What am I doing wrong?
Replies
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What I'm doing right now is BMR set to sedentary and I'm only logging workouts. My BMR at sedentary on MFP is the same number as my RMR: 1340. I then add my exercise calories, using the MFP database figures. I usually burn 300-500 calories/per workout according to those figures. I have MFP set to lose .5 lbs a week and it calculates my 'goal' accordingly; I'm usually 300-400 calories under my 'goal' for the day.
I ordered a Fitbit Flex but it hasn't been released yet, so I don't have a shipping date for it.
Then you're really not eating back your exercise calories if you still have that deficit at the end of the day. Have you tried calorie cycling? 300 less one day - 300 more the next. I try to average mine out over the week as some days I'm not as good as I should be
You're right, I'm not eating my exercise calories back. How could that be causing me to gain weight, though? I don't have an abnormally slow metabolism; the RD said it was right where it should be for a woman my age and size.0 -
You're right, I'm not eating my exercise calories back. How could that be causing me to gain weight, though? I don't have an abnormally slow metabolism; the RD said it was right where it should be for a woman my age and size.
I have no idea - if you're not giving your body enough fuel to function, maybe it's hanging on to what's there? Wouldn't hurt to give it a try? Give it at least 4 weeks to see if there's a change. It's not something you'd be able to tell in a few days.
Believe me, I'm no expert! But having put back on 9 of the 14 lbs I had lost last summer, this is what's working for me now. 10 lbs since September. That's just over 1lb a month - very slow but at least it's happening0 -
Then how is it possible to gain weight if you're eating under your TDEE? Your miscalculating your caloric intake then.
And the vicious cycle continues. I'm not miscalculating it. I measure everything on a food scale. Unless my scale is lying to me, I don't see how I could possibly be miscalculating it.
Basically here's what happens...I tell people what the situation is and one of the following happens:
1.) I'm accused of lying about my food intake
2.) I'm accused of misrepresenting my activity level (dunno how you can misrepresent sedentary)
3.) I'm told that I possibly have a condition I've already been tested for and don't have (hypothyroidism)
So then the person I'm speaking to goes to one of the other options on the list...and so it cycles....then they finally say "Well you must be doing SOMETHING wrong..."
That's a very distinct possibility.
However, I work out. I don't sit there and read a book on the elliptical or play around on a recumbent bike. I get my heart rate up over 150. I sweat. I lift heavy weights. My trainer will tell you I'm not a slouch at the gym. I do this 5 days a week.
I measure/weigh and log everything that passes my lips. Everything.
I net under my RMR.
I'm not lying and it's incredibly frustrating to be told that I am.0 -
I thought I knew the "rules", but every day I question my nutrition knowledge. I just got back from Europe so I was eating full fat milk, cheese and cream as well as tons of fatty pastries and charcuterie. Since we were walking every day as well as riding bikes I actually LOST two lbs. The weight loss made me realize how sedetary my desk job is and how important it is for me to make time for the gym every day!
That and it should make you realize the human body runs better when it gets fat. Low fat in general is problematic.0 -
Then how is it possible to gain weight if you're eating under your TDEE? Your miscalculating your caloric intake then.
And the vicious cycle continues. I'm not miscalculating it. I measure everything on a food scale. Unless my scale is lying to me, I don't see how I could possibly be miscalculating it.
Basically here's what happens...I tell people what the situation is and one of the following happens:
1.) I'm accused of lying about my food intake
2.) I'm accused of misrepresenting my activity level (dunno how you can misrepresent sedentary)
3.) I'm told that I possibly have a condition I've already been tested for and don't have (hypothyroidism)
So then the person I'm speaking to goes to one of the other options on the list...and so it cycles....then they finally say "Well you must be doing SOMETHING wrong..."
That's a very distinct possibility.
However, I work out. I don't sit there and read a book on the elliptical or play around on a recumbent bike. I get my heart rate up over 150. I sweat. I lift heavy weights. My trainer will tell you I'm not a slouch at the gym. I do this 5 days a week.
I measure/weigh and log everything that passes my lips. Everything.
I net under my RMR.
I'm not lying and it's incredibly frustrating to be told that I am.
I am sorry you are having such a difficult time. Increase your calories till you find the highest amount you can eat and not gain weight. Eat at that maintenance level for a while. Drop the exercise down to three days a week and give your body some rest. Don't net under RMR, that is likely to make the problem worse. Don't necessarily think of it as "starvation mode" think of it as underfeeding causing you to unconsciously decrease your non-exercise activity thermogenesis.
If I had to take a guess, at least one thing if not the synergy of your entire program is telling your body this is a crisis situation.0 -
Have you looked at what your TDEE is? Try eating 20% less your TDEE
That's just it, I have no idea what it is. Various calculators have it differing by 500 calories with the same inputs.
I'm netting under my RMR and gaining.
I just have no idea what to do and I keep getting bounced around with different vague advice and referred to various websites and calculators which have only confused me more. I need someone to give it to me straight and pretend I don't know a THING about any of this.
Give us your height, your weight, gender, age and activity level.0 -
Give us your height, your weight, gender, age and activity level.
5'6"
126
Female
37
Desk job, mostly sedentary on weekdays but I hit the gym hard 5x a week.
On weekends I'm running errands, cooking, doing laundry, volunteering, etc. Nothing horribly strenuous but I'm not on my butt all day either.0 -
Give us your height, your weight, gender, age and activity level.
5'6"
126
Female
37
Desk job, mostly sedentary on weekdays but I hit the gym hard 5x a week.
On weekends I'm running errands, cooking, doing laundry, volunteering, etc. Nothing horribly strenuous but I'm not on my butt all day either.0 -
Give us your height, your weight, gender, age and activity level.
5'6"
126
Female
37
Desk job, mostly sedentary on weekdays but I hit the gym hard 5x a week.
On weekends I'm running errands, cooking, doing laundry, volunteering, etc. Nothing horribly strenuous but I'm not on my butt all day either.
Yeah, now I'm going to doubly say switch to maintenance for a while. Maybe assess what your goals actually are. Are you actually looking to lose more weight, or are you looking for a change in body composition? Have you actually had your body fat percentage calculated?0 -
Give us your height, your weight, gender, age and activity level.
5'6"
126
Female
37
Desk job, mostly sedentary on weekdays but I hit the gym hard 5x a week.
On weekends I'm running errands, cooking, doing laundry, volunteering, etc. Nothing horribly strenuous but I'm not on my butt all day either.
You are eating WAY too little. You should NEVER net under your BMR or RMR -- you are not fueling your body for living, let alone working out hard 5 days a week, and your body is probably freaking out a little.
Here is the range of calories you should consume every day, based on this website (http://scoobysworkshop.com/accurate-calorie-calculator/) and the information you gave above:
1583 (bare minimum) - 1762
If you ate that much, you would lose weight. End of story. Eat enough to give your body what it needs to actually "hit the gym hard", otherwise you're doing far more harm to your body than good. Stop netting under your RMR or BMR.
Side note: you also do not need to lose weight -- 126 for your height/weight/gender/age is fabulous.0 -
Ding ding! Yes, you're already at a healthy weight...perhaps even a little towards the lower end of what is considered healthy for your height/age.0
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I just have no idea what to do and I keep getting bounced around with different vague advice and referred to various websites and calculators which have only confused me more. I need someone to give it to me straight and pretend I don't know a THING about any of this.
Basic premise you already know.
You must eat less than what you burn daily (TDEE). At least on avg. End of story.
If you eat a whole lot less than what you burn, your body will adjust, besides the fact you have great chance of burning off muscle mass then, which now requires you to eat even less.
If you slow your metabolism down, going lower rarely works for long, besides just burning off more muscle.
Stress from diet, from exercise, from food allergies, from life, from lack of sleep - all affect hormones and will affect fat and weight loss. You balance out the stresses so it's not too much to lose weight. Control what you can and reduce the stress there, which may allow more stress in other things without effecting you negatively.
It's how you estimate both sides of that equation - eating and burning.
MFP has the eating down, as long as you log correctly everything. Everything.
Spend 2 weeks actually weighing your food if you've never discovered how far off your measurements may be. Calories is per gram right, which is weight. So weighing is more accurate than volume - cups, tablespoons, ect.
Now you need to get the other side of the equation down - burning daily on avg. That's the tough one without being part of a study being hooked up to expensive equipment. So totally estimates on this side. And because of that stress aspect, better to be on the high side first.
The FitBit's and BodyMedia's can do that great - if your daily activity is what they measure well, and they start with actual foundation that matches you.
They use your gender, age, weight, height to calculate BMR - FitBit something close to Mifflin and Harris BMR formula's, BodyMedia Harris BMR formula.
BMR, what your body would like to burn if you slept deep all day long. Since this is literally energy supplied to all the cells, including fat cells, unless we had little perpetual motion machines in our body, this can only slow down so much if you don't take that energy in. Then the body starts slowing down other functions of higher metabolism, skin/hair/nail growth, repair, immune system, ect. Then body activity during the day is slowed down to leave enough for required BMR functions, fidgeting, getting up, moving, ect. Then your performance slows down in exercise so not burning as much there, but that happens automatically too as muscle is not repaired that is torn down.
Those devices use a BMR figure that is inflated when you are overweight. They also balance that out somewhat by using the BMR figure for any time you are not moving, which is not really true. Awake but resting burns more, called RMR, but they don't use this (BodyMedia possible for some). They use BMR for all non-moving time.
BodyMedia at least tries to adjust that estimated BMR by measuring body heat at night with that little heat-flux sensor. Works well for some, not well at all for others.
That base BMR figure can also be estimated much better using a formula that uses bodyfat%, because the energy required to spend on fat and non-fat mass is pretty consistent across genders and age, so only weight and BF needed - Katch BMR.
And Katch BMR for many that are overweight is easily 200-500 below the Harris BMR those devices are using. So they have you burning at an inflated value, despite the fact the under-estimate awake non-moving times.
This issue also applies if you use a TDEE calculator that uses non-Katch BMR and your choice of activity levels.
You may be giving yourself an estimate 200-400 over a better BMR estimate and reality.
And since TDEE in those tables is a multiple of BMR, you just got an really inflated TDEE.
Take a deficit, and you likely in reality have no real deficit in place, because of course your TDEE is much lower than that.
But, even in that worse case scenario, you stay there for a month with many measurements and weight (eating more and exercise allows your body to make improvements that are usually weight gain, which can balance fat loss) - and if you see no movement at all in inches or weight, you drop a couple hundred calories. And you gave yourself a mini-reset.
Whereas if you start to low and metabolism lowers, you get the same effect, you are eating at TDEE. But lower in this state, and body that is already stressed just lowers more to match. Maybe a week or 2 of loss, then nothing. Lower again? Failure again.
Need to unstress the body with no diet, eat at maintenance, and hopefully sooner than later it'll feel like allowing you to create a deficit without slowing down.
Hence the suggestions above to reset.
And take reasonable deficit.
And eat enough protein.
And do strength training.
All things to retain muscle mass, which is what is the main burner of your metabolism, and your daily burn.
I'm going to suggest this of course, to get best estimate of BF% outside a valid test, uses best estimate of BMR, get better estimated of TDEE (be honest), and give reasonable deficit based on activity type and time, and give good macro recommendation. But even there, you can have enough stresses in life that is too much, and have to eat more than suggested. Or it may end up being over-estimated, in which case you'll need to eat less after a while.
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/813720-spreadsheet-bmr-tdee-deficit-macro-calcs-hrm-zones
You may also have a metabolism that is way under what is expected and normal. Thyroid problems, or endurance cardio can do that. But as many have discovered, over is just as likely as under.
And if you are trying to lose weight when there isn't much to lose - be prepared for your body to fight it.
If you want body recomp, you ain't going to get any muscle built by under-eating either, body has nothing left to use.0 -
Maybe you could start putting money aside for a heart rate monitor?
Don't need to set money aside for it, I can buy one today. I'd like some recommendations. I googled around on them over the weekend but couldn't find one that was consistently highly rated.
Forget HRM, can't use that for all day estimate of calorie burn.
Formula's for HRM's are only valid for steady-state aerobic exercise - anything below exercise isn't aerobic level exercise.
Neither is lifting or intervals steady-state nor aerobic, invalid there too.0 -
I net under my RMR.
You must net under your RMR by a decent amount. Prior post said you do NOT eat back your exercise calories. and your MFP goal is your tested RMR. What your body would like to burn if resting all day long.
You have messed up your metabolism, plain and simple.
Your RMR can only go down so far for your lean body mass, then other daily activity starts slowing down.
Your RMR may be right on for your age, weight, height - but how does it compare to your LBM, or BF% using Cunningham RMR formula?
You could be well below what it should be measured at.
Also, you may easily be compensating for your exercise calorie burn by burning way less rest of the day. So you burn off 500 extra calories on just exercise, but then you slow down rest of the day by NOT burning 500 calories - net gain of nothing! Might as well have not done the exercise.
And when you did eat more and gain weight, how much in how long a time span?
You do realize that any fast weight you lost when you started was water weight, and you'll gain that back as soon as you go to maintenance, right?
Any fast gain cannot be fat, it is water. Usually proving the point you are undereating because your glucose stores were so depleted they finally topped off.
You realize you seem to be indicating that you are right now eating at TDEE, meaning the amount you eat maintains your weight for the amount of activity you do.
Fine.
Prove it once and for all. It'll take 2 weeks.
Eat 250 calories daily for 2 weeks. 250 x 14 = 3500 excess calories = 1 lb of fat if no other improvements take place.
So eating 250 extra calories should only cause 1 lb of gain in 2 weeks. Reread that.
Now go test it. If you gain more, it's water weight, and you are undereating. Your metabolism is messed up, and your glucose stores are mainly depleted, and you are probably risking muscle loss all the time.
Easy test - 2 weeks.0 -
I would suggest to eat more. Just try it for a few weeks. High Cortisol levels will make you gain weight too. If you honestly feel that you are doing everything right then go back to the doctor. When I was eating 1200 calories it worked for a long time but then it stopped..my weight was bouncing all around eating small amounts of calories. (mostly going up/gain) When I upped my calories then I started losing.0
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why did you choosse sedentary if you work out 5 days a week??0
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Thank you everyone for your suggestions. I have decided to eat at maintenance for the next month and seriously up my exercise again. Fingers crossed that this will be the solution to get me back into the losing game.
Make sure your maintenance includes the seriously upped exercise!0 -
You may not be doing anything wrong. Go to your Dr. and get some blood work done your body may be telling you something.0
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why did you choosse sedentary if you work out 5 days a week??
Because I log my exercise and it nets out from my overall calories for the day.0 -
You may not be doing anything wrong. Go to your Dr. and get some blood work done your body may be telling you something.
I already did, twice in 2012. They ran all sorts of tests looking for all sorts of things. I was told that my thyroid function was "low normal" and my LFTs were elevated but I don't have hepatitis.
In one case the doctor threw her hands up and said "I don't know what to tell you. Try eating less." The other, the doctor outright accused me of lying about my activity levels and my food journals.0 -
Are you insulin resistant? Maybe you should check into it.
Last time I had bloodwork done everything came back normal. I don't know how IR would show up on a full metabolic panel, but there was nothing there that was abnormal.
"normal" isn't always normal in a good way. A fasting blood sugar over 85 can be an indicator of insulin resistance. Doctors don't always tell their patience about insulin resistance, they usually wait until someone is pre-diabetic, or full blown dianetic to tell them to do something.0 -
Are you insulin resistant? Maybe you should check into it.
Last time I had bloodwork done everything came back normal. I don't know how IR would show up on a full metabolic panel, but there was nothing there that was abnormal.
"normal" isn't always normal in a good way. A fasting blood sugar over 85 can be an indicator of insulin resistance. Doctors don't always tell their patience about insulin resistance, they usually wait until someone is pre-diabetic, or full blown dianetic to tell them to do something.
The doctor did not order a fasting blood glucose test. They tested my blood glucose along with lots of other things within 2-3 hours of me eating, and it came in at 80.0 -
Are you insulin resistant? Maybe you should check into it.
Last time I had bloodwork done everything came back normal. I don't know how IR would show up on a full metabolic panel, but there was nothing there that was abnormal.
"normal" isn't always normal in a good way. A fasting blood sugar over 85 can be an indicator of insulin resistance. Doctors don't always tell their patience about insulin resistance, they usually wait until someone is pre-diabetic, or full blown dianetic to tell them to do something.
The doctor did not order a fasting blood glucose test. They tested my blood glucose along with lots of other things within 2-3 hours of me eating, and it came in at 80.
Yeah, a fasting tests is the best indicator. Too bad they don't make that the standard. Mine would be in the 80's like yours. But my fasting was higher, near 100.0 -
Have your thyroid checked.0
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I have heard of "low normal" thyroid and people have gone to an Endocrynologist (not sure of spell..thyroid doctor) and they put them on medicine for it..may want to check with thyroid doctor.0
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Most likely it is the type of food you eat. Maybe your taken in to much bad carbs. Get a carb counter and stay at 15 to 20 carbs a day. If that don't work try no carbs long enough to reset your metabolism. Good luck ( I know the flustration0
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Have your thyroid checked.
I did...twice.0 -
I have heard of "low normal" thyroid and people have gone to an Endocrynologist (not sure of spell..thyroid doctor) and they put them on medicine for it..may want to check with thyroid doctor.
I can't find an endocrinologist in Dallas who will see me without a formal diagnosis of some metabolic disorder, which I don't have.
If anyone knows of an endocrinologist who will see me, that would be great. I'll call them immediately.0 -
Aren't you answering your own question all the time? Stop netting under your rmr! It can do you no good. It may mess up your weight loss plans, and it definitely is not healthy.
So eat a lot more, and go do some weight training (and of course, eat back your exercise to sustain your exercise). If you only have a few pounds to lose, your deficit should be small, and it will take a while. You may also consider going for muscle gain entirely instead of weight loss.0 -
Go here:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/819055-setting-your-calorie-and-macro-targets
Since you are lifting, don't just pay attention to the calorie stuff, set your macros by this too. If you don't eat the macros properly, you are wasting that lifting. I'm not sure why your doctors aren't just telling you that your weight is fine, focus on body composition if you want to make some changes.
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/CalRequire.html is probably a calculator you would like.0
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