SO hard to lose when petite
missystalker
Posts: 7
Anyone other petites out there trying to lose those last ten pounds? So frustrating to try to lose even a pound a week. With a BMR as low as 1300, I have to limit my calorie intake 500 per day if I want to lose only a pound a week. Hungry and constantly exercising with little results. Not very motivating
0
Replies
-
I'm 5'3 and have been working on my last 10 lbs for about a month now and there has been NO movement in the scale!! However, I strength train 5-6 days per week and I am loosing inches. But seriously with only 10 lbs left to lose, you need to be eating way closer to your TDEE so it will be an easier transition to maintenance. Also, with only 10 lbs to go they say people lose on average only .25 - .50 lbs per week. Feel free to add me!0
-
I'm not petite but limiting yourself to 500 cals per day is not the way to do it. You should be aiming to NET at least your BMR.0
-
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.0
-
At 5'1" I went from 136 to 101. The closer I got to my goal, the closer my eating was to TDEE. I was never hungry. Time to learn patience. And at my age, my BMR is 1100.0
-
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.
When you start weights its normal for you to see a jump on the scale. It's just your muscles holding on to water. It will eventually go away. Two months of strength training did more for my body than six months of cardio.0 -
I'm 5'1" and lose weight on 1500 cals/day, in fact this is too few calories for me and I don't plan to ever eat that low.
you do not have to eat just 500 cals/day. Please go to a thread called "in place of a road map" and read it all carefully, then follow the instructions to find out how many calories a day you should eat for slow and steady fat loss.
Additionally, when you're trying to lose the last few lbs, that's when it matters more that you eat enough. People with a lot to lose can get away with having a bigger calorie deficit, but when it's the last few lbs you need to take it very slowly.
I have some more *fat* that I want to lose, but I'm not really trying to get any lighter. I'm trying to reduce my body fat percentage from 22 to maybe 18-20%. I may or may not get lighter. I'm taking the fat loss very slowly, currently eating 1850 cals/day to see if this is maintenance or a very slight deficit. Once I've established that, I'll be eating TDEE -10% for a while, and alternating that with eating a little over maintenance to gain some lean body mass. I'm also focusing on increasing my strength. Focusing on body composition is very important, because it's lowering your body fat percentage that improves how your body looks. If you only have 10lb to lose and you're trying to lose it quickly with too big a deficit, you'll lose lean body mass (i.e. healthy weight) along with the fat.... you'll end up 10lb lighter but looking the same as before.0 -
bump0
-
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.
When you start weights its normal for you to see a jump on the scale. It's just your muscles holding on to water. It will eventually go away. Two months of strength training did more for my body than six months of cardio.
I'll take your word for it and give it a few weeks then. I hope I don't gain 10-15lbs just from switching to weights. I don't wan't heavy muscle, just toning.0 -
I'm the same....trying to loose my last 10 as well and I'm 5'3". First 10 lbs came off well. I am doing 30 day shred right now and I am losing inches, even someone commented that I shouldn't loose too much more or I'll be too skinny and I actually added 0.8lbs that day! I started at 157, at 147 now, trying to get to 135. I must hold my weight well or something, bc no one ever guesses I weigh as much as I do....except me!0
-
At 5'1" I went from 136 to 101. The closer I got to my goal, the closer my eating was to TDEE. I was never hungry. Time to learn patience. And at my age, my BMR is 1100.
^^^^ this is very sound advice. Please listen to it (and read the "road map" thread I mentioned)
the less you have to lose, the more careful you have to be to lose it slowly and sustainably, and to be vigilant that it's just fat you're losing, not lean body mass. Slow and steady really does win this race.0 -
Hi! My name is Theresa and I am just wondering if you drink protein shakes?? They are so good for you and just by adding a shake a day can help burn calories!! When you limit yourself to 500 calories your body is being starved of nutrients so it holds on to every thing you eat!! By adding lean calories to your diet your body will become a fat burning machine!! (I drink Arbonne protein shakes - they are dairy free, gluten free and soy free(I can't have dairy or soy) and they taste great!) www.arbonne.com Feel free to ask any questions! I am a mom of 3 and I have stayed lean just by adding protein to my diet!!0
-
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.
When you start weights its normal for you to see a jump on the scale. It's just your muscles holding on to water. It will eventually go away. Two months of strength training did more for my body than six months of cardio.
I'll take your word for it and give it a few weeks then. I hope I don't gain 10-15lbs just from switching to weights. I don't wan't heavy muscle, just toning.
You're not going to gain muscle at a deficit. A few ounces of newbie gains, but nothing terrible noticeable. The weight you see is just water retention like the other poster said. It went away for me mostly after a few weeks. Now I still get a slight upward fluctuation the day after I lift but it's never much. It's good to realize that your weight is a range anyway. I'm in maintenance at the moment and mine ranges from 129-132.
Understanding the math can help. 5 lbs would be 17500 calories, approximately. If you didn't eat that amount over and above your maintenance calories then you didn't gain fat.0 -
When I got to my last 10 lbs I set MFP to lose .5 lbs per week. Then I found that I had to get a lot more accurate with my logging. I did not stall or have any trouble with the last bit. I'm 5'4" so I still consider myself somewhat petite.0
-
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!0
-
Hi! My name is Theresa and I am just wondering if you drink protein shakes?? They are so good for you and just by adding a shake a day can help burn calories!! When you limit yourself to 500 calories your body is being starved of nutrients so it holds on to every thing you eat!! By adding lean calories to your diet your body will become a fat burning machine!! (I drink Arbonne protein shakes - they are dairy free, gluten free and soy free(I can't have dairy or soy) and they taste great!) www.arbonne.com Feel free to ask any questions! I am a mom of 3 and I have stayed lean just by adding protein to my diet!!
I don't do protein shakes, but I eat 1 or 2 boiled eggs a day to add protein and feel full. Every morning I have a green smoothie (kale, spinach, blueberries and bananas) for breakfast. I love green smoothies and salads because you can pack them full of lots of fiber with very little calories. It also allows me to get a lot of vitamins and nutrients on a low calorie diet.0 -
Maybe your not eating enough? 500 is very low, your body could be in starvation mode. You need to eat to loose. Try increasing your calorie in take (healthy foods) and your water. I am also a petite woman, but lazy in doing and applying my own advice, lol. I have 40lbs to loose0
-
Tell me about it!! At my age, sedentary, 35 pounds overweight and being 5 even, my BMR is 1292!! My TDEE is 1550! Sooooo To use the <20% = 1240 --- and that is only to lose .62 of a pound a week! To lose a pound a week (which at 35 pounds over weight does not seem to much to ask for!) my calorie intake would be 1054!!! Talk about discouraging!!! :grumble: :sad:0
-
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!
this is waaaaaaaaaaay to little food.... seriously, do a search for the "in place of a road map" thread, and read it all carefully, so you can get a good idea of how much you should be eating.
eating 800-1200 calories a day is not enough if your BMR is 1300 cals/day
doing all that exercise so your net ends up aroun 600-700 cals/day is self starvation.
you CAN eat a lot more, and lose the last little bits of stubborn fat. not only can, but SHOULD.0 -
I'm 5'3 and talked to my doctor b/c I hadn't moved on the scale for months. I do Physique 57 Tue and Thur and walk 4.5mph all other days of the week for an hour. Also do PT for my back on walk days. I told him MFP had me set up for 1400/ day and I ate my cals back. He said to go to 1200 cals and don't eat the calories back. It worked for me. The scale has finally budged and I've lost 7 pounds since and it's been about a month and a half. I didn't want to hear to eat less calories but for me it works and unfortunately my metabolism doesn't seems to need 1400 cals.0
-
It is hard.... and it is slow...
Eat more.
You're not doing yourself any favors by limiting your calories so much. I'm petite... 5'1" 125 lbs (and wearing about a sz 2-4). I eat anywhere from 1450-2000 calories per day, and I workout 3-4 hrs per week.
Don't try to lose more than .5 lb per week--there's just no healthy way to do it at our size. When you set your calories so low, your body will try to hang on to them/store them rather than use them for energy. Do it too long and your body will need to start using your muscle to run itself. In the long term that will screw up your metabolism and make it even harder to lose weight or maintain a healthy weight. Take whatever preset calorie/macro goals MFP gave you and throw them out the window... generally speaking I find that the calorie goals are too low, the protein goals are WAY too low, and the carb goals are too high. Someone suggested reading the "in place of a roadmap" thread... that's a good one. An online calculator I like is:
http://www.calorieline.com/tools/tdee
It gives excellent explanations of BMR, TDEE, and REE--it really helped me to understand that stuff.
It can be scary to eat more; you might gain a pound... you might gain 3... until your metabolism heals/resets and then it will start coming off. In the long run this the way to go to be able to reach and maintain your goals.0 -
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!
this is waaaaaaaaaaay to little food.... seriously, do a search for the "in place of a road map" thread, and read it all carefully, so you can get a good idea of how much you should be eating.
eating 800-1200 calories a day is not enough if your BMR is 1300 cals/day
doing all that exercise so your net ends up aroun 600-700 cals/day is self starvation.
you CAN eat a lot more, and lose the last little bits of stubborn fat. not only can, but SHOULD.
I guess I'm being the devil's advocate here (and I also realize I approached this thread with a complaint regarding my routine not working quickly enough), but wouldn't I be avoiding starvation if I'm working out as much as I am? I do 2, sometimes 3 different workouts throughout the day (I'm self-employed so I'm extremely lucky to have the free time) and therefore I'm forcing my muscles to work (telling my body not to burn muscle since I need it). Wouldn't this result in me burning more fat? Also, the foods I eat are very high in nutrients (green smoothies, salads, etc) so it seems I wouldn't be depriving my body. I suppose I came here for the sake of complaining because it seems unfair that a female a few inches taller than me would not have to reduce her calories nearly as much and still get better results. It sucks being short!0 -
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.
When you start weights its normal for you to see a jump on the scale. It's just your muscles holding on to water. It will eventually go away. Two months of strength training did more for my body than six months of cardio.
I'll take your word for it and give it a few weeks then. I hope I don't gain 10-15lbs just from switching to weights. I don't wan't heavy muscle, just toning.
You're not going to gain muscle at a deficit. A few ounces of newbie gains, but nothing terrible noticeable. The weight you see is just water retention like the other poster said. It went away for me mostly after a few weeks. Now I still get a slight upward fluctuation the day after I lift but it's never much. It's good to realize that your weight is a range anyway. I'm in maintenance at the moment and mine ranges from 129-132.
Understanding the math can help. 5 lbs would be 17500 calories, approximately. If you didn't eat that amount over and above your maintenance calories then you didn't gain fat.
I'm not really looking for muscle, just toning up a bit. I'm happy with the way I look now. I had seen the scale very steady for 2 months but when I added the weights, boom went up..Like you said, I guess it's water weight gain in the muscles, but I think since I'm happy with the way I look now, I'll just stick with cardio 4 days a week and maintain like I was doing, since I'm not looking for a lot of muscle gain.0 -
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!
this is waaaaaaaaaaay to little food.... seriously, do a search for the "in place of a road map" thread, and read it all carefully, so you can get a good idea of how much you should be eating.
eating 800-1200 calories a day is not enough if your BMR is 1300 cals/day
doing all that exercise so your net ends up aroun 600-700 cals/day is self starvation.
you CAN eat a lot more, and lose the last little bits of stubborn fat. not only can, but SHOULD.
This.
Netting so low is not healthy. Respect your body. Increase your calories and be patient.0 -
I'm 5'3" and have struggled after losing just 7lb and getting down to 141lb. However, 6 weeks ago I started the IF diet (intermittent fasting) and I'm now starting to lose again. My TDEE is 1770 so for 5 days a week I eat well for that amount and then for 2 days I eat 25% of that (around 445 cals). It's not too bad - I have porridge made with water and oodles of blueberries for breakfast then usually a Quorn meal with some salad for dinner. I'm finding this easier than sticking to a low cal diet every day and being denied little treats and what's best is that it actually works! I've lost 4lbs in 5 weeks which pleases me greatly!0
-
:flowerforyou: perhaps you need to increase your protein amounts for each meal. if you eat enough protein it keeps you fuller longer through out the day!0
-
I hit my target goal weight finally after I switched my exercise routine up, guess my body just got use to my routine. I then switched to weights like a lot suggested and gained 5 lbs in 3 days, eating the same 1600 calories a day I had been and eating clean as usual... ugh...guess it's back to cardio to lose those 5lbs back again.
When you start weights its normal for you to see a jump on the scale. It's just your muscles holding on to water. It will eventually go away. Two months of strength training did more for my body than six months of cardio.
I'll take your word for it and give it a few weeks then. I hope I don't gain 10-15lbs just from switching to weights. I don't wan't heavy muscle, just toning.
Unless you eat a LOT you aren't going to gain heavy muscle. Like they said, it's just water. Big bulky females aren't made by mistake, they have to try and try HARD to look like that. If you put on 15 pounds of muscle I want to hear your secret.0 -
:flowerforyou: also if you increase your calorie intake rather than lower it you can sometimes loose more weight. i am 5'2" & i did that after going to see a dietiacian her suggestion was to increase my caloric intake which i did & started losing again!0
-
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!
this is waaaaaaaaaaay to little food.... seriously, do a search for the "in place of a road map" thread, and read it all carefully, so you can get a good idea of how much you should be eating.
eating 800-1200 calories a day is not enough if your BMR is 1300 cals/day
doing all that exercise so your net ends up aroun 600-700 cals/day is self starvation.
you CAN eat a lot more, and lose the last little bits of stubborn fat. not only can, but SHOULD.
I guess I'm being the devil's advocate here (and I also realize I approached this thread with a complaint regarding my routine not working quickly enough), but wouldn't I be avoiding starvation if I'm working out as much as I am? I do 2, sometimes 3 different workouts throughout the day (I'm self-employed so I'm extremely lucky to have the free time) and therefore I'm forcing my muscles to work (telling my body not to burn muscle since I need it). Wouldn't this result in me burning more fat? Also, the foods I eat are very high in nutrients (green smoothies, salads, etc) so it seems I wouldn't be depriving my body. I suppose I came here for the sake of complaining because it seems unfair that a female a few inches taller than me would not have to reduce her calories nearly as much and still get better results. It sucks being short!
no, because working out burns calories. Netting 800 cals/day or less is starvation. The more you work out on so few calories, the more you are starving yourself, not the less. The more you work out, the more you need to eat. Working out does not make you need to eat less food.
Your body will burn muscle in this situation. Your body can't generate the energy it needs to keep your organs functioning and keep up the levels of activity you're doing from nowhere. If you're not giving it energy (i.e. calories) to run properly from the food you eat, it'll take it from your body. In a prolonged food shortage (whether you're exercising or not) this will come from your muscles as much as, or even more than, your fat reserves, as fat will make you survive longer in a famine, while muscle is a liability, because it uses more energy than fat. Your body burns muscle to make you more energy efficient to survive the famine. When the human body starves, by the time your body fat is starting to run out, your muscles are already so wasted that you look like skin and bones, and at that point you are extremely close to death. Your body will not burn fat while leaving the muscles alone, unless you are feeding it properly to begin with, which you are not. The leaner you get, the more likely your body will burn muscle rather than fat, even if you are doing a bodybuilding level of training. Bodybuilders seek to minimise lean muscle losses by eating properly and cutting fat slowly at a very moderate deficit.
No matter how many micronutrients there are in your shakes, etc, if you're not supplying yourself with enough calories to sustain your body, you are starving yourself. Your body needs *energy* to sustain itself, calories are a unit of energy (just as centimetres are a unit of length) - vitamins do not give you energy. Fat, protein and carbohydrate gives you energy.
Seriously, eat more!0 -
I should have been clearer. When I meant reduce 500 calories, I meant as my total net. I still eat around 800 to 1200 calories a day, but I exercise a lot to ensure that my net ends up being around 600 or 700 so that it remains at a 500 deficit in order to lose a pound a week. I am 5 ft 1 and I am 116 pounds. I train really hard by doing cross fit and marathon training, but the diet portion has been quite difficult. Thanks for all the responses! It is motivating to hear from other petites who have been successful. Feel free to add me as a friend! I need the motivation!
I'm not intending to be rude at all, but I am not quite sure you understand how MFP works? First, Your BMR is the MINIMUM number of calories you should be consuming EVERY DAY, and you should not be taking a deficit from that number, your deficit comes from your TDEE. You should always NET at LEAST at, and ideally somewhat ABOVE, your BMR for optimal nutrition and fat loss.
Second, your calorie goal set by MFP ALREADY has a deficit built-in, so that you would lose weight even if you did NOT exercise. This is why it is SO important to eat your exercise calories back, or at least some of them. You will never get enough nutrients netting below your BMR.
You are eating FAR too little for as much exercise as you are doing. Also, since you are so very close to your goal, 1 pound a week is probably a bit ambitious, 1/2 pound may make a little more sense. Yes, it takes longer, but your body will thank you for it.
Don't EVEN worry about "bulking up," this really is a complete myth for women. We simply do not have the testosterone to develop huge muscles without some type of supplementation. Lifting weights may initially put on some weight, but I guarantee you will actually BE smaller measurement-wise....don't let the number on the scale rule your life!
Anyway, I hope this helped, and I wish you a lot of luck, you're doing amazing! :flowerforyou:0 -
Hello!
I'm 5'1 and can totally relate! I'd also like to add that an extra 10lbs on our frames looks like 50lb! It's crazy and hard to lose, I'm working on the 1200calorie thing without logging in my fruit/veggies.
Also trying to be patient and not so hard on myself, which is also difficult, but I don't want to lose quickly just to gain it all back the next week
Any shorties add me! x0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions