A challenge for you: Spot the reason I'm not losing weight
Replies
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Did you ever figure that it might just be muscle mass that is keeping you at that weight and maybe you don't need to lose so your body won't?I look like your in shape to me..0
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Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Well then why the hell do we bother giving advice.
Here's the truth:
Fruit is godawful on a low-carb diet, especially if you are trying to do Keto. In fact, fructose is one of the worst things you can consume, even on a carb up, since it refills liver glycogen rather then muscle glycogen... you can consume one piece of fruit about 1 hr before your depletion workout, and thats it...
But since you are a girl, and most likely don't want to "gain muscle" and just lose fat, here are some suggestions.
1) Get a real DEXA scan to see your current BF%. No Jamoke weight scales that underestimate your BF% (When i got my dexa it said 23%, my scale says 13.7% you do the math).
2) Calculate your macros accurately from your DEXA. You can see exactly what you need to eat every day. There are many calculators online on how to do this... but you first must need an accurate BF%.
3) Get a food scale, and measure everything you are taking in. Keep a pad right next to your weight with a pen.
4) keep it Simple. I limit myself to Broccoli, Nuts, Chicken, and my special keto sauce of mayo and siracha.
Once you have a daily routine, its much easier just to get a specific amount. IE: I need to eat 12 oz of chicken today, with 2 containers of broccoli, and 3 servings (72) almonds.
5) Be conservative and use your actual TDEE with a 1.0 scale. Aka you sit on your *kitten* and do nothing for the whole day. <-- Too many people are overestimating their TDEE.
6) Do a 500 cal deficit. Slow and steady wins the race. Going too fast will screw with your leptin. If you want to body hack, do a CKD carb up, eat a +1000 cal one day, which will "trick" your leptin levels to go back to pre-diet levels... but you may want to only do this once you have your low carb diet down.
Btw. Low carb is not under 100g. That's almost what I use to eat normally... Low carb is around 30g or lower, for girls may even go down to 20g. I am hitting around 25g a day.0 -
First of all there other nutrients in the above named fruits that are beneficial to the body such as Potassium and Vitamin C. To not eat them because of the amount of sugar in them and to tell some one to not do it is just wrong. It is like one of my co-workers telling me I am not going to lose any weight because I choose to eat one Lean Cuisine. We cannot tell people what they can and cannot eat. If people want to not give up a particular food such as bananas then substitute it for its less sugary cousin the Plantain. While back I found Plantain chips with sea salt. They had been dehydrated. If anything you can always use the sugary fruits instead brownies, cakes, and cookies for desert.
I'm not telling her what she "can" or "can't" do -- she asked for suggestions, and I gave her some. I told her based on what's worked for me, and numerous books I've read. She can take the advice, or not. No need to flame me. It's a fact that sugar and carbs can kill weight loss for those who have sluggish metabolisms.
Also, you can get potassium, vitamin C and other nutrients from veggies (tomatoes, avocados, etc.). I'm not suggesting she cut out fruits entirely, either. I recommended one serving a day. There's nothing wrong with suggesting that. Remember, there are humans in this world that sustain themselves solely on fat and protein and have no vitamin deficiencies. Our bodies are cool like that.0 -
Drink 3 liters of water a day.
One when you first waken up.
One by the end of lunch.
One by the end of tea.
You will pee lots. But you will lose weight.:happy:0 -
Your sedentary BMR is 1500, adding in exercise you should probably be eating more in line with 1600-1800. You are stalling the engine of your body!
If possible use measuring devices like cups, spoons and food scales!0 -
I'm a big snacker and eat 2-3 times the daily recommended amount of fruit a day. A half pound of berries here, 2 bananas in my smoothie, small watermelon are normal portions of fruit I eat throughout the day. I also eat dinner late at night. I'm also 90 pounds.
According to many on myfitnesspal, that should have kept me from losing 50 pounds...it didn't.
Everyone's bodies are different. However its safe to say that for the general population, meal timing, fruit and when you eat your carbs are not the culprits of weight gain. Nor is it "too many carbs and sugar" that will keep fat. Losing weight is about calorie deficit, it's as simple as that. Try to weed out all of the confusion, sit down and be really honest and diligent about evaluating your energy needs, your food intake, and the appropriate amount of macro's and calories you are getting.
In the perfect world, sure. BUT the main flaw is that your body metabolism adjusts when you cut down your calories. its a huge reason why a lot of dieters fail... cause when they jump back to their normal pre-diet intake, their metabolism is still bogged down from "starvation mode".
Thus, why many people have great success when they have a cheat day once a week, to boost their metabolism, and the most successful usually incorporate a high degree of cardio also to boost metabolism.0 -
Have you had a medical check up. Ten years ago I had a similar problem to you but I was in my fifties. My gym instructors couldn't believe the amount of weight I was actually putting on - not even managing to maintain my weight with diet and exercise.
I gave up my dieting and exercising in frustration as nobody would believe that I wasn't overeating.
It was later discovered that I had a tumour in my pituitary which is in the front of the brain. I've since had it removed but find I still struggle to lose weight as my hormone levels are all over the place.0 -
my trainer has us stay away from all alcohol beverages while on her program....she says that alcohol increases our body to store fat and not lose weight...i would try to stay away from it0
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there's a lot of wrong information in this thread.
I agree... a lot of dieting myths being thrown around... hope she is able to decifer through the good advice from the bad
Edit to the OP: have you tried adding lifting to your exercise? I don't know how close you are to your goal weight, but maybe your body is just asking to take on a shape rather than a size/weight... also you should always record your exercise, other wise how do you know your eating enough?
Agree, heavy lifting is the way to go! Lost all my weight with it, and was able to completely abandon cardio0 -
Drink 3 liters of water a day.
One when you first waken up.
One by the end of lunch.
One by the end of tea.
You will pee lots. But you will lose weight.:happy:
how bout no.0 -
Drink 3 liters of water a day.
One when you first waken up.
One by the end of lunch.
One by the end of tea.
You will pee lots. But you will lose weight.:happy:
how bout no.
I suppose technically you'd lose 3 liters worth of weight once you peed it all out.0 -
Drink 3 liters of water a day.
One when you first waken up.
One by the end of lunch.
One by the end of tea.
You will pee lots. But you will lose weight.:happy:
how bout no.
I suppose technically you'd lose 3 liters worth of weight once you peed it all out.0 -
I'm a big snacker and eat 2-3 times the daily recommended amount of fruit a day. A half pound of berries here, 2 bananas in my smoothie, small watermelon are normal portions of fruit I eat throughout the day. I also eat dinner late at night. I'm also 90 pounds.
According to many on myfitnesspal, that should have kept me from losing 50 pounds...it didn't.
Everyone's bodies are different. However its safe to say that for the general population, meal timing, fruit and when you eat your carbs are not the culprits of weight gain. Nor is it "too many carbs and sugar" that will keep fat. Losing weight is about calorie deficit, it's as simple as that. Try to weed out all of the confusion, sit down and be really honest and diligent about evaluating your energy needs, your food intake, and the appropriate amount of macro's and calories you are getting.
In the perfect world, sure. BUT the main flaw is that your body metabolism adjusts when you cut down your calories. its a huge reason why a lot of dieters fail... cause when they jump back to their normal pre-diet intake, their metabolism is still bogged down from "starvation mode".
Thus, why many people have great success when they have a cheat day once a week, to boost their metabolism, and the most successful usually incorporate a high degree of cardio also to boost metabolism.
High amounts of cardio with a large calorie deficit can backfire, and will not necessarily help metabolism. Lifting and creating lean muscle will definitely do so.0 -
I don't have a solution but I am a 19 year old college student and I've never gone out drinking. So yes, there are those who don't... just saying.0
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my trainer has us stay away from all alcohol beverages while on her program....she says that alcohol increases our body to store fat and not lose weight...i would try to stay away from it
Alcohol merely delays digestion since the liver is busy processing the alcohol. It does not increase fat storage...
The main problem is people use inaccurate methods to calculate alcohol calories, and the drunk munchies which destroy your diet (from personal experience).0 -
I'm a big snacker and eat 2-3 times the daily recommended amount of fruit a day. A half pound of berries here, 2 bananas in my smoothie, small watermelon are normal portions of fruit I eat throughout the day. I also eat dinner late at night. I'm also 90 pounds.
According to many on myfitnesspal, that should have kept me from losing 50 pounds...it didn't.
Everyone's bodies are different. However its safe to say that for the general population, meal timing, fruit and when you eat your carbs are not the culprits of weight gain. Nor is it "too many carbs and sugar" that will keep fat. Losing weight is about calorie deficit, it's as simple as that. Try to weed out all of the confusion, sit down and be really honest and diligent about evaluating your energy needs, your food intake, and the appropriate amount of macro's and calories you are getting.
In the perfect world, sure. BUT the main flaw is that your body metabolism adjusts when you cut down your calories. its a huge reason why a lot of dieters fail... cause when they jump back to their normal pre-diet intake, their metabolism is still bogged down from "starvation mode".
Thus, why many people have great success when they have a cheat day once a week, to boost their metabolism, and the most successful usually incorporate a high degree of cardio also to boost metabolism.
High amounts of cardio with a large calorie deficit can backfire, and will not necessarily help metabolism. Lifting and creating lean muscle will definitely do so.
True, but unless you never lifted in your life (noob gains) you aren't going to increase your lean body mass much. I do a lot of LISS, and yes if your deficit is way too big your metabolism will slow down. Which is why I am big, big believer on the carb up day.0 -
I am 5'1 my calorie goal is 1200 if I eat within this goal and burn 400 a day without eating back my calories I loose 1-3 lbs a week. I currently weigh 144. Some will argue this is too low, but it works for me. ( I am on a medical weight loss program and under a doctor's supervision). If I eat back my calories or don't exercise I maintain. If I go over at all I gain. You are a little taller then me so if you stick with your goal. you will probably continue to maintain. I suggest trying to burn 400 calories a day for one week. Don't eat back your calories. If it doesn't work then try something else. If what you are doing isn't working then you should always try to change something. Good luck. :-)0
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Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Avoid fruit? Are you high?
QFT.
This thread is the poster child of bad information. Not just the anti-fruit message. I feel for the OP.
Sarauk and some others mentioned this above, and it's very well worth repeating, you need to be logging accurately. That doesn't mean "eyeballing" your food or calling the portion that they give you in the cafeteria or at a restaurant a serving. They're often several times more than a serving. You need to learn to weigh all solids and measure all liquids. That includes everything that goes in except water. I'd say that is probably the biggest reason that people fail when they think they should be losing.0 -
my trainer has us stay away from all alcohol beverages while on her program....she says that alcohol increases our body to store fat and not lose weight...i would try to stay away from it
Alcohol merely delays digestion since the liver is busy processing the alcohol. It does not increase fat storage...
The main problem is people use inaccurate methods to calculate alcohol calories, and the drunk munchies which destroy your diet (from personal experience).
Amen. The drunk munchies will kill your calorie count, as will not really knowing exactly how much or what you're drinking. Going out with friends once a week and having a couple beers is probably fine and manageable. Going out with friends once a week and have 5 sugary mixed drinks and 10 shots and 8 beers and nachos and a burger and pizza and maybe dessert is probably not.0 -
Snacking is not going to be the issue...I am the queen of snacking and have lost 184 pounds. Is the calorie range correct for you? How did you work it out? MFP? If so how much did you set it to lose? ie 1 pound or 2 pounds etc? Or are you doing TDEE-20% How much are you trying to lose? Are you weighing and measuring everything? While the foods dont look high in sodium I personally would track sodium as well.
Hold the phone! You lost 184 pounds?!?! That is amazing! Congratulations and good for you and all that jazz. Well done!0 -
.....
The main problem is people use inaccurate methods to calculate alcohol calories, and the drunk munchies which destroy your diet (from personal experience).
This.....0 -
Exercise more:drinker:
yep do this and i promise you will see a difference
If you always do what you have always done, then you will always get what you have always got0 -
One, alcohol is the first thing your body burns. Give it alcohol and a ton of other goodies, it will go through the alcohol first regardless of what else it got.
Two, eat your exercise calories. I bet you're not as energetic the day after you work out, especially if you work out later in the day.
And three, you're simply not going to have an easy time offloading weight after your body fat dips low enough. This dip happens faster to people who work out.0 -
Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Avoid fruit? Are you high?
QFT.
This thread is the poster child of bad information. Not just the anti-fruit message. I feel for the OP.
Sarauk and some others mentioned this above, and it's very well worth repeating, you need to be logging accurately. That doesn't mean "eyeballing" your food or calling the portion that they give you in the cafeteria or at a restaurant a serving. They're often several times more than a serving. You need to learn to weigh all solids and measure all liquids. That includes everything that goes in except water. I'd say that is probably the biggest reason that people fail when they think they should be losing.
Again, the posters here telling me I'm "high" and "crazy" and "wrong" for suggesting she cut out fruit are men who seem to be pretty trim. Once again, for women -- especially women with high BMI -- eliminating sugars (and yes, that means fruit) may be the only way to lose weight. This is the case with me. I'm not suggesting she go her whole life without eating fruit.
Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.0 -
Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Avoid fruit? Are you high?
QFT.
This thread is the poster child of bad information. Not just the anti-fruit message. I feel for the OP.
Sarauk and some others mentioned this above, and it's very well worth repeating, you need to be logging accurately. That doesn't mean "eyeballing" your food or calling the portion that they give you in the cafeteria or at a restaurant a serving. They're often several times more than a serving. You need to learn to weigh all solids and measure all liquids. That includes everything that goes in except water. I'd say that is probably the biggest reason that people fail when they think they should be losing.
Again, the posters here telling me I'm "high" and "crazy" and "wrong" for suggesting she cut out fruit are men who seem to be pretty trim. Once again, for women -- especially women with high BMI -- eliminating sugars (and yes, that means fruit) may be the only way to lose weight. This is the case with me. I'm not suggesting she go her whole life without eating fruit.
Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.
Unless she has a metabolic issue (which has not been confirmed, and also is probably not the case as the OP did not lose weight when she dropped carbs), then there is no reason to cut out fruit...and I am a female saying this (and not a young one).
Oh, and metabolic issues/insulin resistance is a sensitivity to carbs in general, not just sugar.
Making a statement like 'sugar makes you fat' is reductionist and not true for the majority of the population.0 -
Once again, for women -- especially women with high BMI -- eliminating sugars (and yes, that means fruit) may be the only way to lose weight. This is the case with me. I'm not suggesting she go her whole life without eating fruit.Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.
...and the folks that are giving the OP advice that is different than you have lived it much more than two nutrition classes and books. trust me, you're not gonna die if your advice isn't the best... just grin, smile, accept that you gave your .02... and move on.
that said, I'd trust Sara twice as far as she could throw me... and she could chuck me pretty far, I'd wager.0 -
I really love what WWWDOTCR AND BIRDIE989 ARE SAYING.0
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Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Avoid fruit? Are you high?
QFT.
This thread is the poster child of bad information. Not just the anti-fruit message. I feel for the OP.
Sarauk and some others mentioned this above, and it's very well worth repeating, you need to be logging accurately. That doesn't mean "eyeballing" your food or calling the portion that they give you in the cafeteria or at a restaurant a serving. They're often several times more than a serving. You need to learn to weigh all solids and measure all liquids. That includes everything that goes in except water. I'd say that is probably the biggest reason that people fail when they think they should be losing.
Again, the posters here telling me I'm "high" and "crazy" and "wrong" for suggesting she cut out fruit are men who seem to be pretty trim. Once again, for women -- especially women with high BMI -- eliminating sugars (and yes, that means fruit) may be the only way to lose weight. This is the case with me. I'm not suggesting she go her whole life without eating fruit.
Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.
EDITED BECAUSE I SUCK AT TYPING ON MY KINDLE.0 -
Also, you mention fruit. I only eat fruit once a day, and I try to pick a high quality antioxidant fruit like berries or cherries. And I always, always eat it with protein, which slows down the blood sugar rush. If you snack, try to keep it protein and fat, like nuts or jerky. If you do eat fruit, stay away from bananas and papayas and kiwis and pineapple -- the sugary ones. Sugar and refined carbs make us fat, and fruit should only be a luxury for those who are trying to lose weight. Even though it's got antioxidants, it's a weight-loss killer for me. And always eat cheese or Greek yogurt (full fat or at least 2%) when eating your fruit, so that protein goes down with it.
Avoid fruit? Are you high?
QFT.
This thread is the poster child of bad information. Not just the anti-fruit message. I feel for the OP.
Sarauk and some others mentioned this above, and it's very well worth repeating, you need to be logging accurately. That doesn't mean "eyeballing" your food or calling the portion that they give you in the cafeteria or at a restaurant a serving. They're often several times more than a serving. You need to learn to weigh all solids and measure all liquids. That includes everything that goes in except water. I'd say that is probably the biggest reason that people fail when they think they should be losing.
Again, the posters here telling me I'm "high" and "crazy" and "wrong" for suggesting she cut out fruit are men who seem to be pretty trim. Once again, for women -- especially women with high BMI -- eliminating sugars (and yes, that means fruit) may be the only way to lose weight. This is the case with me. I'm not suggesting she go her whole life without eating fruit.
Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.
How does being "trim" (or for that matter someone's gender) make what anyone says about dieting invalid? Do you really want to put all of our respective body compositions at issue? Please listen to what successful people are saying. It comes not only from reading but personal, and additionally in Sarauk's case consulting, experience. Start with accurately counting calories. If that truly doesn't work then there's likely something wrong, but cutting out entire food groups is an extreme approach and certainly not the first or even second step.0 -
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Clearly dieting is not a one-size fits all solution. I'm offering one possible answer. I didn't realize these threads were so confrontational if anyone suggests something that you don't agree with. What happened to support, encouragement and an open-mind? I'm not giving her unhealthy information. I've taken two nutrition classes and read more books than I can even count. Trust me -- she's not going to die if she cuts out fruit for a few months.
This!0
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