Weight gain and aging
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29 is not old!2
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brookesdsu wrote: »Aging at 29?? LOL I wish I was 29 again.
I've been 29 for sooooooo many years now.3 -
I'm 59, and have lost 53 lbs. Slowly, but surely. You are young and your age cannot be a factor. Nor is it possible surely to gain 10 lbs from one meal! If you are eating the right number of calories for your height and weighing food properly, you should lose weight. As you are only aiming for 7 lbs, I imagine you are already at a healthy weight, so this loss may be slow.0
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When I read "Aging " I thought you 'll be in your late 60's lol...hardly aging. I'm 38 and when I stick to my deficit and workouts ( creating decent deficit and keeping me sane with extra calories ) I'll lose .
When I don't I won't,simple as that. Seeing how alot of older people than me on here lost crazy amount of weight and are fitter than me I'd like to think that anything is possible if you put some work in.
Don't make up reasons you can't lose instead make sure you track properly and weight wl come off no matter what .2 -
I'm 56 now and there is no doubt I'm not losing as fast as I did in my 30's and 40's (running around after small children) but when I look back honestly, it was not just the activity but an unhealthy approach to eating - I'd eat under 1000 cals a day, probably nearer 800 (I always eventually put the weight back on and then some). Now it's coming off slower (post menopause, hormone suppressing drugs in the mix too, plus I'm only 5ft 1") but I rarely eat fewer than 1200 calories and I'm far more sedentary. If I went back to my old restrictive/active ways, I'm pretty sure the weight loss would be just as fast. It's taken longer because I'm doing it right this time, and I'm healthier and down nearly 5.5 stone so far.
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When I saw the title I expected to see a 60++ person posting for help. I expected to post a "buck up little buckeroo" encouragement. Wow, so disappointed. I'm 63. You can lose weight and better your body at almost any age. I'm seeing excuses here. I also don't think it's the 1000cals you're eating. Be very precise-weight and log everything you eat and drink for 2 weeks and see what happens. Get a digital food scale if you don't have one. Read the"Sexypants" thread and other beginning stickies. Come back then, if you're still not losing.1
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Weight gain and agingMorty90210 wrote: »I'm 29 ...
So ... why are you asking about aging when you're nowhere near aging? Ask the question again in 20 years when you're in menopause. And incidentally, I had no trouble losing weight when I was 49.
Enjoy your youth!
Cheers!
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Yeah 29 is sooo young. I have almost 20 yrs on you. Weight loss in my 40s was no harder than in my earlier years but this time I found what works for me and have kept the weight off.1
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Yes, the so-called calorie "calculators" say we'll gradually burn fewer calories every year as we age. Very few. And much of the reason is that we move less in daily life (sit around more), and gradually lose muscle mass as a consequence. Both of those are factors that - absent genuine physical disability or disease - each of us can control.
The great likelihood is that you're logging inaccurately (no blame, it's a skill to be learned, not a character fault); or that you're "cheating" your way out of a calorie deficit (so log it all, then you'll know). There are two types of people who'd fail to lose on a consistent true 1000 daily calories: Very, very unusually super-petite people, or people with a serious disease. You know whether you're the former. If you think you might be the latter, consult your doctor.
If the problem is satiation on a given sensible calorie level, experiment with changing what or when you eat to improve that. There are bunches of threads with good information.
Reading posts and food diaries around here for several years, I've come to a conclusion, not 100% universal, but common. People who look for external or uncontrollable reasons they can't successfully lose weight tend to experience more unhappiness/drama/frustration, and have less success losing weight. People who seek to understand the mechanics of the process, then focus on what they personally control, tend to experience less emotional upheaval, and lose weight more successfully.
Focus on what you can control, and improve it.
As an aside, blaming weight loss failure on age, when 29, will tend to make quite a few much-older, formerly very fat, now healthier and much thinner peiple . . . chuckle.
Signed,
62-year-old formerly decades-long obese person who's been at a 50+ pounds lower healthy weight since 59-60. While hypothyroid.
Best wishes . . . you can achieve your goals.2
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