Lots of Exercising, Healthy Eating, Gaining Weight?!?!
Hi! I'm Kristina. I'm 18, 5'6'' and currently 117 lbs. (When I started MFP I was 135.5, and my lowest weight was 111, and I was like that from July to November.) I've gained 6 pounds since November, and I don't know why. I've been eating just about the same (healthily, about 600-1000 calories per day), and because I've gained weight I've scared myself into exercising more, so I exercise about 1.5 hours- 2 hours per day. My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle, but I sincerely doubt that one can gain 6 pounds of muscle in a month and a half. Help/suggestions/explanations?
0
Replies
-
your calorie allowance is way too low which could be why you are gaining. your body may be in starvation mode as you are not feeding it enough so it will cling onto whatever it can. up your calorie allowance and try to eat a couple of hundred cals below it. you should lose then0
-
Why only 600-1000 calories?0
-
my calorie allowance is 1400, I exercise about 400 cals off a day and eat about 1400-1500 and I have lost 16lbs in 2 months so far. hope this helps0
-
You're starving yourself and your body hates you. there is no way you feel full daily on 600-1000 and working out 2 hours a day. Hell you basically burn that off in 2 hours if you're doing it right.
eat around 1500 and see if it helps. Also what you eat matters.0 -
Hi! I'm Kristina. I'm 18, 5'6'' and currently 117 lbs. (When I started MFP I was 135.5, and my lowest weight was 111, and I was like that from July to November.) I've gained 6 pounds since November, and I don't know why. I've been eating just about the same (healthily, about 600-1000 calories per day), and because I've gained weight I've scared myself into exercising more, so I exercise about 1.5 hours- 2 hours per day. My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle, but I sincerely doubt that one can gain 6 pounds of muscle in a month and a half. Help/suggestions/explanations?
1. You are already on the low side of healthy weight for your height. If you continue to lose more you should set your goals for no more than .5 pounds per week.
2. 1200 calories is the minimum recommendation for a short, sedentary woman for a reason. It's difficult to get enough nutrition in on less than that. You are neither short nor sedentary and you are eating less than my 4-year-old niece. You really need to consider increasing your calories.
3. When you increase your exercise routine your muscles hoard water to help cushion and repair them. You're right in that you aren't building any new muscle (especially not on less than 1000 calories a day) but it may cause a pumped look to your muscles and a gain on the scale. It should be temporary.
4. A lot of other things can cause a small gain like that on the scale. How quickly did it go up? Could be extra sodium, TOM, stress (like the stress you're putting on your body by undereating).
5. How closely are you measuring your portions? It's possible you're not eating as little as you think.0 -
Unless you have a medical reason to be eating so few calories, bump them up. At a minimum you should be consuming 1200/day. Your body can go into starvation mode if you're not eating enough and exercising too much and hold onto any nurtrients and fat you consume to continue life sustaining body functions. Muscle also weighs more than fat. In the end though, if your clothes are still fitting the way they should before you gained the weight back, then don't worry about it.0
-
You're not eating enough.
I know it sounds like a weird concept, but a few months ago I was eating 1,000 - 1,200 calories.
I was stuck at 112 and it would occasionally go up.
I upped my calorie intake to 1,300 - 1,400 calories, and now Im down at 110 and still dropping.
Your mother is wrong though, as you cannot build muscle at a deficiet let alone on that low.
Also do you have a food scale? You should be weighing/measuring everything you put in your mouth.0 -
You're not eating enough.
I know it sounds like a weird concept, but a few months ago I was eating 1,000 - 1,200 calories.
I was stuck at 112 and it would occasionally go up.
I upped my calorie intake to 1,300 - 1,400 calories, and now Im down at 110 and still dropping.
Your mother is wrong though, as you cannot build muscle at a deficiet let alone on that low.
Also do you have a food scale? You should be weighing/measuring everything you put in your mouth.
totally agree. I also weigh out all my food and measure all liquids. I also eat more or less cals than my allowance depending on how much I have exercised. when I have horse ridden I up my intake by a couple of hundred more so that my body doesn't go into starvation mode0 -
Ditto what everyone else said--your body needs food. I'm 5'4" 134lbs, and I maintain on 1640 (without exercise), lose on 1500. Take care of your body!!0
-
Hi! I'm Kristina. I'm 18, 5'6'' and currently 117 lbs. (When I started MFP I was 135.5, and my lowest weight was 111, and I was like that from July to November.) I've gained 6 pounds since November, and I don't know why. I've been eating just about the same (healthily, about 600-1000 calories per day), and because I've gained weight I've scared myself into exercising more, so I exercise about 1.5 hours- 2 hours per day. My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle, but I sincerely doubt that one can gain 6 pounds of muscle in a month and a half. Help/suggestions/explanations?
You're going to hurt yourself, if you haven't already.0 -
you're not building any muscle on that calorie limit, it's WAY too low, so your body is going into starvation mode and it's trying to keep everything you have and turn it into fat and store it, so up your calories to at least 1200 but try to find your BMR and up it to that (mine is 1500 something) and you may gain a couple more pounds at first but then those and the 6 you just gained will all come off0
-
you're not building any muscle on that calorie limit, it's WAY too low, so your body is going into starvation mode and it's trying to keep everything you have and turn it into fat and store it, so up your calories to at least 1200 but try to find your BMR and up it to that (mine is 1500 something) and you may gain a couple more pounds at first but then those and the 6 you just gained will all come off0
-
No. You are not gaining muscle on 1000 calories a day... you can take that one to the bank. If anything... you're losing it by working out like a crazy person and not giving your body any fuel. Stop doing so much cardio. I would estimate your body probably burns atleast 1200 calories AT REST.... so you need to atleast give it that much. Factor in your every day activities, you could eat 1200 calories/day and be at a deficit WITH NO WORKOUT. If you want to work out... you have to eat what you burn to stay at a moderate deficit. If you want to retain your muscle and continue to do cardio you HAVE to do weight training.. and you HAVE to get lots of protein to repair the muscles after a workout.
Trust me... I've been there, done that. Until you understand the SCIENCE of weight loss you will not lose. Check out New Rules of Lifting for Women.... it explains everything in a very easy to understand why and you'll see why everything you're doing right now is wrong. Good luck.0 -
You are already underweight, it is your body's way of trying to catch up.0
-
My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle
....your mother needs some CME
....and maybe a good malpractice lawyer.0 -
Look into intermittent fasting to repair that metabolism.
Also consider how accurate this measurement is. Is this the mean/average measurement of daily weigh-ins over a month or is this just a one-time weight? If it's one time it could just be the perfect storm of constipation and day-before-period gain.
Good luck.0 -
skinny fat, skinny fat, what are they feeding you, skinny fat, skinny fat, it's all your fault.
eat more. derp.
I love Phoebe.....0 -
Also, if you're running for a good portion of those exercise hours I know I gain two pounds immediately from such a long run (it does a number). That would add to the measurement inflation.0
-
skinny fat, skinny fat, what are they feeding you, skinny fat, skinny fat, it's all your fault.
eat more. derp.0 -
My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle
....your mother needs some CME
....and maybe a good malpractice lawyer.
LOL! Love it. Totally agree.0 -
your calorie allowance is way too low which could be why you are gaining. your body may be in starvation mode as you are not feeding it enough so it will cling onto whatever it can. up your calorie allowance and try to eat a couple of hundred cals below it. you should lose then
This is why when people starve to death, they leave extremely obese corpses.
In all seriousness, there's a problem in the equation somewhere. It's usually a problem with underestimating calories and overestimating exercise.0 -
upping your calories may make things slower but easier to maintain after you finish
Some times more calories are what your body needs as it is in starvation mode (and that's fadvice rom a friend who has just qualified as a dr)0 -
your calorie allowance is way too low which could be why you are gaining. your body may be in starvation mode as you are not feeding it enough so it will cling onto whatever it can. up your calorie allowance and try to eat a couple of hundred cals below it. you should lose then
This is why when people starve to death, they leave extremely obese corpses.
In all seriousness, there's a problem in the equation somewhere. It's usually a problem with underestimating calories and overestimating exercise.
I understand calories which is how ive managed to lose 16lbs. what I meant was go up to about 1400 cals but you don't have to eat that many. I eat about 1300 on days when ive not exercised and 1500 on days when I have (though more when ive been horse riding)0 -
Your calories are down, and so is your metabolism, especially with the work out. Either increase the daily intake or look into carb cycling to reset your metabolism.0
-
No. You are not gaining muscle on 1000 calories a day... you can take that one to the bank. If anything... you're losing it by working out like a crazy person and not giving your body any fuel. Stop doing so much cardio. I would estimate your body probably burns atleast 1200 calories AT REST.... so you need to atleast give it that much. Factor in your every day activities, you could eat 1200 calories/day and be at a deficit WITH NO WORKOUT. If you want to work out... you have to eat what you burn to stay at a moderate deficit. If you want to retain your muscle and continue to do cardio you HAVE to do weight training.. and you HAVE to get lots of protein to repair the muscles after a workout.
Trust me... I've been there, done that. Until you understand the SCIENCE of weight loss you will not lose. Check out New Rules of Lifting for Women.... it explains everything in a very easy to understand why and you'll see why everything you're doing right now is wrong. Good luck.
Agreed!0 -
My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle
....your mother needs some CME
....and maybe a good malpractice lawyer.
Most doctors know diddly squat about fitness and nutrition ... Furthermore, not every doctor, knows everything about every part of the body, that's why they have specialties ..0 -
This happened to me too. Turned out I was losing fat, but gaining muscle, ehich of course weighs more than fat0
-
This happened to me too. Turned out I was losing fat, but gaining muscle, ehich of course weighs more than fat
Can't gain muscle through starving oneself. The OP is underweight.0 -
Your body is no doubt in starvation mode. You have got to eat more than 1000 cals a day! Plus, if you're working out, YOU ARE gaining muscle weight! But please, eat more than that and you'll the pounds come off. DO YOUR TDEE and eat at that level. I swear, I promise you that you will lose weight! You've got to put in to get out! Starving your body like you are is making your body think "Oh hey, I need this fat, she's quit feeding me what I need. I will need this fat later." So it hold on to that fat and stores it away. That is starvation mode. You will be fine at eating more cals and will LOSE more WEIGHT and GAIN more muscle as long as you are exercising. Muscle is leaner, so take your measurements to keep track of how much you lose. Don't go by the scale so much!0
-
My mother is a doctor and she said that it was because I'm retaining water and building muscle
....your mother needs some CME
....and maybe a good malpractice lawyer.
Most doctors know diddly squat about fitness and nutrition ... Furthermore, not every doctor, knows everything about every part of the body, that's why they have specialties ..
Well, her mother isn't entirely wrong. She could be gaining muscle from exercising and if she's not drinking enough water, she really could be retaining water weight. ....BUT, your mom should know that if you're eating at 1000 cals a day, you need to bump up the cals. THAT, she should know. Nobody should ever eat below 1200 and eating at 1200 is for basically morbidly obese people. But it's definitely a step up from 10000
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K 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