What am I doing wrong?

I'm not sure what is going on. I'm trying to eat healthy and working my *kitten* off but yet not losing any more weight. What am I doing wrong?

Thanks
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Replies

  • MistressAella
    MistressAella Posts: 99 Member
    That definitely is frustrating! It depends on what you are doing :) Your diary is closed so that will be one thing that will be asked of you. Also what are you doing to create a calorie deficit? Are you eating below your tdee, or doing cardio, or weight lifting or a combination of them?
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    I opened it, you should be able to see it now.
  • AmyRhubarb
    AmyRhubarb Posts: 6,890 Member
    I checked your diary - what are you doing for exercise? I mean I see it logged as Circuit Training, but wondered about specifics. Also wonder how accurate the recorded burn is because MFP is notorious for overestimating.

    That being said, on many days, even if you cut the burn in half, it would appear you're not eating back exercise cals, or not enough anyway. Example - last Friday your intake was 1399 cals, your burn listed at 796 = 603 net cals, pretty low. Even if the burn estimate is high - if we cut it half, and say you burned 398 cals that day, it still leaves you with a net of less than 1200 cals, and that's not good. Another day you have intake of 1218, burn of 802 = 416 cals, which leaves you pretty much out of gas for the day.

    Food is fuel, goal means GOAL, not several hundred cals under, especially when you're set at the bare minimum goal for women. If you can get yourself a HRM to track calorie burn a bit more accurately, that helps, but you need to either eat those burned cals back and get your daily net up to goal, or cut back on the workouts so you don't have such a huge deficit every day.

    Eat too little for too long and you're giving your body a reason to store fat rather than burn it.
  • herblackwings39
    herblackwings39 Posts: 3,930 Member
    I checked your diary - what are you doing for exercise? I mean I see it logged as Circuit Training, but wondered about specifics. Also wonder how accurate the recorded burn is because MFP is notorious for overestimating.

    That being said, on many days, even if you cut the burn in half, it would appear you're not eating back exercise cals, or not enough anyway. Example - last Friday your intake was 1399 cals, your burn listed at 796 = 603 net cals, pretty low. Even if the burn estimate is high - if we cut it half, and say you burned 398 cals that day, it still leaves you with a net of less than 1200 cals, and that's not good. Another day you have intake of 1218, burn of 802 = 416 cals, which leaves you pretty much out of gas for the day.

    Food is fuel, goal means GOAL, not several hundred cals under, especially when you're set at the bare minimum goal for women. If you can get yourself a HRM to track calorie burn a bit more accurately, that helps, but you need to either eat those burned cals back and get your daily net up to goal, or cut back on the workouts so you don't have such a huge deficit every day.

    Eat too little for too long and you're giving your body a reason to store fat rather than burn it.

    This. If you actually are burning that many calories in a work out you really do need to eat them back. MFP already has your deficit figured in.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    I do Jillian Michaels, shed and shred. So you're telling me I need to eat more?
  • csheltra26
    csheltra26 Posts: 272 Member
    I checked your diary - what are you doing for exercise? I mean I see it logged as Circuit Training, but wondered about specifics. Also wonder how accurate the recorded burn is because MFP is notorious for overestimating.

    That being said, on many days, even if you cut the burn in half, it would appear you're not eating back exercise cals, or not enough anyway. Example - last Friday your intake was 1399 cals, your burn listed at 796 = 603 net cals, pretty low. Even if the burn estimate is high - if we cut it half, and say you burned 398 cals that day, it still leaves you with a net of less than 1200 cals, and that's not good. Another day you have intake of 1218, burn of 802 = 416 cals, which leaves you pretty much out of gas for the day.

    Food is fuel, goal means GOAL, not several hundred cals under, especially when you're set at the bare minimum goal for women. If you can get yourself a HRM to track calorie burn a bit more accurately, that helps, but you need to either eat those burned cals back and get your daily net up to goal, or cut back on the workouts so you don't have such a huge deficit every day.

    Eat too little for too long and you're giving your body a reason to store fat rather than burn it.

    This. If you actually are burning that many calories in a work out you really do need to eat them back. MFP already has your deficit figured in.

    This.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    Today I did level 1 of she'd and shred, a mile of intervals on the treadmill, biked for 20 minutes and walked for 2 hours. I thought I wasn't doing enough exercise. ....
  • ropermom
    ropermom Posts: 52 Member
    Are you having dressing on those salads? Pickled(high salt) stuff. Are you measuring everything? I noticed your sodium was high quite a bit-may be retaining some water. Also, I noticed that you eat out pretty often, and when you do that it's never totally accurate with regard to calories, etc.
    You might try eating at home more where you can be absolutely sure, at least until you're at goal. Those last few pounds can be SO hard!!! Hope this helps!:smile:
  • FaerieCae
    FaerieCae Posts: 437 Member
    Good grief, do less exercise. You dont need to beat your body into submission. Focus on an hour a day, with intensity. Dont forget to have rest days.
  • Hi,

    I think they mean in order to have proper nutrients for your body, you need to refuel after your workouts. That is the one thing I have learned. I eat 6 small meals a day.. 200 calories each meal. I try to balance it with a veggie or fruit, protein, and a complex carb. On days I weight train, I eat more because I've burned more. And on weight days, I drink a protein shake afterwards.

    I haven't peeked at your diary, but as long as your meals are balanced then you should start losing weight. If your eating the wrong foods/high calorie and still exercising then you are just maintaining your weight... Does this make sense?

    It look me forever to figure how my body worked with food. Good luck on your journey (:
  • JoanB5
    JoanB5 Posts: 610 Member
    Today I did level 1 of she'd and shred, a mile of intervals on the treadmill, biked for 20 minutes and walked for 2 hours. I thought I wasn't doing enough exercise. ....

    1. I have a heart rate monitor and I don't find that MFP is that far off on the calorie count.
    2. Eat back your exercise calories.
    3. That is like 3 hours of exercise. It is possible to OVER exercise so that your body isn't doing any of it wholeheartedly. 30DS has me toast.

    Pour it out for an hour a day...and there is no need to do more. Your body builds muscle during times of rest, so make sure you are giving it what it needs for a strong workout the next day.
  • marz42
    marz42 Posts: 223 Member
    Today I did level 1 of she'd and shred, a mile of intervals on the treadmill, biked for 20 minutes and walked for 2 hours. I thought I wasn't doing enough exercise. ....

    That's TONS of exercise for one day.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    Oh wow. Ok so I'll slow down on the exercise. I just thought I wasn't doing enough. So exercise less and eat what I burn but better. Wow.
  • Retiredmom72
    Retiredmom72 Posts: 538 Member
    You might want to track your water consumption. If you eat quite a bit of sodium, you might want to up water intake. Good luck.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    More water??? Ok
  • savithny
    savithny Posts: 1,200 Member
    Go do a search on cardio and cortisol. Too much cardio freaks your body out -- its really stressful, because its really unnatural, hormonally speaking.

    And cortisol makes it hard to lose weight, makes it easy to gain weight, and puts that weight right around your middle in the most unhealthy place.
  • AmyRhubarb
    AmyRhubarb Posts: 6,890 Member
    Today I did level 1 of she'd and shred, a mile of intervals on the treadmill, biked for 20 minutes and walked for 2 hours. I thought I wasn't doing enough exercise. ....
    Great article here about over training and under eating: http://www.shapefit.com/overtraining-exercising-too-much.html

    I'm 45 years old, 5'8", and have had my best success eating 1800+ calories a day, working out about an hour or less 5-6 days a week. My body has been happily shedding fat for the past year. :bigsmile:

    More good info here: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/974889-in-place-of-a-road-map-short-n-sweet
  • StrongAndHealthyMommy
    StrongAndHealthyMommy Posts: 1,255 Member
    I checked your diary - what are you doing for exercise? I mean I see it logged as Circuit Training, but wondered about specifics. Also wonder how accurate the recorded burn is because MFP is notorious for overestimating.

    That being said, on many days, even if you cut the burn in half, it would appear you're not eating back exercise cals, or not enough anyway. Example - last Friday your intake was 1399 cals, your burn listed at 796 = 603 net cals, pretty low. Even if the burn estimate is high - if we cut it half, and say you burned 398 cals that day, it still leaves you with a net of less than 1200 cals, and that's not good. Another day you have intake of 1218, burn of 802 = 416 cals, which leaves you pretty much out of gas for the day.

    Food is fuel, goal means GOAL, not several hundred cals under, especially when you're set at the bare minimum goal for women. If you can get yourself a HRM to track calorie burn a bit more accurately, that helps, but you need to either eat those burned cals back and get your daily net up to goal, or cut back on the workouts so you don't have such a huge deficit every day.

    Eat too little for too long and you're giving your body a reason to store fat rather than burn it.

    this
  • OMGeeeHorses
    OMGeeeHorses Posts: 732 Member
    I do a different thing than MFP, its called in place of a road map. I do this so I don't have to eat my calories from exercise back as its going off my TDEE and already has that calculated into my daily food intake. I did this as it made it so much easier to just eat what it gives me for numbers and not worry about the rest

    Also if you are high in sodium, drink lemon water. It will flush your system and not let the sodium make you hold on to it. I did this and was amazed at the 2lb drop from just switching that in.

    :) hope I helped in some way :P

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/975025-in-place-of-a-road-map-short-n-sweet
  • mockchoc
    mockchoc Posts: 6,573 Member
    You aren't eating enough for that type of workout.
  • JoanB5
    JoanB5 Posts: 610 Member
    Personally, In Place of a Road Map helped me understand more of what I was doing and the goal. I use it, but modify it to work with MFP because I need the incentive to workout. So, I set it 200 calories lower than it's stated each day for my daily eating goal, then if I exercise, I get to eat add it back (he counts on you subtracting it if you realize you aren't going to work out that day...I don't like seeing that number goal at all until I've earned it). I'm pacing appropriately throughout the day in case I don't get to work out as planned. I still need that. Maybe someday, I won't. My schedule is just too variable around family obligations to count on any workout for sure...and I don't want to eat like I'm going to, and then not be able to fit it in.
  • koshkasmum
    koshkasmum Posts: 276 Member
    I have looked over a few days of your food diary and I notice a couple of things that could be holding you back.

    First is measurements. Do you measure your food? When eating out particularly guestimates can kill you. I note refence ot 1.5 ounces of barbecue ribs - that is VERY little. Also, you need to apply some thought to calorie counts on the database as some of them are so far off as to be worse than useless (you have a good example: .a quarter of a typical Chinese restaurant plate of chow mein is a heck of a lot more than 22 calories. ) Try checking a few similar items on the database to make sure your selection is in the ballpark. For example, a typical half cup serving of most starchy foods (noodles, pasta, rice, potatoes) is going to run 100 calories or more. So if you ate only enough chow mein noodles to fit neatly in the cupped palm of your hand, it would be at least 100 calories - and that is before you factor in things like the generous amount of oil they cook it in (100 + calories per tablespoon and most Chinese resturants start off a dish for 4 people with 4 tablespoons of oil - then there's meat, sauce, etc.)

    I do not see any references to butter, margarine, oil etc - like in your omelette - Are you leaving them out? Little things like thais can add up enormously. As do sauces and condiments like ketchup, mayo, relishes etc.

    I do not see much that looks like vegetables. Your body needs the nutrients in these, they help fill you up and they help keep the output part of your digestive tract working properly. (If your body is not getting rid of excess water and waste the scale can show 3-5 pounds that is not your body, if you know what I mean.)

    May I suggest that you see a dietitian? They can be a real help when you are a bit over your head on your own

    Good luck and good health.
  • KaraLee69
    KaraLee69 Posts: 57 Member
    Wow! Great information here!!! Thanks for asking the question! And thanks to all of those that answered with great info!
  • hfox9707
    hfox9707 Posts: 74 Member
    Have you tried weight training? You will build more lean muscle therefore burn more fat. However, you may not see much change in weight loss if you gained muscle mass. I would also eat more protein from lean meats, eggs, seeds and nuts: and less grains and dairy. For carbs, focus on veggies and moderate on fruit. Weight training also has other benefits such as better bone mass which we need as women. Btw, check to see how your clothes fit and have someone measure your fat loss. For the cardio workout, try shorter highly intense interval training.

    PS- when you focus on just weight loss, you lose both fat and lean muscle...lessen the cardio and add weights to your workout routine. Eat more protein and healthy fats such as avocados, flax seed oil, virgin coconut oils. This way your insulin levels don't sky rocket causing more stores of fat. Eat your veggies and stop eating processed foods all together. Try to go more paleo or a modified one.

    Hope this helps.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    my clothes don't fit anymore.....lol I've gone from a size 10 to a 6 already. So now I will exercise less, only did my walk today and I will eat more.

    Hope this works.

    Thanks everyone
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    As for weight training, I have hand weights that I use with my Shed and Shred and that I also use on the treadmill when I walk. But I don't do more than that. I'd like to, but the closest gym is like 20 minutes away. Not feasible.
  • Mads1997
    Mads1997 Posts: 1,494 Member
    you are suppose to be eating your exercise calories back, that's how MFP works if you are following it and not some other method.
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    What does that mean eating your exercise calories back?
  • Cat_Lifts
    Cat_Lifts Posts: 174 Member
    What does that mean eating your exercise calories back?

    It means consuming back what you've burned in exercise, typically if you're already at a calorie consumption deficit. Example:

    Your daily net goal to consume is 1800 calories. You workout, burn 300 calories. If you do not eat back those 300 calories you burned, you will only be netting 1500. If you eat back your exercise calories, you can technically be eating 2100 calories for the day, but still netting 1800 because you burned 300.

    Many people will have their own methods of creating a deficit, whether that's:

    Consuming less calories + working out to reach their net goal. (200 less calories eaten + 200 burned at gym = 400 cal deficit)
    Consuming even less calories with no exercise to reach their net goal. (400 less cals consumed + 0 cals burned from gym = 400 cal deficit)
    Not consuming less calories but working out to burn those excess calories. (400 calories burned at gym + 0 less cals consumed = 400 cal deficit) In this case, you would not eat exercise calories back because you are not cutting back on calories you are consuming, you are creating your deficit solely from working out.

    Hope that makes sense, shoot me a PM if not or anyone feel free to correct me if I've made an error in explanation. :)
  • sexymom04
    sexymom04 Posts: 263 Member
    So basically no matter what I have to eat 1200 a day even if I work out.