What is happening to me?

I am not ok friends
I have lost 65 pounds in 7 months. I did that by doing 1200 calories a day and being active. I was losing 3 pounds a week until 2 werks ago. In the last 2 werjs I have only lost 2 pounds. What is happening? Why is it slowing diwn now after 7 months? I have 20 pounds to go. I am currently a size 8 and at 163 pounds. Has anybody had this happen to them and if so did you find a reason and solution? Thanks guys.
- Lisa

Replies

  • JeremyM0510
    JeremyM0510 Posts: 18 Member
    It’s not good to get accustomed to a certain number of lbs per week. Body fat % is a better metric long term. It can be read a number of different ways. I suggest going off of that rather than lbs/wk. as others have said the body will shut itself down at a certain point and adapt metabolically to keep you alive. As it adjusts, you will need to as well. Your progress has been incredible though. Don’t stop
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,259 Member
    By the way and for the record based on your own experience your numbers as stated are not quite correct.

    In the big scheme of things I'm picking nits. But when you eventually try to establish maintenance it might be useful for you to understand

    You seem to be using activity and tdee. I'm assuming activity level you have selected on MFP and tdee as estimated based on exercise you add or device that estimates for you.

    Doing 1200 doesn't mean much. The actual calories you consume matter.

    They could be 1400 on average or 1150 on average for all I know of even exactly 1200. Only YOU have the actual data.

    Take a month of that. That's calories in

    Take a month of your weight trend change (not direct scale weight but weight trend)

    Multiply by 3500 per lb of weight change as a first approximation and divide by number of days (number may be a bit higher for you then 3500 due to speed and length of loss--there's some dynamic adjustment in all this)

    Calories logged + weight change calories are what your body and logging together think that your tdee has been over the time period.
  • lisamsanford1229
    lisamsanford1229 Posts: 20 Member
    PAV8888 wrote: »
    By the way and for the record based on your own experience your numbers as stated are not quite correct.

    In the big scheme of things I'm picking nits. But when you eventually try to establish maintenance it might be useful for you to understand

    You seem to be using activity and tdee. I'm assuming activity level you have selected on MFP and tdee as estimated based on exercise you add or device that estimates for you.

    Doing 1200 doesn't mean much. The actual calories you consume matter.

    They could be 1400 on average or 1150 on average for all I know of even exactly 1200. Only YOU have the actual data.

    Take a month of that. That's calories in

    Take a month of your weight trend change (not direct scale weight but weight trend)

    Multiply by 3500 per lb of weight change as a first approximation and divide by number of days (number may be a bit higher for you then 3500 due to speed and length of loss--there's some dynamic adjustment in all this)

    Calories logged + weight change calories are what your body and logging together think that your tdee has been over the time period.

    Thank you very much for taking the time tow answer me. That was very informative and I will do that.
  • ddsb1111
    ddsb1111 Posts: 872 Member
    edited June 5
    @lisamsanford1229 How have you been feeling lately? Early March Ann wrote you a response and I have a feeling it might apply to what’s happening here. Reposting if it’s okay. I hope this helps and gives some insight.
    Fatigue is a bad sign. Fatigue is also counterproductive.

    Why?

    Think about it: Fatigue usually makes us drag through the day. We move less, burn fewer calories than we would if properly fueled. Researchers have found that a fidgety person can burn low hundreds of calories more per day than an otherwise similar non-fidgety person. I'm not encouraging you to fidget, but saying that the fatigue-created difference in calorie burn can be that subtle, but that large. When fatigued, we rest more, maybe make simpler meals, lose interest in leisure activities that involve movement, put off energy-intensive home projects, and more.

    And that's in addition to the risk of depressed immune system, gallbladder complications, muscle loss, hair loss, etc. Mood can suffer, affecting relationships. It's not guaranteed that any bad thing will happen, but the odds shift in a bad direction.

    I assume you'd like to keep this 81 pounds off once you lose it. Are your current methods helping you find and practice habits you can continue forever almost on autopilot to stay at a healthy weight long term when other parts of life get challenging (because they will)? I'm doubtful.

    Weight management is not a quick project with an end date, after which things go back to normal. That's a recipe for yo-yo weight regain, which is even a less healthy alternative than staying somewhat overweight permanently.

    If you feel terrible now, eat more, lose slower but feel better. Be healthier. Learn some habits that will work for you in maintenance. (You may even find that adding a hundred or two hundred calories a day perks you up enough to keep weight loss close to the current rate, given your current fatigue.)

    Please give this a rethink. Even if you lose fast, you have many weeks to go. Yes, 40 more weeks is a long time. They'll feel even longer if they're miserable weeks, and that's assuming you don't hit a breaking point before those weeks are over. Would it really be worse to take 50 or even 60 weeks, but feel decent, energetic, even vivacious? You're not on a path of thriving now. There is such a path available, I'm betting.

    Whatever you decide, I wish you well, sincerely.
  • MargaretYakoda
    MargaretYakoda Posts: 2,995 Member
    PAV8888 wrote: »
    Margaret its not irritability it's hAngry from being too hungry.

    To lose at 65lbs over a 7 month (213 day) time period, she has hit ACTUAL EFFECTIVE deficits of 1068 Cal a day.

    That's a LOT if her TDEE is in the 2500 range--it is in the 40% to 50% of TDEE deficit range -- a far cry from a still aggressive 20% to 25% cut while still obese.

    I don’t get a lot of steps in daily due to a mobility issue. So the space between losing weight and gaining weight is a bit thinner for me. I have to be very cautious not to be too aggressive. I really feel it, because it exacerbates my balance deficit.

    I can’t imagine living like that for months.
    I would be absolutely miserable.
    And very lonely too, as I’m sure my partner would not put up with it. :D