1ooo daily calories/60 minute exercises and no weight loss
GTS53
Posts: 12
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
0
Replies
-
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
How long have you been doing it? What type of exercise?0 -
With that big of a deficit your body is starving and will hold onto as many calories as it can! You will eventually lose weight with that program (impossible not to eventually) but if you up your calories to around 1500 you will lose more, and maintain muscle (which will help you lose even more and maintain a higher metabolism. Try upping your calories for 1500 for 6 weeks. You may initially gain a few lbs, but once your body realizes that you are no longer starving it will stop saving every calorie it can and you will start to lose weight. Also, make sure you are strength training in addition to cardio.0
-
what also will matter with your rate of loss is your current weight and your goal weight, the smaller you are to begin with and the lower weight loss goal, the longer it can take (ex: 50 pounds can take less time or even the same amount of time to lose as 5 pounds)0
-
Eat more food.0
-
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
Are you very short, and already quite slim? 1000 calories is almost nothing. Especially if that's your gross intake, then your adding exercise.
Nevermind the weight loss, you should probably be eating more for your health.0 -
You aren't starving yourself...but you are under eating which causes messed up hormones, loss of lean body mass, a slowed metabolism, and plateaus after a prolonged period of time ("prolonged" vvaries from person to person).
It didn't sound like you are eating back exercise calories? If you aren't, start now. I suggest you calculate your BMR and TDEE and eat at a reasonable deficit from there (20% if you have more than 50 pounds to lose, 15% 20-50 pounds, 10% less than 20 pounds).0 -
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
Um why?
Your NET intake is possibly zero .... this means all of the nutrients your brain, heart, lungs, kidneys needed have come from fat stores AND existing muscle mass.
Figure out your BMR ..... calories needed if you were in a coma. You should be netting at least this number.... netting means eat exercise calories back.
http://www.fitnessfrog.com/calculators/bmr-calculator.html
The reason I say "possibly" .... calorie burns can be over-stated by MFP & many machines. A lot of factors go into calulating calorie burns .... some of which MFP & machine CAN'T possibly know. Calorie burn calculations are tricky at best.0 -
Hi there! I am NOT a dietitian or a personal trainer...but I am a Phys. Ed and Health Ed. teacher and a woman who has struggled with her weight (up and down) for years, mostly due to poor choices
With that intro, my thoughts are that you aren't eating enough calories to sustain your body's BMR (basal metabolic rate) and you are expelling a lot of additional energy and your body thinks it's starving so it is clinging to all 1000 calories you are consuming.
Try to eat every 2.5-3.5 hours (personalize it) making smart food choices (like limiting refined sugars and starchy carbs) increase your calorie intake to 1200.
Just a thought! Hope it helps if you decide to give it a shot
Question for you: How long have you been maintaining the 1000 daily calories/60 minute exercise regimen?0 -
Hi there! I am NOT a dietitian or a personal trainer...but I am a Phys. Ed and Health Ed. teacher and a woman who has struggled with her weight (up and down) for years, mostly due to poor choices
With that intro, my thoughts are that you aren't eating enough calories to sustain your body's BMR (basal metabolic rate) and you are expelling a lot of additional energy and your body thinks it's starving so it is clinging to all 1000 calories you are consuming.
Try to eat every 2.5-3.5 hours (personalize it) making smart food choices (like limiting refined sugars and starchy carbs) increase your calorie intake to 1200.
Just a thought! Hope it helps if you decide to give it a shot
Question for you: How long have you been maintaining the 1000 daily calories/60 minute exercise regimen?0 -
Hi there! I am NOT a dietitian or a personal trainer...but I am a Phys. Ed and Health Ed. teacher and a woman who has struggled with her weight (up and down) for years, mostly due to poor choices
With that intro, my thoughts are that you aren't eating enough calories to sustain your body's BMR (basal metabolic rate) and you are expelling a lot of additional energy and your body thinks it's starving so it is clinging to all 1000 calories you are consuming.
Try to eat every 2.5-3.5 hours (personalize it) making smart food choices (like limiting refined sugars and starchy carbs) increase your calorie intake to 1200.
Just a thought! Hope it helps if you decide to give it a shot
Question for you: How long have you been maintaining the 1000 daily calories/60 minute exercise regimen?
I can answer this: 2 reasons. First, your body will start to realize it gets food regularly, so it won't hold onto fat stores as much for self-preservation. And second, you burn a little extra calories everytime you eat (for digestion). Something I just learned myself...so if you eat more often, you burn more calories.0 -
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
Um why?
Your NET intake is possibly zero .... this means all of the nutrients your brain, heart, lungs, kidneys needed have come from fat stores AND existing muscle mass.
Figure out your BMR ..... calories needed if you were in a coma. You should be netting at least this number.... netting means eat exercise calories back.
http://www.fitnessfrog.com/calculators/bmr-calculator.html
The reason I say "possibly" .... calorie burns can be over-stated by MFP & many machines. A lot of factors go into calulating calorie burns .... some of which MFP & machine CAN'T possibly know. Calorie burn calculations are tricky at best.
^^ THIS. No other responses necessary. You must eat! I eat 2200 a day. Look at my ticker and pictures.0 -
I have been following a 1000 calorie food intake diet and exercising for 60 or more minutes a day of exercise and hardly losing some weight. Can anyone tell me why?
That strategy is doomed to failure. Your body just gets fuel efficient to save itself; you get more miles to the gallon. It's going to try to save you by slowing down your metabolic rate so that you burn less calories doing everything. At some point you'll burn out, binge and order will be restored. Slow and steady wins the race. Don't mess with Mother Nature (she ain't havin' it!).0 -
It would be helpful if you could make your diary public so we could see better what you're eating and how much, and what sort of exercise you do each day. And I would agree, 1000 a day is likely too low unless you are a very tiny person. Under-eating can actually stall weight loss, especially coupled with too much exercise. Food is fuel!0
-
Eat more, your starving0
-
Agree with the pp's. You aren't eating nearly enough. Calculate your TDEE and your BMR and make sure you stay above your BMR. I wasn't doing this either and it was screwing me up too.0
-
becaus eu a re in starvation mode
1000 is w ay to few calories
how much do u weigh?????0 -
Hi there! I am NOT a dietitian or a personal trainer...but I am a Phys. Ed and Health Ed. teacher and a woman who has struggled with her weight (up and down) for years, mostly due to poor choices
With that intro, my thoughts are that you aren't eating enough calories to sustain your body's BMR (basal metabolic rate) and you are expelling a lot of additional energy and your body thinks it's starving so it is clinging to all 1000 calories you are consuming.
Try to eat every 2.5-3.5 hours (personalize it) making smart food choices (like limiting refined sugars and starchy carbs) increase your calorie intake to 1200.
Just a thought! Hope it helps if you decide to give it a shot
Question for you: How long have you been maintaining the 1000 daily calories/60 minute exercise regimen?
I can answer this: 2 reasons. First, your body will start to realize it gets food regularly, so it won't hold onto fat stores as much for self-preservation. And second, you burn a little extra calories everytime you eat (for digestion). Something I just learned myself...so if you eat more often, you burn more calories.0 -
Hi there! I am NOT a dietitian or a personal trainer...but I am a Phys. Ed and Health Ed. teacher and a woman who has struggled with her weight (up and down) for years, mostly due to poor choices
With that intro, my thoughts are that you aren't eating enough calories to sustain your body's BMR (basal metabolic rate) and you are expelling a lot of additional energy and your body thinks it's starving so it is clinging to all 1000 calories you are consuming.
Try to eat every 2.5-3.5 hours (personalize it) making smart food choices (like limiting refined sugars and starchy carbs) increase your calorie intake to 1200.
Just a thought! Hope it helps if you decide to give it a shot
Question for you: How long have you been maintaining the 1000 daily calories/60 minute exercise regimen?
First, your body will start to realize it gets food regularly, so it won't hold onto fat stores as much for self-preservation.0 -
Try increasing your calories to offset the workouts (just a little like 200 a day or so). If you eat too few calories your body will think it's starving and it will store fat (I'm not a Dr. but my nutritionist advised me of this)0
-
You should eat more0
-
Eat more. When you first join this site, it can be confusing, because there is not really a lot of up front direction. That's why the forums are so helpful, there is so much knowledge and insight being shared. Once I started reading into it all, I realised I wasn't eating anywhere near enough calories, which explained my almost two month plateau. So I started eating 2000 cals a day, which freaked me out at first... but I just lost 2kgs (almost 5 lbs?) in two weeks. So it's made a believer out of me!0
-
You may want to stick to at least 1200 calories a day, under that your body tends to hang onto everything.0
-
altogether now....YOU NEED TO EAT MORE!!!!!0
-
You are not eating enough--increase your calories by at least 600 a day and see what happens you may need to go up to 1700 or 1800 daily--when you dont eat enough yor body keeps everything and you wont loose---good luck it will come off!!!0
-
Eat more!
You must be sluggish all the time.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K 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
- 421 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
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions