How to avoid water weight gain on the scale
retro_gamer
Posts: 127 Member
Short answer- Drink less water
So I have noticed if I eat a big meal that is very dense and may or may not have a ton of sodium that if I don't drink a ton of water or other liquids with it my weight won't balloon up the next day and I'm one of those people that obsesses over my weight on the scale.
Everyone says that you need to drink a gallon of water everyday and I don't think you do
If you're always drinking water all day when you're hungry you're always gonna have 3 or 4 pounds of extra weight when you eat food and weigh yourself
Now I'm not saying everyone should do this because I only have experienced with it myself
And I'm not saying stop drinking water I'm saying you just don't need as much as everyone says
I know people on diets love their water
This is just my opinion I'm not a professional doctor or anything.
So I have noticed if I eat a big meal that is very dense and may or may not have a ton of sodium that if I don't drink a ton of water or other liquids with it my weight won't balloon up the next day and I'm one of those people that obsesses over my weight on the scale.
Everyone says that you need to drink a gallon of water everyday and I don't think you do
If you're always drinking water all day when you're hungry you're always gonna have 3 or 4 pounds of extra weight when you eat food and weigh yourself
Now I'm not saying everyone should do this because I only have experienced with it myself
And I'm not saying stop drinking water I'm saying you just don't need as much as everyone says
I know people on diets love their water
This is just my opinion I'm not a professional doctor or anything.
23
Replies
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No.
No, no, no, no.
Water does not cause fluid retention.
Obviously, people shouldn't be drinking loads of water just because they read on the interwebs that they have to drink at least 8 glasses a day, that's a myth. But good hydration is important, and advising people not to drink water if they're genuinely thirsty and/or in need of it just so they'll weigh less? That's actually dangerous.20 -
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retro_gamer wrote: »Short answer- Drink less water
This is just my opinion I'm not a professional doctor or anything.
Well that's good. Because this borders on some of the stupidest "advice" I've read here.
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I don't know who's telling you a gallon a day, but that's bunk. As for a large meal, I find that when I have a high sodium day, so extra water actually helps flush it out, therefor less of a bump on the scale the next day.15
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I find that if I drink more water than my body needs, I just pee it out...13
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i retain water if i dont drink a minimum gallon a day. i've been watching this for over a year so its tried and true. i can get in a gallon and a half wehn im doing two a days in the gym. if i dont get enough water bam. 5-7 extra lbs..4
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More water is better, unless you start to feel a little giddy / drunk (which has happened to me).
Water weight is not bad weight as it is not "real" weight. It is just water and it does no harm to your body.2 -
How to avoid it - have a non-normal functioning body.
Comatose or dead comes to mind.11 -
Water retention happens, it's very normal. Best way to avoid seeing that weight go up on the scale because of water retention? Weigh yourself no more than twice a month. Seriously. Also, do it in the morning before you eat or drink anything, too. If you weigh yourself less frequently (I like to do it every two weeks) you won't see your weight bouncing all over the place from water weight, and you'll be much happier with yourself. DO NOT drink less water to avoid water retention- that's some of the worst advice I've heard. Drink plenty of water throughout the day, stick to a caloric deficit, and avoid high-sodium foods. Also, I can't tell who originally posted this question but if you're a woman expect some serious water weight around your period. Happens. Otherwise, avoid that piece of advice lol3
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tiffaninghs wrote: »i retain water if i dont drink a minimum gallon a day. i've been watching this for over a year so its tried and true. i can get in a gallon and a half wehn im doing two a days in the gym. if i dont get enough water bam. 5-7 extra lbs..
I'm the same way. My body is used to around 80oz a day. When I don't drink my normal amount I tend to retain fluid and bloat, along with some other digestive issues.
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helpfit1002 wrote: »More water is better, unless you start to feel a little giddy / drunk (which has happened to me).
Water weight is not bad weight as it is not "real" weight. It is just water and it does no harm to your body.
It's not better in all situations. It is possible to create an electrolyte balance when intaking excessive water.3 -
How to avoid water wight gain on the scale? Don't. Learn that it's a perfectly normal part of a functioning body, and either stay off the scale as much or learn to live with your fluctuations and stop majoring in the minors.
Buddy, you seem to have some disordered/uninformed ideas and misconceptions about weight loss, and a predilection to get hung up on irrelevancies. I really think you should concentrate on grasping some basic knowledge of nutrition and weight loss, and stop trying to game the system.10 -
I do a liter of distilled and a liter of spring and I'm good, also more potassium less salt works for me. Adding tomatoes and avacado to my meals really made me have a flat stomach8
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nutmegoreo wrote: »helpfit1002 wrote: »More water is better, unless you start to feel a little giddy / drunk (which has happened to me).
Water weight is not bad weight as it is not "real" weight. It is just water and it does no harm to your body.
It's not better in all situations. It is possible to create an electrolyte balance when intaking excessive water.
Yeah I realize, I was trying not to be overly accurate and kind of speak in generic terms. Too much water can create an "imbalance" as you say, but most people are unlikely to get to that. And I do mean it, one day I drank so much water I literally felt drunk. So yeah too much is not good either.
The main message that several people seem to support on here is, drink more and do not worry about the water component of what your scale tells you. Unless you have swollen legs because of water retention, then I have no idea speak to a doctor or google it.0 -
retro_gamer wrote: »So I have noticed if I eat a big meal that
Stop. Why are you eating a big meal?
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Alatariel75 wrote: »How to avoid water wight gain on the scale? Don't. Learn that it's a perfectly normal part of a functioning body, and either stay off the scale as much or learn to live with your fluctuations and stop majoring in the minors.
Buddy, you seem to have some disordered/uninformed ideas and misconceptions about weight loss, and a predilection to get hung up on irrelevancies. I really think you should concentrate on grasping some basic knowledge of nutrition and weight loss, and stop trying to game the system.
^This.0 -
rfrenkel77 wrote: »retro_gamer wrote: »So I have noticed if I eat a big meal that
Stop. Why are you eating a big meal?
What's wrong with a big meal if it fits caloric/macro intake goals?11 -
weight gain IS NOT THE SAME THING as fat gain.4
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rfrenkel77 wrote: »retro_gamer wrote: »So I have noticed if I eat a big meal that
Stop. Why are you eating a big meal?
because big meals are awesome!6 -
As if the OP wasn't bizarre enough, some of the other posts are even stranger with their theories of water intake.4
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thats not how that works ....1
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epic somehow!
you drink more, your weight goes up...
you drink less, your weight will not go up...
in a big meal you eat a lot of carbs and drink water, your weight will go up...
you eat salty and drink, your weight goes up...
some *kitten* question comes up to me right now: are you prepairing yourself for a bodybuilding contest next few days, or is your daily intake of water already confusing you?1 -
http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
this is a good article about weight fluctuations. def worth the read.....no seriously read it.
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