Gaining not losing??!!
toastersam
Posts: 2
Hi
In the last few weeks I have ramped up my exercise and been good with my diet, only a few splurge days. Yet when I weighed in this morning I was up from last week. I have hypothyroid but just had my meds adjusted over the summer. Has anyone else had this problem? Where you seem to be doing all the right steps but are still not losing any weight?
Thanks for the support!!!
Maureen
In the last few weeks I have ramped up my exercise and been good with my diet, only a few splurge days. Yet when I weighed in this morning I was up from last week. I have hypothyroid but just had my meds adjusted over the summer. Has anyone else had this problem? Where you seem to be doing all the right steps but are still not losing any weight?
Thanks for the support!!!
Maureen
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Replies
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Not sure what to say. I have no medical conditions but menopause is almost at my doorstep. Lately I have hit some kind of plateau. Exercising every day and sticking to my 1200 calories per day. Sometimes I go up a half pound then down again but in the end its still the same. It can only get better from here0
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My grandmother was hypothyroid and skinny. But I didn't know enough to ask her how it affected her or that that could affect weight. SO I'm not going to be much help in that area.
I only looked at a couple of days of your diary, and it looks fine. I did notice it doesn't look like you're tracking sodium or fiber. I would definitely add those as an FYI to just be watchful of.
Salt can make you retain water, and making sure you have enough fiber is important too. BUt the salt issue can play with the scale some. I've noticed that with my weigh-in's and will usually see it resovled in the following weigh-in's.
I've also noticed that it goes in waves....with me anyway. I'll go 2-3-4 weeks losing about 1-2 pounds a week, then it'll go 2-3-4 weeks at about .2-.4 pounds a week or stay the same.
Just know that if you're really doing the right things, the scale will eventually catch up with you.0 -
It's discouraging. The same is happening to me. I haven't been perfect, but I've had a lot of good days (food-wise and exercise-wise), yet my weight has crept up 3 pounds since I joined MFP.0
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Whenever I have a really good work out I seem to retain water. It can stick around for a week but it will balance out. You'll lose the water weight and the weight from your food deficit.
Hang in there! :flowerforyou:0 -
Not sure what to say. I have no medical conditions but menopause is almost at my doorstep. Lately I have hit some kind of plateau. Exercising every day and sticking to my 1200 calories per day. Sometimes I go up a half pound then down again but in the end its still the same. It can only get better from here
Amen Sistah! Been at a plateau for two weeks now--sticking to my 1200 calories a day too and exercising--and my weight went up 3lbs. Not in full blown menopause--maybe perimenopause...but still my body hates me...and so does my scale.
The words of wisdom i have gleaned from this site are that we need to look at the big picture--plateaus come and go.0 -
Hi
In the last few weeks I have ramped up my exercise and been good with my diet, only a few splurge days. Yet when I weighed in this morning I was up from last week. I have hypothyroid but just had my meds adjusted over the summer. Has anyone else had this problem? Where you seem to be doing all the right steps but are still not losing any weight?
Thanks for the support!!!
Maureen
It's so easy to think something is wrong. I used to think it was my insulin resistance, low thyroid, menopause, etc. But once those issues were taken care of I realized there is no magic pill. It is all about calories and how much of a calorie deficit you can handle. Even if you can handle a deep calorie deficit you can't make the fat drop any faster really, the body does it's thing and your water weight fluctuates. It is all about calories and PATIENCE.
What you need to eat for a deficit is relative to your RMR.
To tell everyone eat more is wrong.
To tell everyone to eat less is wrong.
To find the exact amount of calories for you to be in a sustainable calorie deficit is correct. Some people can handle a deeper calorie deficit than others. Some people have emotional eating disorders and it comes into play. Even a small deficit puts your body in a state of flux and everyone is different.
All I can do is share what worked for me. I achieved my goal at age 50 after beating my head against the wall for 15 years. Yeah anyone can do it, but I can tell you that you are up against a lot when you are older and I believe females have some unique issue to face with hormones and such. The sooner you can get a handle on it the better. DO NOT GIVE UP. As I got older and the weight piled on (and I didn't feel I was eating too much!) everyone kept telling me to give up, this is what happens when you get older. I'm small, and I didn't realize how small I was until I lost the weight. Everyone said I had big bones. I looked hefty because I worked out. Once I lost the weight I realized how small I really was and that small people don't need to eat as much as big people. HINT: If you are short you are probably small.
Your body loses weight in chunks, not linear. I have found that you can do everything right and your weight loss seems to plateau but if you are patient and keep exercising and eating at a deficit (however slight) you will lose it, it will suddenly "whoosh". There are so many variables for the scale; water retention, digestion, hormones, allergies, sodium, carbs, water intake, DOMS, inflammation, the list goes on. People mistakenly think they lose or gain weight when they eat more or less because of these fluctuations.
Losing weight requires tremendous patience. You will not lose it when you want it or where you want it. The body does its thing. Some apparent plateaus can last a month or so. You cannot make it happen faster. You must focus on two things; calories and exercise. Nothing else matters. Scales and metrics don't matter. The day in and day out grind of exercise and calories are all that matters. It is not very exciting until things fall into place. You get your victories and you ride one victory to the next.
The scale is a trend tool. The scale is good but put it away and only check once a week and only use it as a trend tool. It will fluctuate, it does not matter. Take front side and back progress pictures at least once a month. You will see differences that the metrics won't tell you and it's that little bit of NSV that will keep you going until the next victory.
To say eat more is wrong.
To say eat less is wrong.
To find the exact calories needed for YOU to be in a healthy sustainable calorie deficit is the right answer. Wait, if you need to adjust by 100 do it, wait, adjust, wait, adjust, wait. The tortoise wins this race.
All that matters is calories. A healthy balanced diet within a calorie budget for a deficit that is right for YOU is all that matters for weight loss. Don't make it complicated.
Also people play mental accounting games with calories just like with finances. Make steps to make sure you are making accurate measurements. Packaged foods can have MORE than they say but not less (they get in trouble if less so they would rather error with MORE).
If you typically intake sodium at a certain rate your body adjusts, but if you make a sudden change then you will see a spike.
Exercise is for making your lean body mass pretty (especially lifting weights) for when the fat is gone. Losing fat with no muscle is ugly and cardio alone will not make you pretty. You cannot out exercise too many calories.What is the exact number of calories for you?
We’ve been trying to figure out an exact NUMBER of calories that everyone should be eating, without recognizing that everyone is slightly different. In truth, the calories aren’t the end game. Your body is. So the EXACT amount of Calories that are right for you is the EXACT amount that will allow you to maintain your ideal bodyweight no matter what some calculator or chart says.
In other words, an online calculator might tell you that you need to eat 2,500 calories
per day to maintain your ideal bodyweight. But the only way to know for sure if this is
the right amount for you is to test it out. If you gain weight or can’t lose weight eating
that much, then you know you need to eat less to lose weight no matter how many
calculators and text books say otherwise.
This doesn’t mean your metabolism is broken, it just means the estimate of your needs
was just a bit off.
-John Barban (The Body Centric Calorie Guide from the Venus Index and Adonis Index Manuals)
The good thing is you don't have to worry about the starvation mode myth if you are fat. Only skinny people have to worry about starvation mode. It does not mean you have the capability to eat at a large calorie deficit if you have emotional eating disorders or other issues going on, but at least you don't have to be afraid of it anymore.
The Theory of Fat Availability:
•There is a set amount of fat that can be released from a fat cell.
•The more fat you have, the more fat can be used as a fuel when dieting.
•The less fat you have, the less fat can be used as a fuel when dieting.
•Towards the end of a transformation, when body fat is extremely low you
may not have enough fat to handle a large caloric deficit anymore.
At the extreme low end, when your body fat cannot ‘keep up’ with the energy deficit
you've imposed on your body, the energy MUST come from SOMEWHERE. This is
when you are at risk of losing lean body mass during dieting (commonly referred to
as ‘starvation mode’). This happens at extremely low levels of body fat, under 6% in
men and 12% in women [Friedl K.E. J Appl Phsiol, 1994].
-Brad Pilon and John Barban (from The Reverse Taper Diet in The Adonis Index and Venus Index manuals)0 -
I AM 51 NOW AND ABOUT TO HIT THE MENOPAUSAL STAGE, AND 1 LOST 3LBS AND THEN 1LB BUT I AM AT A PLATEAU ALSO, I STICK TO A 1200 CALORIE DIET, BUT IT IS SLOW GOING NOW I AM 136, WOULD LIKE TO WEIGH 120...ANY IDEAS?0
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Thanks for all the great support!!! Helpful to hear how everyone faces similar challenges.0
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Without quoting her entire post, please read CaliforniaGirl2012's advice. If you are exercising more, you may need to increase your calories to maintain a reasonable daily deficit. I can tell you from own experience that keeping the daily calorie deficit (number of calories burned minus number of calories consumed) between 500 and 1000 kcal will result in an average of 1-2 lbs of weight loss a week. It's exactly what MFP is set up to do for you. I've had my weight loss plateau going with too low of a deficit but also by going with a deficit that was too high (not eating enough to keep my body fueled properly).
Advice is worth exactly what you pay for it!
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