Excersising daily but losing no weight
lottieee55
Posts: 7
Hey guys,
I've been going to the gym everyday for at least an hour since last year and I try to eat as healthy as possible but I'm just not seeing any results. I've changed my workout regime round and tried all sorts of different workouts but nothing is working. The only thing I have heard is that I may be over excersising and not consuming enough calories to keep my body going?
Any help / advice would be great, thanks
I've been going to the gym everyday for at least an hour since last year and I try to eat as healthy as possible but I'm just not seeing any results. I've changed my workout regime round and tried all sorts of different workouts but nothing is working. The only thing I have heard is that I may be over excersising and not consuming enough calories to keep my body going?
Any help / advice would be great, thanks
0
Replies
-
without being able to see your diary it is hard to tell if food is the issue, or if exercise is the issue. I could give my best guestimate, that that is all it would be.0
-
Open your diary so we can peek?0
-
It could be the intensity of the work outs and what you are eating... could you give us an example of a day and week of what you eat, drink and do at the gym?0
-
Weight loss is all about diet, calories in vs calories out.
It doesn't matter how much you exercise if you aren't in a calorie deficit.0 -
since you've been working out for a year, I'm guessing you could do some higher intensity stuff. check out dailyhiit.com....or read about HIIT. you can get an excellent, fat burning workout in under 15 minutes. but, you're working very hard during that time. Also, HIIT should only be performed 3x per week. give your body enough time to rest and recover. it will help.
but, really, if you haven't lost anything in a year, then there's probably an issue with your nutrition (which you have hidden). you might want to visit with a doctor or nutritionist...someone you're comfortable sharing your diary with.0 -
Weight loss is all about diet, calories in vs calories out.
It doesn't matter how much you exercise if you aren't in a calorie deficit.
^This. OP if you aren't counting calories yet can I suggest you log a normal day and see how many calories you're eating? That would be a great start ti find out what's going on.0 -
DIET is the most important thing ..... exercise "helps" ... but is not necessary for weight loss. Exercise should burn some calories yes, but more importantly it should "shape" they way your body looks, and should help you keep lean muscle mass while losing fat (provided your calorie deficit is not too large). A really large calorie deficit promotes muscle loss.
So .... without knowing the calories in vs. the calories out .... it's hard to say.0 -
Sorry kind of new to fitness pal so didnt realise you couldn't see, have made it public, however I haven't used the diary in a while!:)0
-
PP was right about HIIT. HIIT got me over my weight slump, your body gets used to your routines after a while so you quit seeing results. Weight loss is 70% diet 30% exercise, I had to readjust my calories recently.0
-
Sorry kind of new to fitness pal so didnt realise you couldn't see, have made it public, however I haven't used the diary in a while!:)
[/quote]
There is your problem...If you do not keep track of exactly how much and what you eat, you cannot complain about not losing weight....Guestimating leads to eating bigger portions and more than you think...
Start logging and come back in six weeks......:flowerforyou:0 -
Sorry kind of new to fitness pal so didnt realise you couldn't see, have made it public, however I haven't used the diary in a while!:)
Are your May calories accurate? 651 total consumed on May 17. 717 total on May 18. 830 total on May 19. If these are accurate numbers and you're still eating that low then you are severely undereating. 1200 is the minimum for a sedentary woman and you aren't sedentary.0 -
exercise is good, but calorie deficit is how you lose weight. You have to eat enough for nutrition, but not too much. Exercise can help you burn some calories, and will help change how your body looks...but your food intake is where weight loss happens.0
-
Thank you! How often would you recommended HIIT though?:)0
-
Weight loss is all about diet, calories in vs calories out.
It doesn't matter how much you exercise if you aren't in a calorie deficit.
Agree-I lost all my weight without doing any exercise at all. It's all about the food0 -
Thank you! How often would you recommended HIIT though?:)
HIIT is best done on non-consecutive days, or every other day. You would do best to alternate high and medium/low intensity days. I would say do HIIT no more than 3x a week.0 -
You know what they say... lose weight in the kitchen, get fit in the gym.0
-
You can't exercise away a bad diet. You have to log everything. It is about deficit and what you intake varies per person. Since you are active you probably should be eating closer to 1600-1800. And how much do you even weight? what is your height? It isn't about the number on the scale. Most of those charts are a load of rubbish.0
-
Are you trying to tone up or lose weight? Weight loss will stall out naturally once you reach a low enough weight. You will hit your "set point" and weight loss will become damned near impossible...and kind of unhealthy. That certainly doesn't mean you can't tone up or be healthier in your habits, it just means that if you're already at a normal weight it may not be a good idea to focus on weight loss as a primary goal. (Which makes sense if you think about it.) What is your BMI currently?
More on set point: "In adult individuals body weight is maintained at a relatively stable level for long periods. The set-point theory suggests that body weight is regulated at a predetermined, or preferred, level by a feedback control mechanism. Information from the periphery is carried by an affector to a central controller located in the hypothalamus. The controller integrates and transduces the information into an effector signal that modulates food intake or energy expenditure to correct any deviations in body weight from set-point. Evidence for involvement of various factors and physiological systems in the control of food intake and regulation of body weight and fat are reviewed within the context of a control model. Current working hypotheses include roles for nutrients, dietary composition and organoleptic properties, hormones, neural pathways, various brain nuclei, and many neurotransmitters in the regulation of food intake. It is concluded that regulation of body weight in relation to one specific parameter related to energy balance is unrealistic. It seems appropriate to assume that the level at which body weight and body fat content are maintained represents the equilibria achieved by regulation of many parameters."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22538450 -
When I hit a plateau, I tried Leangains.com
Yes, now that works.0 -
Exercise builds lean muscle which is denser than fat. It's not hard to lose fat, gain muscle and not change weight. The best way to tell if this is happening if if your body dimensions are changing. Are you physically getting thinner? If so, you might have nothing to worry about.0
-
Weight loss is all about diet, calories in vs calories out.
It doesn't matter how much you exercise if you aren't in a calorie deficit.
Agree-I lost all my weight without doing any exercise at all. It's all about the food0 -
I found myself talking to a personaltrainer about a year back, and this was the very subject. Now I don't know whether it is true or not, but this is what she claimed. She said she is often approached by young women working-out and trying to loose weight but not succeding. However whilst talking she often notices that they are drinking a protein-shake or munching away on a protein-bar. And this is the very issue for most of them. If you are just working out to loose weight, get fit and not gearing up for a big sports or actively trying to gain muscle weight, Young women particularily should not take protein supplements. All they do is bind water and make weight loss next to impossible. Instead a healthy diet is the best. Where you keep a diary and make sure you get your daily intake of protein (no more) if you are worried you don't get enough. The protein sources should be natural, like meat, fish, poultry and dairy.
If you are taking protein supplements it might be worth trying a couple of weeks without them.0 -
Thank you! How often would you recommended HIIT though?:)
Adding HIIT at this point is pointless if you aren't eating enough. I'm losing weight and eating 1450 a day, you're eating HALF that. Your body is holding onto fat because it's starving.
Eat more. Then lose weight.0 -
I found myself talking to a personaltrainer about a year back, and this was the very subject. Now I don't know whether it is true or not, but this is what she claimed. She said she is often approached by young women working-out and trying to loose weight but not succeding. However whilst talking she often notices that they are drinking a protein-shake or munching away on a protein-bar. And this is the very issue for most of them. If you are just working out to loose weight, get fit and not gearing up for a big sports or actively trying to gain muscle weight, Young women particularily should not take protein supplements. All they do is bind water and make weight loss next to impossible. Instead a healthy diet is the best. Where you keep a diary and make sure you get your daily intake of protein (no more) if you are worried you don't get enough. The protein sources should be natural, like meat, fish, poultry and dairy.
If you are taking protein supplements it might be worth trying a couple of weeks without them.
Utter nonsense....Do not believe anything elst this "trainer" tells you.....:huh: Protein shakes consist of proteins, a little carbs and a little fat - it "binds with water" and get digested - calories in other words.... Where did this trainer get this mumbo jumbo from????0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.5K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 430 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
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions