Here's a little background and info.
I'm 24, will be 25 later this week. I'm 5'11" and right at 200# right now. I grew up in the foothills of the Appalachians and stayed in great shape hiking and rockclimbing (GREAT total body workout by the way) as well as working on the family's small farm, and playing football and basketball. As part of football, I bulked up to 205 by the end of high school, but staying in the 12-13% body fat range. When I went off to college, I was away from the mountains and was no longer playing competitive sports, but I still played a lot of pickup games and worked out. The real problem started my senior year when I had to spend so much time on my senior thesis and then after graduation having to work 45+ hours a week.
Now, while I'm 5# lighter than my heaviest weight, I'm in poor shape. I'm been running lately and starting to workout again over the past two weeks and I've dropped from 205 to 200.
It's amazing how quickly you can go from couch potato to being in A LOT better shape! I started out with very light jogging, but in two weeks, I went from very light, casual jogging with lots of walking breaks to now being able to run 1.5 miles straight and doing it in 13 minutes. While that's by no means burning up the track, it's certainly better than 2 weeks ago when I couldn't make it 1/2 a mile before sucking wind! Starting tomorrow, I'm bumping it up to 2 miles, because I want to continue to push myself and the past 2 days, I've noticed that after the 1.5 miles, I still had some more gas in the tank where a few days ago I was done after that distance.
My main concern right now is getting down into the 180-185 range and getting in good cardio shape and then I'll start really focusing on some strength training again. Right now, I'm just doing some basic lifting to get back into the swing of things.
I've only been getting serious about getting back into shape in the past 2 weeks, but so far, I'm amazed at how well I'm progressing.
Not really asking for any real advice here, more just sharing my experiences. However, if you have any tips or anything you'd like to add, please feel free!