Any advice on how to shake things up?
Lovebears99
Posts: 19 Member
I have struggled with my weight my entire life. The last time i was successful in losing and keeping it off, i followed a low carb Dr. Phils diet and lost 60 pounds. After a few years and difficult circumstances, food again comforted me back up to 232 pounds. In the past year i have taken off 25 pounds, but since the beginning of the year, my weight has not budged at all, nor am i losing inches. I am at a complete standstill. I started logging my cals last week on here, without making any dietary changes just so i could see where i am at. Most days i barely hit 1200. Once adding in exercise i am netting even less. I am pretty sure i need to up my cals, not really sure how to do it, any advice would be greatly appreciated. I have spent my entire life being told, don't eat to much u will end up fat, and now i am going to try to eat more to lose. I think in the back of my mind i am afraid adding more cals is going to up the pounds. The other thing i am contemplating is maybe adding some type of a protein shake, since i seem to struggle eating the cals, maybe that would be beneficial? I have no clue lol. Just looking for a little insight :flowerforyou:
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When you set up your goals here I am assuming that you set your goal to lose 2 lbs a week. Your calorie plan is thusly built to hold back 1,000 calories a day from your basic caloric needs in order to facilitate that loss. I recommend that you try to eat your calories closer to your goal number (minus the additional calories that you get for exercise) to ensure that your body is getting what it needs. Another thing that you can do is to customize your tracker. I have mine tracking fiber and calcium as well. Fiber to ensure that I am eating enough fruits, veges, and whole grains that my body needs but also higher fiber = feeling fuller longer and healthier choices. I also am tracking calcium because I am lactose intolerant and know that when I am not getting enough calcium, I am usually then not getting enough potassium and magnesium. These nutrients are essential for my nervous system and muscular system functions and have a huge effect on water retention (which has a huge effect on the scale).
Plateaus happen to everyone. A shock to the system can sometimes shake it up. Changing the type of exercise that you do, cardio vs. strength training, different muscle groups, swimming instead of walking or spinning, is a good shake up. You can also shake it up by having a higher calorie day or two but be careful...we all know that it isn't always easy to come back from that.
I also have struggled my whole life with this and several years ago had myself on a great run with weight loss, exercise, etc. I let a promotion to a high stress job and a miscarriage carry me into the emotional waste land and chose food and a sedentary lifestyle to be my comforts. But what is past is past. I can't change it, only learn from it. I can't change tomorrow either. The only time I can effect is right now and it takes a certain mindset to do it. Set your mind to choose you...your best this moment. I am so proud of the changes that you have made. Keep going step by step. You will get where you want to go.0 -
I second the above poster about eating close to your goal. I notice that my loss dwindles the farther under my goal cals, on average--I mean I may lose quickly in a day or two, but after that, the plateau arrives. So, yes, the more I eat--and I'll add the controversial caveat--of the "good" foods, i.e., what I consider healthy and optimal to me, which is veggies, fruits, high proteins, low carbs foods, the more consistent my weight loss. Exercise also has to be a part of the equation though.
So yes, as close to goal as possible.0 -
Change your workout completely. If you walk do yoga. If you weight train do body resistance. Also change your food to primarliy veggies and protein with complex carbs. But you should definitely up your caloric intake. I was at a standstill and was going to the gym everyday burning almost 1000 cal. I stopped for a week and did nothing but yoga. I dropped 3 lbs. Now I have started to slow. I'm going to the gym this week and not do any yoga. Maybe some circuit training and that will jumpstart me again.0
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THank you for the replies. Im going to get my calories up and see how it goes As well as try to switch things up. I typically do a lot of cardio, mainly zumba. So there is definitely room to change things!!0
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I completely agree with the above posters and am trying to pull my self out of a plateau as well. I would like to add that there is so much good info on MFP. I read a lot of info on a regular basis to learn how I can improve. The majority of people who have been successful, and not suffered while doing it, were eating way more than 1200 calories a day. I understand the mindset though. It has taken me a long time to rid myself of the "fat free" mentality and believe that those foods got me fat. Good luck and keep an open mind!0
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Get a kitchen scale and measure everything properly for a week before upping your cals. Also, maybe see your dr. and figure out if you have a low thyroid or a hormone issue.0
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I'm new here; just been on this board a couple of weeks, so I don't have the wisdom of some of the other posters. But I've been struggling with my weight most of my life, too. I wonder if you just need to change your eating patterns a bit? Before I was tracking calories with MFP, I was eating very little, but what I was eating was the wrong stuff. I just started eating the Mediterranean way a couple of weeks ago and it has really helped to think not as much about the calories, but the types of food I'm filling up with. I'm trying to make sure that my diet consists mostly of vegetables; meats are used as a "garnishment." I'm staying away from processed foods as much as possible (really hard because my schedule is so hectic!) But I'm discovering that salads really taste good again. And I'm finding that I don't crave the processed foods, but when I'm hungry, I prefer to fill up with a salad. It's really strange for me because I wasn't that crazy for salads before! I don't know if this will be helpful for you but it's just a thought.0
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Don't plateaus SUCK?
There is a lot of good stuff you've got going on: you're tracking, you're aware, you've been here before, and you're ready to make changes. That's all SO important
I don't see you mentioning that you've calculated your resting metabolism (you'll see it as BMR around here a lot - it's what your body needs to maintain critical function, like heart rate and brain functioning) or your total daily energy expended (or TDEE - how much you burn by doing any thing else in your day - working out, walking to the car, cooking, and so on). That might help you figure out where you need to be.
And I totally second a scale. It makes a difference when you measure - I know I was STUNNED at what a "real" portion should be!
Feel free to inbox me if you have questions - I'm happy to share what has worked for me0
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