Got down to my first goal weight, now what?

Ok so I started a yr and 9 months ago today to change my lifestyle. I was 278 and I felt horrible. Fresh break up from a 4 yr engagement and super depressed. As of 15 days ago I was at my first goal weight of 220-224. Well I decided to make a new goal weight of 200 by new years. Ruffly 25 pound to go. I thought easy right, wrong. I started the 30 day squat, arms, and ab challenges. Last night was day 15. I feel great. I can see some tone and I jump on the scale....235. holy crap 10 pounds in 15 days. I know muscles weigh more than fat but holy crap.
I may be looking at this all wrong. I like the idea of being more muscular and I would love to one day see this keg turn into a 6 pack. Not sure if i am doing something wrong. My diet has seen a few days where i was off but not 10 pounds worth. Maybe I just need to stay on track and see if I bulk up some more and let the muscle eat the fat.

Replies

  • Elvira2014
    Elvira2014 Posts: 14 Member
    Mostly like its muscle, just like you said. So dont get discouraged keep doing your best and you will continue to see the results you want.
  • wilsoje74
    wilsoje74 Posts: 1,720 Member
    Mostly like its muscle, just like you said. So dont get discouraged keep doing your best and you will continue to see the results you want.
    10 lb of muscle in 15 days? No...
  • BigGuy47
    BigGuy47 Posts: 1,768 Member
    I started the 30 day squat, arms, and ab challenges. Last night was day 15.
    Were you exercising at all before you started these challenges? Sometimes when you start a new routine after a long lay off your body will retain water/glycogen to repair the muscles. This coupled with a diet that was off track is probably why the scale has jumped a bit.

    Stay on track with your diet, continue with a regular exercise routine and monitor your progress (over the course of 6 weeks). IF you're still gaining you may need to adjust your calories.
  • Might be an idea to check on your body composition. I know analysis scales arent always the most acurate, but they do give you a general idea on your body fat %, lean muscle mass, water %. I very much doubt youve gained 10 lbs of pure muscle in 2 weeks, but as another poster has said you could have retained water. Also your metabolism might be slower now youve lost weight if youve been eating the same diet/calories. You might not be eating enough food now you are exercising so your body could be storing it to compensate. You could have slipped in your diet without realising. Or it could be none of the above, and be something completely different. There are so many varibles and everyone is different, but hope these things might give you an idea :)
  • KeRAWRi
    KeRAWRi Posts: 79 Member
    Have you been taking measurements? Do your clothes feel tighter or looser as a result of gaining ten pounds? Is your scale broken? Lol. Goodluck sir !
  • Iron_Lotus
    Iron_Lotus Posts: 2,295 Member
    Mostly like its muscle, just like you said. So dont get discouraged keep doing your best and you will continue to see the results you want.

    I really wish that people who know nothing about the amount of work and time it takes to put on muscle would stop perpetuating this! It is not muscle nor is it possible to be muscle in 15 days. It takes years to put on 10lbs of muscle and that with doing everything flawlessly right.
  • Yeah I know its not muscles and I am guessing the diet needs to change. I never really worked out before. all the weight lose was from eating and calorie counting. So I am guessing it could be water weight and not eating enough now so my body would be storing. I just need to adjust if it continues to climb.
  • chani8
    chani8 Posts: 946 Member
    You weighed yourself "last night"? Check again in a few days, in the morning.
  • You weighed yourself "last night"? Check again in a few days, in the morning.

    Sorry Last night was day 15 and this morning I weighed in.
  • harleygroomer
    harleygroomer Posts: 373 Member
    when I hit my weight goals, my trainer makes me STOP and maintain that weight for 2 weeks before starting again. She also has me doing ADKINS every3 months for 10 days only--granted, it is a sad sad 10 days, but it shocks your system every now and then and for me it keeps the plateaus to a minimum.
  • kellygirl5538
    kellygirl5538 Posts: 597 Member
    Even when you are goal weight,....fitness is always ongoing. Everyone can improve. Try to be healthy and maintain a healthy life style.
  • Fullsterkur_woman
    Fullsterkur_woman Posts: 2,712 Member
    when I hit my weight goals, my trainer makes me STOP and maintain that weight for 2 weeks before starting again. She also has me doing ADKINS every3 months for 10 days only--granted, it is a sad sad 10 days, but it shocks your system every now and then and for me it keeps the plateaus to a minimum.
    That sounds poopy. It would suck for my lifts and contribute to my depression. No thanks! I'll just eat high protein and continue getting the carbs I need to fuel my workouts. The maintenance practice is a darned good idea though. I do that a lot!

    N, I'd suggest taking your measurements every 3-4 weeks since starting the weight training program to see how you're progressing. That 10+ pounds is all water, I guarantee it. I did some leg work I hadn't done for a while last Tuesday and I was all swole (and sore!) for about four days. I weigh about 20% less than you, and I've been lifting for quite a long time, so I'd expect that you'd gain even more water and glycogen that I do from lifting.

    And it took me about 5.5 years to put on 10 pounds of bona fide muscle (per DEXA scans), so yeah, you gotta be patient with that part!

    Just stick with it and the results will come. :drinker:
  • It is not that you are doing anything wrong. If building muscle is one of your goals, then you are definitely on the right track. However if your main goal is still to lose weight, your exercise routines should focus on cardio, not just muscle building. Cardio (running, jogging, dancing etc.) is what burns the fat and calories. Add cardio to your workout and you should start seeing results.

    Good luck, and congratulations on meeting your first goal!
  • Fullsterkur_woman
    Fullsterkur_woman Posts: 2,712 Member
    It is not that you are doing anything wrong. If building muscle is one of your goals, then you are definitely on the right track. However if your main goal is still to lose weight, your exercise routines should focus on cardio, not just muscle building. Cardio (running, jogging, dancing etc.) is what burns the fat and calories. Add cardio to your workout and you should start seeing results.

    Good luck, and congratulations on meeting your first goal!
    Well, no. Muscles burn calories by increasing your metabolism. Cardio does burn calories, but it also does nothing to preserve muscle mass, which you need to do to avoid decreasing your basal metabolic rate. If all you care about is the number on the scale, and not body composition or how many calories you get to eat in maintenance, then by all means, cardio it up!

    The weight training in a deficit is not going to build muscle. It'll help him preserve muscle while he is in a deficit. Weight loss is mostly determined by your diet, i.e., creating caloric deficit. And if you have a really large caloric deficit, it's hard to avoid muscle loss.

    Using lots of cardio to increase the deficit is not a good idea if you want to preserve muscle mass. Do moderate cardio to maintain your aerobic capacity, and/or because you like it.
  • HIITMe
    HIITMe Posts: 921 Member
    glycogen.... dehydration... water retention



    DRINK AN EFFTON OF WATER & continue all else.....
  • Everyone has had helpful suggestions for losing more weight but maybe you need a different goal. While the number on the scale is fun to watch when you're losing, when you hit a plateau it is frustrating and feels like failure or moving away from your goal even though you may still be making great forward strides. I would make a performance goal rather than a weight loss number goal. Do you like to run? Say you're going to run a certain number of miles a week- not too far out of reach, but something that will challenge you. Or if you like lifting, maybe make a goal that by the end of the month you are going to add x number of pounds to all of your lifts and then work hard to reach it. You'll be actively heading toward your better body goal without having to rely on the number on the scale (which can fluctuate and depend on many things). And who knows, when you reach a performance goal you may find you've reached your number goal as well!
  • fleetzz
    fleetzz Posts: 962 Member
    Take your measurements and track those, and just step on the scale occasionally. It sounds like there is no way you are gaining fat so stop with the scale and start tracking inches.