NOT 1 single pound lost. I don't get it.... WHY!!!!

Okay so today was my official weigh in day. Nothing, Nada not 1 pound lost. I made my own challenge that I would move every day, I set my calorie intake to 1200. Not 1 soda grrrrrrrrrrr. Thank goodness I also did do body measurements, I did see a loss of inches but can't understand why the scale didn't move. Desperately need advice please.
Thanks in advance.
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Replies

  • geotrice
    geotrice Posts: 274 Member
    The fat was turned to muscle....you could be holding onto water...chill... You made progress feel happy
  • flabassmcgee
    flabassmcgee Posts: 659 Member
    The scale is not always an indicator of fat loss. You lost inches. Congrats -- that's progress.

    If you aren't losing weight over a longer period of time, then you are not in a caloric deficit.
  • Mr_Knight
    Mr_Knight Posts: 9,532 Member
    Open your diary. You're most likely eating more than you think.
  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    Thank u , I am really happy but just wondering what I can do differntly, someone said I may not be eating enough. I am sure the numbers on the scale will drop eventually. Until then I'll keep peddling lol. Thanks again
  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    How do I open my diary
  • kaspatore
    kaspatore Posts: 95 Member
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!
  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    I opened my diary. Thanks for looking at it
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,267 Member
    geotrice wrote: »
    The fat was turned to muscle....you could be holding onto water...chill... You made progress feel happy

    all this but the part I put a line through.

    Make sure you are using multiple indicators....inches lost are great...I prefer those over lbs
  • freechewy
    freechewy Posts: 111 Member
    uh oh, stand by to get fussed at... I haven't lost a lot either but I am middle aged and your metabolism basically dies after 50. I still keep moderating my food intake and doing some form of exercise every day. Hang in there
  • andreirotariu
    andreirotariu Posts: 23 Member
    Could be any number of reasons. Faulty scales, water weight, muscle turned to fat (although I doubt you would build the exact amount of muscle as you have lost fat...).

    Make sure your only checking your weight once a week and do it at the exact same time e.g. morning and make sure your clothes are off or on, whatever suites you. I have noticed I can gain a whole kilo if I weight myself at night as compared with in the morning and if I keep my clothes on I can add anywhere between a couple hundred grams to a kilo so I always make sure I weigh myself at the same time and in the same way every time.

    Also 1200 calories seems a little low, you may want to look at that.
  • areallycoolstory
    areallycoolstory Posts: 1,680 Member
    Congrats on losing a few inches! Try not to stress:-)
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,267 Member
    Could be any number of reasons. Faulty scales, water weight, muscle turned to fat (although I doubt you would build the exact amount of muscle as you have lost fat...).

    Make sure your only checking your weight once a week and do it at the exact same time e.g. morning and make sure your clothes are off or on, whatever suites you. I have noticed I can gain a whole kilo if I weight myself at night as compared with in the morning and if I keep my clothes on I can add anywhere between a couple hundred grams to a kilo so I always make sure I weigh myself at the same time and in the same way every time.

    Also 1200 calories seems a little low, you may want to look at that.

    People need to stop saying that...fat does not turn into muscle...that is impossible.

  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    Thank you, I'll do some reading up on. Calories. Thanks again
  • JordisTSM
    JordisTSM Posts: 359 Member
    SezxyStef wrote: »
    Could be any number of reasons. Faulty scales, water weight, muscle turned to fat (although I doubt you would build the exact amount of muscle as you have lost fat...).

    Make sure your only checking your weight once a week and do it at the exact same time e.g. morning and make sure your clothes are off or on, whatever suites you. I have noticed I can gain a whole kilo if I weight myself at night as compared with in the morning and if I keep my clothes on I can add anywhere between a couple hundred grams to a kilo so I always make sure I weigh myself at the same time and in the same way every time.

    Also 1200 calories seems a little low, you may want to look at that.

    People need to stop saying that...fat does not turn into muscle...that is impossible.

    Clearly you didn't get your magic wand when you signed up to MFP.
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    geotrice wrote: »
    The fat was turned to muscle....you could be holding onto water...chill... You made progress feel happy

    what???? Care to explain this process how fat turns into muscle?
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    freechewy wrote: »
    uh oh, stand by to get fussed at... I haven't lost a lot either but I am middle aged and your metabolism basically dies after 50. I still keep moderating my food intake and doing some form of exercise every day. Hang in there

    the pseudo science is deep in this thread….
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    OP - do you use a food scale?
  • elphie754
    elphie754 Posts: 7,574 Member
    freechewy wrote: »
    uh oh, stand by to get fussed at... I haven't lost a lot either but I am middle aged and your metabolism basically dies after 50. I still keep moderating my food intake and doing some form of exercise every day. Hang in there

    nope- if your metabolism "died" you'd be dead.
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 25,595 Member
    Okay so today was my official weigh in day. Nothing, Nada not 1 pound lost. I made my own challenge that I would move every day, I set my calorie intake to 1200. Not 1 soda grrrrrrrrrrr. Thank goodness I also did do body measurements, I did see a loss of inches but can't understand why the scale didn't move. Desperately need advice please.
    Thanks in advance.

    How long have you been at this?

    It took me 10 days before there was any change at all ... no loss of inches, no drop in weight. And then, after 10 days of nothing, it started.

    Also, how often do you weigh yourself?

  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    OP - do you use a food scale?

    This.

    And I really wish people would stop telling others that they are turning fat into muscle or gaining muscle in their calorie deficits and that's why they're not losing. That is absolutely no help.
  • AmyRhubarb
    AmyRhubarb Posts: 6,890 Member
    edited May 2015
    Okay so today was my official weigh in day. Nothing, Nada not 1 pound lost. I made my own challenge that I would move every day, I set my calorie intake to 1200. Not 1 soda grrrrrrrrrrr. Thank goodness I also did do body measurements, I did see a loss of inches but can't understand why the scale didn't move. Desperately need advice please.
    Thanks in advance.
    Inches lost = WIN! Scale not moving = who cares? Can anyone else see your scale numbers? No. Can anyone else see the visible results that are inches lost? Yes!

    Best advice I can give - DON NOT LET THE SCALE DEFINE YOU OR MESS WITH YOUR HEAD! I went six months without losing anything on the scale, but during that time I dropped a full size! I laughed at my scale and went out to buy new, smaller sized jeans!

    The scale WILL go up and down day to day, week to week - the losses are not linear. Track your measurements, take a few photos for comparison later, and don't let those scale numbers stress you out - a lower number is not always the sign of progress, and certainly not a sign of failure - it's just a number. :tongue:

    Edited to add: Fat does not turn into muscle, you did not gain muscle on a calorie deficit, and "middle aged" is no excuse - I'm 47 and in far better shape than I was in my 30's! I have reached every fitness and weight loss goal I have set for myself over the past few years, and maintained the progress. You can do anything you set your mind to.

    Eat the right number of cals to fuel your body for daily routines and exercise, drink water, take rest days, get plenty of sleep. That's all there is to it.

  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    arditarose wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    OP - do you use a food scale?

    This.

    And I really wish people would stop telling others that they are turning fat into muscle or gaining muscle in their calorie deficits and that's why they're not losing. That is absolutely no help.

    unfortunately, that is never going to stop …*sigh*
  • ronronronj
    ronronronj Posts: 474 Member
    kaspatore wrote: »
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!
    That happened to me, too! In some ways, I would rather lose the inches than the pounds!
  • jnv7594
    jnv7594 Posts: 983 Member
    edited May 2015
    ronronronj wrote: »
    kaspatore wrote: »
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!
    That happened to me, too! In some ways, I would rather lose the inches than the pounds!
    kaspatore wrote: »
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!

    This is my pattern as well, and it has been since I started losing weight in August. I won't lose anything for 2 or 3 weeks, then suddenly I will drop 3 pounds in a week. Not sure why this happens, but it's a definite pattern for me personally. I've lost 85 pounds and it's been that way the whole way through. I am a shining example of the fact that weight loss is not linear, lol.

    That being said, until you have such a noticeable pattern with your weight loss, it's best to consider other things as the cause. As others said make sure you are weighing and measuring EVERYTHING that goes in your mouth. That means everything including prepackaged foods. Also, make sure you are using correct database entries. There are a ton in the database that aren't accurate, so just be mindful of that. If you are tracking calories correctly, weighing and measuring, and using correct entries then just be patient. It will happen.

  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    jnv7594 wrote: »
    ronronronj wrote: »
    kaspatore wrote: »
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!
    That happened to me, too! In some ways, I would rather lose the inches than the pounds!
    kaspatore wrote: »
    look up the "woosh" happened to me... no loss until like 3 weeks in and suddenly was 4 pounds down. Hang in there!

    This is my pattern as well, and it has been since I started losing weight in August. I won't lose anything for 2 or 3 weeks, then suddenly I will drop 3 pounds in a week. Not sure why this happens, but it's a definite pattern for me personally. I've lost 85 pounds and it's been that way the whole way through. I am a shining example of the fact that weight loss is not linear, lol.

    That being said, until you have such a noticeable pattern with your weight loss, it's best to consider other things as the cause. As others said make sure you are weighing and measuring EVERYTHING that goes in your mount. That means everything including prepackaged foods. Also, make sure you are using correct database entries. There are a ton in the database that aren't accurate, so just be mindful of that. If you are tracking calories correctly, weighing and measuring, and using correct entries then just be patient. It will happen.

    Same for me.

    And I agree, until you've been logging long enough to have the data to assume you will lose in this manner, you have to make sure you're logging accurately and using a food scale.
  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    Thank you so much for the support. From this site http://www.bmi-calculator.net/bmr-calculator/harris-benedict-equation/ I did every calculation they had lol. And my BMR was 2332. And after reading and reading, it seems that 1200 cal, which I set for my goal is low, so I raised it to 1600. And I am not going to allow the scale to discourage me. I will also take some pictures tomorrow. (I'm scared lol) having other ways to track success will most defiantly keep me motivated. Thanks again everyone. :)<3
  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    Thank you so much for the support. From this site http://www.bmi-calculator.net/bmr-calculator/harris-benedict-equation/ I did every calculation they had lol. And my BMR was 2332. And after reading and reading, it seems that 1200 cal, which I set for my goal is low, so I raised it to 1600. And I am not going to allow the scale to discourage me. I will also take some pictures tomorrow. (I'm scared lol) having other ways to track success will most defiantly keep me motivated. Thanks again everyone. :)<3

    This is great, but if you weren't losing on what you thought was 1200, you're going to need to be very diligent when you up your calories. Food scale.
  • blankiefinder
    blankiefinder Posts: 3,599 Member
    Food scale, food scale, food scale!

    You mention that this was your weigh in day, how long have you been stalled at the same weight?
  • jthomas0054
    jthomas0054 Posts: 24 Member
    I have been biking 5 to 10 miles a day, or walking 5 plus added yoga classes and strength training 3 times a week. If I don't see a difference, I'll tweek it again. What do u think the goal calorie should be?
  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    I have been biking 5 to 10 miles a day, or walking 5 plus added yoga classes and strength training 3 times a week. If I don't see a difference, I'll tweek it again. What do u think the goal calorie should be?

    I don't remember you mentioning your statistics. Remember, you should not strive to create the whole of your deficit with exercise. Create the deficit with you diet, weighing all food on a food scale and logging accurately every bite you eat. Exercise will help you eat more.