I gained weight last week while following my numbers and nee

cherilyn221
cherilyn221 Posts: 62 Member
edited September 26 in Health and Weight Loss
Up 3 pounds this morning. I went over by 400 calories yesterday and way over on the fat grams with the butter on my oatmeal, but that was yesterday only.....would that cause a 3 pound gain? Two days last week I was under by about 200 calories and the other days I was under by less than 100 calories and close on the other numbers of carbs, sodium, fat, fiber and I was completely honest with my food and exercise diary.

Do I need to adjust my calories lower than what is automatically calculated for me to have to lose two pounds a week?

I exercised each day....but not at a consistent level. What I mean by that is some days I walked ten minutes at a slow pace and some days I walked ten minutes at a very fast pace. One day I had access to an elliptical machine so I walked that day and did 7 minutes on the elliptical. On Saturday I walked for a couple hours at a medium pace. Sunday I didn't exercise at all except some light housework.

I drank my 8 cups of water each day and yesterday I drank 12 cups.

To me it seems like the calculations allow an awful lot of calories and carbs to eat and still lose weight. But then that's the perspective of a person who all her life (since I was 12 years old and I'm 54 now) has a history of losing weight only by fasting for days and sometimes weeks at a time and being below 500 calories a day on the days I ate while I was dieting. Diet doctors in the seventies with pills and telling me the body doesn't need all those calories....to stick below 500. Now, keep in mind I haven't fasted like that for about seven years and no diet pills since the 80's.

Anyway....I would like to what you all have to say. Thank you....

Cherie

Replies

  • melsinct
    melsinct Posts: 3,512 Member
    Over by 400 calories one day will not make you gain weight, especially 3 pounds. To gain one pound you would have to eat 3500 calories above and beyond what you are allowed.

    Your body goes through fluctuations. I weigh daily and I can be up or down three pounds from one day to the next. As long as you are meeting the calorie goals for what MFP tells you (not going far under or over) you will see weight loss over a period of time (not day to day but week to week). Pay special attention to the amount of sodium you are eating...if that number is high, chances are you are holding on to water weight. Try to keep under the MFP sodium goal.
  • rodneyderrick
    rodneyderrick Posts: 483 Member
    Sodium will cause you to retain water, and that's the reason for your weight gain. It's frustrating to see the needle of the scale move in the wrong direction, but it's not a true weight. Cut your sodium, and your numbers will look a lot better.
  • MakingAChoice
    MakingAChoice Posts: 481 Member
    Sodium can make things fluctuate dramatically, I have seen as much as a 5 lb swing on higher sodium days. It is crazy how much water the body can retain.
  • Shadowcasting
    Shadowcasting Posts: 124 Member
    I'm in the same boat. Up 2.5 pounds. Its frustrating, but what can we do? Can't give up!
  • bethany41h
    bethany41h Posts: 218
    My scale is always fluctuationg and it is really frustrating and a lot of times it's just water weight. Though sometimes, I have no idea what it is but I know that I can't be down 5 pounds one day and up 4 pounds the next... but the scale will try to have mebelieve that! At first, I would get discouraged. But now I just wait a week or two to weigh so I can get something more accurate. But if you weigh every single day, you will end up obsessing over those pounds when sometimes they are irrelevant. Pay attention to your non-scale victories.. they often mean more :)
  • Foolishly ate a Polish sausage yesterday (not turkey), up 3 pounds today. Drink plenty of water and flush that sodium out!
    Soon you will be able to feel it when you have too much salt....


    Dont give up!
  • KTGoings
    KTGoings Posts: 3
    I think another big thing about weight gain is making sure you are consistent with your excercising. It seems like my weight decreases more when I workout at least 30mins to an hour 4-5 days a week. You have to get your heart rate up high enough to burn calories.
  • skillen
    skillen Posts: 8 Member
    some times you gain muscle from your work outs to...and if you eat to few calories you go into starvation mode I'm to understand at that point your body will store food because it thinks it's starving which leads to weight gain. Dont get discouraged ...I went over calories 3 days last week and was at level one day and below two and gained back 2.4 pounds.. then the following week i did about the same and lost 1.6 so I think sometimes it just flucuates when your not consistent. I don't excersize daily ( wish I did) and my water intake is never the recommended amount. Just keep working at it and you'll get there.
  • Yea, it's just a weight fluctuation! Yesterday I almost passed away when I weighed myself and saw I'd gained all of the five pounds I'd lost over the past two weeks back! But I was out last night and when I got home, I weighed myself and I'd lost four of those pounds so unless you weighed yourself at a different time to usual then it's the weight fluctuation!

    Also, my scales were off for a while too so check that just in case you too bought a really cheap scales! That could be it. Otherwise you've done really well so don't beat yourself up about it!
  • RNewton4269
    RNewton4269 Posts: 663 Member
    I am up 3 pounds today...totally washing out the 3 pounds loss last week. But I know what I did wrong..I didn't work out for 3 days in a row and I drank way too many diet sodas..which I need to cut completely. It is terribly frustrating but all we can do is do better!
  • jaygirl3
    jaygirl3 Posts: 320 Member
    Same here. Weighed in this morning and i had added a whooping 3kg! Almost collapsed. I had some bread/butter binges over the weekend, but didnt expect it to get to this
  • pjfmaui73
    pjfmaui73 Posts: 408
    Over by 400 calories one day will not make you gain weight, especially 3 pounds. To gain one pound you would have to eat 3500 calories above and beyond what you are allowed.

    Your body goes through fluctuations. I weigh daily and I can be up or down three pounds from one day to the next. As long as you are meeting the calorie goals for what MFP tells you (not going far under or over) you will see weight loss over a period of time (not day to day but week to week). Pay special attention to the amount of sodium you are eating...if that number is high, chances are you are holding on to water weight. Try to keep under the MFP sodium goal.



    I agree with this... I weigh in weekly, mid week (I feel less pressure that way)...don't use the scale as the guide to your success...go by how you feel and how your clothes are fitting. i think some of the key to success is eating smaller freq. meals...this keeps the metabolism burning...I wish you the best of luck and stay strong...it takes time to lose weight!!!
  • KeyMasterOfGozer
    KeyMasterOfGozer Posts: 229 Member
    From Day to Day, your weight can fluctuate from a lot of reason, like water weight an others. It is strongly recommended that you don't weigh-in every day. Do it once a week instead. This is to prevent panics like this one. :smile:

    That said, I weigh in everyday myself, but I know to only look at my weekly averages.

    This post might be good to read to get you started:
    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/23912-links-in-mfp-you-want-to-read-again-and-again
  • kjensen15
    kjensen15 Posts: 398 Member
    All I can say is keep doing what you're doing. Your weight can fluctuate daily with no real reason. There are times that I've fluctuated 5-7lbs doing nothing differently. It can be frustrating and deflating at times. One thing I did do is change my nutrient settings to be 40% carbs, 30% protein, and 30% fat. This is the ratio that the Zone diet uses. However, I dont freak out if I'm over on my carbs if I know I'm getting most of them from fruits and veggies.
  • hpsnickers1
    hpsnickers1 Posts: 2,783 Member
    Up 3 pounds this morning. I went over by 400 calories yesterday and way over on the fat grams with the butter on my oatmeal, but that was yesterday only.....would that cause a 3 pound gain? Two days last week I was under by about 200 calories and the other days I was under by less than 100 calories and close on the other numbers of carbs, sodium, fat, fiber and I was completely honest with my food and exercise diary.

    Do I need to adjust my calories lower than what is automatically calculated for me to have to lose two pounds a week?

    I exercised each day....but not at a consistent level. What I mean by that is some days I walked ten minutes at a slow pace and some days I walked ten minutes at a very fast pace. One day I had access to an elliptical machine so I walked that day and did 7 minutes on the elliptical. On Saturday I walked for a couple hours at a medium pace. Sunday I didn't exercise at all except some light housework.

    I drank my 8 cups of water each day and yesterday I drank 12 cups.

    To me it seems like the calculations allow an awful lot of calories and carbs to eat and still lose weight. But then that's the perspective of a person who all her life (since I was 12 years old and I'm 54 now) has a history of losing weight only by fasting for days and sometimes weeks at a time and being below 500 calories a day on the days I ate while I was dieting. Diet doctors in the seventies with pills and telling me the body doesn't need all those calories....to stick below 500. Now, keep in mind I haven't fasted like that for about seven years and no diet pills since the 80's.

    Anyway....I would like to what you all have to say. Thank you....

    Cherie

    what you lost during fasting and eating less than 500 calories a day was water and muscle mass. The body needs a certain amount just to function (baseline number is 1200). Right now if you are eating under 1200 continuously it can keep you from losing. And depending on how much weight you have to lose 2lbs per week might not be realistic or healthy. The reason it allows a lot of calories is because you need those calories. I can imagine the amount of false information back in the 70's.



    Please read through the links in my signature "Links in MFP you want to read again and again"; "Your body's thoughts on calories"

    and this is a great site: http://www.hussmanfitness.org/html/TPAdaptation.html

    The goal of this site is to help you to transform your physique by walking you step-by-step through everything you need to know about exercise physiology and nutrition. I know that a lot of you have “tried everything,” and because there are so many approaches that have failed you, there's a real risk that you'll quit again and again if you don't see results immediately, or if you don't fully understand why your fitness program should work. Worse, there may be some missing pieces in your program, which could lead to slow progress even though you're hard at work. My hope is that this information will help you to stay on track - to turn effort into results - and to reach your goal.

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    Every change you throw at your body triggers a response. The problem with many diet and exercise programs is that they can accidentally encourage your body to defend fat, shed muscle, increase appetite and even lower its metabolism. The key to fast results is to know exactly which actions will cause your body to adapt by becoming fitter.

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    The law of unintended consequences

    Your body is an amazing feedback system aimed at balance and survival. Humans are at the top of the food chain because they are able to adapt to their environment. Every action produces a reaction. Every change in its environment triggers a survival response. It's important to keep that in mind when you plan your fitness program. If you treat your body as an enemy to be conquered, you'll produce unintended results.

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    Ready to change?

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  • hpsnickers1
    hpsnickers1 Posts: 2,783 Member
    some times you gain muscle from your work outs to...and if you eat to few calories you go into starvation mode I'm to understand at that point your body will store food because it thinks it's starving which leads to weight gain. Dont get discouraged ...I went over calories 3 days last week and was at level one day and below two and gained back 2.4 pounds.. then the following week i did about the same and lost 1.6 so I think sometimes it just flucuates when your not consistent. I don't excersize daily ( wish I did) and my water intake is never the recommended amount. Just keep working at it and you'll get there.

    You cannot gain muscle doing cardio. You have do strength/resistance training. Calorie restriction and cardio cause muscle mass loss and this is what we want to keep. Increasing muscle mass will increase your metabolism and you will have a higher daily calorie burn even during rest, normal activity and sleeping.
  • hpsnickers1
    hpsnickers1 Posts: 2,783 Member
    I think another big thing about weight gain is making sure you are consistent with your excercising. It seems like my weight decreases more when I workout at least 30mins to an hour 4-5 days a week. You have to get your heart rate up high enough to burn calories.

    You burn calories 24/7. I worked out 3-4 days a week and lost weight. You can lose weight without exercise. It just lets you eat more and is great for your healthy. I'm burning calories during my weight lifting sessions yet I don't get my heart rate up. (I only do 2 days of cardio per week). And you don't have to be consistent. The body adjusts to a routine. You have to give it some variety.
  • hpsnickers1
    hpsnickers1 Posts: 2,783 Member
    All I can say is keep doing what you're doing. Your weight can fluctuate daily with no real reason. There are times that I've fluctuated 5-7lbs doing nothing differently. It can be frustrating and deflating at times. One thing I did do is change my nutrient settings to be 40% carbs, 30% protein, and 30% fat. This is the ratio that the Zone diet uses. However, I dont freak out if I'm over on my carbs if I know I'm getting most of them from fruits and veggies.

    Exactly. I'm at 40/35/25 right now (thinking of switching to 40/40/20). Carbs are good for you. It's your body's primary fuel source. It's the kind of carbs you that is important.
  • LuckyLeprechaun
    LuckyLeprechaun Posts: 6,296 Member
    yesterday my scale said 179. Today it says 184. It's NOT true that I gained 5 lbs in a day, so what happened? Other things have a direct effect on the scale. 4 extra cups of water yesterday that you maybe haven't peed out yet are one immediate thing I see (32 ounces of water = 2 lbs). Whether or not you poo'd yet, clothing, humidity changes, etc. can all affect it. the scale is an overall guideline that you're moving in the right direction, but it's going to zig zag around on it's overall downward path.
  • cherilyn221
    cherilyn221 Posts: 62 Member
    I do believe it's water weight honestly after reading everyone's responses here. I was thinking those extra 32 oz of water would flush the too much sodium (which I knew I had) out of my system but I think it's hanging in there. Onward with the fresh determination, valuable information and great support from everyone today.
  • yargls
    yargls Posts: 6 Member
    Let me suggest "The Hacker's Diet".... http://www.fourmilab.ch/hackdiet/www/hackdiet.html (This is a free online book written by John Walker in the 90s, never published)

    He suggest you weigh in everyday at the same time if possible. Seems most MFP folks, get up, pee, strip and step on the scales. That's what I do.

    I have a smart phone (android) and use the following app to track my progress..
    http://www.appbrain.com/app/libra-weight-manager/net.cachapa.libra

    There may be an app for the iphone or PC/Mac that does something similar (the book uses Excel formulas). What's unique about this app (and the diet) is that it tracks your weight over time using a moving average. This is nice because your water weight can vary quite a bit from day to day, but the moving average allows you to see that your weight is still on a downward slope in spite of the daily variations. It can help you deal with the inevitable plateaus and spikes. So long as your weight stays below the trend line, you're still on track as far as your weight loss goals go. I would find a weekly weigh in dangerous to my psyche, I've seen my weight vary up or down a couple of pounds from day to day. Were I to weigh in weekly and that particular day be an up day....eww.

    Good luck!
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