severe, longstanding insulin resistance cases will only respond to more drastic measures such as Metformin, intermittent fasting, low carb high fat (LCHF) eating, and sometimes bariatric surgery.

By the way, 80 percent of the overweight and obese are insulin-resistant. Their bodies are trapped in a cycle that promotes fat storage. Insulin drives fat storage. Remember that before you blame the fat person for lacking willpower.

Specializes in 15 years in ICU, 22 years in PACU.

Losing 50 pounds in 90 days does not sound very "healthy" to me. It would require a drastic change of habits that is just not compatible with the human psyche. It is a "diet" that is a short term fix and almost always results in regaining the weight and then some.

A slow sustained weight loss due to realistic changes in eating and activity is a lifestyle change people can do for the rest of their healthy life.

This "article" sounds like a sponsored ad. The very title is distasteful. Ick.

I have used a free on-line fitness forum to lose 40 pounds this year. A slow 1-2 pounds a week strategy is what is promoted by the most successful "losers". So many new people will comment that they are looking for the quick magical answer to their life long problem of obesity. They are quickly reminded that magic doesn't exist and quick weight loss products only work on their wallet. We don't need nurses advocating the quick weight loss nonsense.