sljohnson1207 wrote: » I hope you can find something that works with all of your goals. I really do.
cmcdonald525 wrote: » Not me personally, but my younger sister. Her circumstances are a little different, but she is a HUGE inspiration to me! She has been diagnosed with everything under the sun: Bipolar, epilepsy, ocd, mild schizophrenia, mental retardation, and one more that I just can't think of right now. Mentally, she is between 8-10 years old (24 years old physically). Poor girl is on so much medication, and the side effects of them have made it impossible for her to feel full. She used to be very overweight. We actually used to catch her sneaking food from the kitchen when she thought no one was paying attention, even right after eating a very large meal. My mom started teaching her to focus on walking and exercise, and what portions are good for her. My sister fell in love with her pedometer and started really working on fitness. She has lost at least 80lbs and LOVES all things healthy now! She no longer sneaks food. If she's under 10k steps for the day, she likes to walk up and down the hallways until she's there. And good lord, now she loves clothes shopping! She started out with a lot of help, but she really started to run with it in her own.
vanessalillian82 wrote: » And I lost 10kg in one summer at uni simply because I wasn't eating as much takeaway food or drinking as much beer, and I was still on Tegretol. From what I've read, provided it's not causing fluid retention (like Lyrica does, which my mum is currently on, which is working for her in every other way besides the weight gain), it's about learning to deal with having an increased appetite. For example, bingeing on broccoli is going to be less of a problem than bingeing on chocolate, not just because it's an actual food but also because it's filling, and will probably eventually remove the "reward" component of the craving cycle.
Woodspoon wrote: » On standard issue Sodium Valproate for epilepsy 2x500mg a day not really been an issue weight wise but been on it for so long that I barely notice it
ruthie1wastie2015 wrote: » I'm on lamotrigine and zonisamide for epilepsy and have wondered before if it caused my weight gain. I am losing though so it's all good
abble_pie wrote: » Ive lost 50 pounds on bipolar medication. I've been on every med in the book. I was over 200 pounds at my highest. The only combo ive found I can lose weight on is geodon an
xstephnz wrote: » I am wondering what changing my habits will do. I was living on a steady diet of takeaways before this, and before that, I would go to the supermarket once or twice a week, and load up on treats like chocolate, chips, dip and popcorn. If I stopped doing all of those things, I should be able to reduce my body weight by at least 20 kilos? (My start weight is about 68 kilos from where I want to be). I think my Bipolar medications are responsible for making me 20-40 kilos overweight. The rest is probably *kitten* habits.