Can't lose weight on LCHF diet -- Any advice?
dajband
Posts: 6 Member
Hello I want to lose 70 pounds this year to reach an average BMI of 21. I'm at 203 and 5'6".
I have been following a LCHF (Low carb high fat) diet at 1500 calories for three weeks now. A few days I have eaten more than 1500 but kept net carbs below 30. I think only twice I went over 30 net carbs by 1 carb. I eat roughly 90+ g of protein each day and the rest is fat which I try to get by cooking with butter or organic coconut oil. I even incorporated intermittent fasting every few days.
I try to make time for dedicated exercise however if I can't I keep a pedometer and make sure to walk around and move all day to achieve 10000 steps. I've been averaging 7500 steps per weekday. Once a week I make the effort to do 90 minutes straight of heavy lifting. On the weekends I go for long 2 hr hikes at different parks in my area. So far I've lost and gained 1 lb.
Is there anyway I can tweak my diet or fitness to get the scale moving? Should I increase my fitness/steps per day? I am getting frustrated. I enjoy the LCHF diet and don't intend to go back to the horrible way I use to eat. However I just expected a much larger initial weight loss. I am now worried I'm not doing LCHF correctly.
One other thing I just started to add dairy, like cheese and sour cream to my diet. I don't know if that had anything to do with it either.
Please any advice would be appreciated. Cheers.
Thanks
Tasha
I have been following a LCHF (Low carb high fat) diet at 1500 calories for three weeks now. A few days I have eaten more than 1500 but kept net carbs below 30. I think only twice I went over 30 net carbs by 1 carb. I eat roughly 90+ g of protein each day and the rest is fat which I try to get by cooking with butter or organic coconut oil. I even incorporated intermittent fasting every few days.
I try to make time for dedicated exercise however if I can't I keep a pedometer and make sure to walk around and move all day to achieve 10000 steps. I've been averaging 7500 steps per weekday. Once a week I make the effort to do 90 minutes straight of heavy lifting. On the weekends I go for long 2 hr hikes at different parks in my area. So far I've lost and gained 1 lb.
Is there anyway I can tweak my diet or fitness to get the scale moving? Should I increase my fitness/steps per day? I am getting frustrated. I enjoy the LCHF diet and don't intend to go back to the horrible way I use to eat. However I just expected a much larger initial weight loss. I am now worried I'm not doing LCHF correctly.
One other thing I just started to add dairy, like cheese and sour cream to my diet. I don't know if that had anything to do with it either.
Please any advice would be appreciated. Cheers.
Thanks
Tasha
0
Replies
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No one doing a LCHF diet? Please could use advice. Cheers.0
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Hello I want to lose 70 pounds this year to reach an average BMI of 21. I'm at 203 and 5'6".
I have been following a LCHF (Low carb high fat) diet at 1500 calories for three weeks now. A few days I have eaten more than 1500 but kept net carbs below 30. I think only twice I went over 30 net carbs by 1 carb. I eat roughly 90+ g of protein each day and the rest is fat which I try to get by cooking with butter or organic coconut oil. I even incorporated intermittent fasting every few days.
I try to make time for dedicated exercise however if I can't I keep a pedometer and make sure to walk around and move all day to achieve 10000 steps. I've been averaging 7500 steps per weekday. Once a week I make the effort to do 90 minutes straight of heavy lifting. On the weekends I go for long 2 hr hikes at different parks in my area. So far I've lost and gained 1 lb.
Is there anyway I can tweak my diet or fitness to get the scale moving? Should I increase my fitness/steps per day? I am getting frustrated. I enjoy the LCHF diet and don't intend to go back to the horrible way I use to eat. However I just expected a much larger initial weight loss. I am now worried I'm not doing LCHF correctly.
One other thing I just started to add dairy, like cheese and sour cream to my diet. I don't know if that had anything to do with it either.
Please any advice would be appreciated. Cheers.
Thanks
Tasha
Have you just started all the exercise in the last 3 weeks? I held 3 pounds of water whilst upping my training for 3 weeks, and the day I stopped bam! I lost the weight. That was at 130lbs so it was quite a lot of repairing water there for my muscles etc. In fact I lost quicker than anticipated, all the while massivley panicking that my metabolism was screwed.
I would go through all the other questions first though. They will come. its probably your numbers. You don't have to give up food groups or do anything different than get your maths right to succeed here. Use your normal diet, just at a calorie deficit. You're going to have to live a lifetime on it.0 -
I am going to echo the person above with reiterating how important it is that you accurately measure your intake on that particular diet, because you are consuming large (or larger then other people) amounts of calorie dense foods and little mistakes can mount up big there.0
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I weigh everything in grams even the butter and coconut oil according to the calories per gram listed. Even if a food item is listed in the database, I convert them to a calories per 100g measurement to make measuring quicker so that I won't have to do crazy division in my head. I only measure liquiods by volume and the only liquids I ever measure is my heavy cream with coffee. I even take a tbs measuring tool to work to keep track. If I can't weigh it I don't eat it. I am that dedicated. So I'm quite confident my numbers are accurate.
Unless 1500 calories are way too much, I don't know why I'm not losing? With this way of eating I don't get hungry often and can go hours before I'm ravenous. However I just started snacking on individually wrapped cheese sticks during the day thinking maybe my metabolism slow down.
Yes I just started training the last three weeks. I will skip next week to see if that makes a difference. Maybe I should increase my steps per day? I try to aim for 10000. I have a gym but it only has treadmills and normally just walk uphill on them. I can't run cause of my knees. So walking everyday and heavy lifting once a week is all I do. Do I need to increase?
I just don't know what I'm doing wrong!
Cheers,
Tasha0 -
I enjoy the LCHF diet and don't intend to go back to the horrible way I use to eat. However I just expected a much larger initial weight loss.
For me personally, LCHF would be a horrible way to eat. I notice that you said you have gone over on your calories a few days - if you are not eating at a deficit then you will find it hard to lose weight no matter what sort of diet you are eating. I've not seen anyone else on here talking about eating this way but try doing a search for LCHF posts and see what comes up.0 -
I had much success awhile back with low carb. Then when I went back to it I wasn't losing. Turns out, I developed a sensitivity to almonds and 15 almonds was a daily snack for me. When I stopped eating them I started losing again. Maybe try with eliminating a regular food for a bit and see if your results are better!0
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Hormones?
By the by, were you dieting or restricting your eating in any way before starting lchf three weeks ago?0 -
LCHF might not be ideal for you, maybe try tweaking your macros?
And I second the above comments, make sure you're measuring and logging accurately and you could be holding water (for recovery) if your exercise routine is new.0 -
Despite the "calorie in/calorie out" notion, I've always been able to eat MORE with low carb/high fat and still lose, or maintain.
Initially on LCHF you are NOT suppose to calorie restrict. Why are you keeping your calories so low at such a high weight? Especially considering your relatively high activity level?
I'm not one who thinks "eat more" is the answer to every problem, but in this case it might be for you. You're not likely to get much support here because this board is, in general, very antagonistic against the notion of low carb. But if you step out and find one of the many LCHF boards out there you'll find people who are more knowledgeable and supportive. I have seen people who didn't lose due to restricting calories along with carbs, and who didn't move the scale until they ate more.
Take a couple of weeks and keep your carbs low, fat high, and do NOT worry about calories. See if that makes a difference because it has for a lot of people who faced this issue. And if it doesn't work, then just move on to some other way of eating that works better for you.0 -
You may want to search the groups for the low-carb people here. You'll get a greater response from people who are on the same type of eating plan as you are. In the general forums, LCHF is a heresy to most people and you'll get a bunch of negativity. The groups that are specifically low-carb are very friendly and welcoming.
There are several reasons you may not be seeing success on the scale, at this moment. If your TDEE is correct, your intake is correct, and your exercise is also correct, then you are losing weight. It will show up eventually. You may be retaining water due to exercise, hormones, whatever. It may be something else entirely. Just keep calm and keep doing what you're doing.0 -
Are you drinking enough water? LCHF needs way more water than people think. This will help in your recovery from your exercise too. Also, you may be eating too much. No matter what kind of eating plan, if calories are too high, you won't lose weight. Everyone has a calorie limit that they need to hit. For me it is 1600 when I eat to my hunger and I was losing about .75 lbs a week. I have PCOS so that slows the weight loss but I was fine with that. Maybe slowly decrease your calories by 100 a week or so until you start losing.0
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Maybe try a different way of eating? A more natural way perhaps? There's no reason to stick to a fad diet that isn't working. Either way, if you stick to the fad diet or not, you do need a deficit to lose weight. If you are still eating in access over what your body needs, or at maintenance, you wont lose.0
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Maybe try a different way of eating? A more natural way perhaps? There's no reason to stick to a fad diet that isn't working. Either way, if you stick to the fad diet or not, you do need a deficit to lose weight. If you are still eating in access over what your body needs, or at maintenance, you wont lose.
What is a "natural way" of eating? When I low carbed my diet consisted primarily of meat, a plethora of vegetables, diary, some fruit and healthy fats. There are entire indigenous societies that have that kind of ancestral diet.
So, pray tell, what is "natural"?0 -
Hormones?
By the by, were you dieting or restricting your eating in any way before starting lchf three weeks ago?
Before I started I normally would eat one meal a day high in carbs, like Chinese takeout. Sometimes I would eat two a day if I went to lunch with co-workers that day. I rarely snacked or ate sweets. I figured by lowering my carbs and watching my calories I could drop some weight.0 -
Maybe try a different way of eating? A more natural way perhaps? There's no reason to stick to a fad diet that isn't working. Either way, if you stick to the fad diet or not, you do need a deficit to lose weight. If you are still eating in access over what your body needs, or at maintenance, you wont lose.
What is a "natural way" of eating? When I low carbed my diet consisted primarily of meat, a plethora of vegetables, diary, some fruit and healthy fats. There are entire indigenous societies that have that kind of ancestral diet.
So, pray tell, what is "natural"?
Thank you! You beat me to it!
A LCHF diet is natural. Perhaps you are eating too much protein and not enough fat? Where are you carbs coming from? The vast majority should be coming from vegetables.0 -
I'm not familiar with LCHF eating but maybe try balancing your fat and protein a little more will help with your weight loss.0
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Open your diary.0
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I'm following essentially a low carb diet with my net carbs below 30g per day. My carbs come from mixed veggie bags, mushrooms, peppers, onions, as well as, avocado, almonds, eggs, cheese, heavy cream, arugula, coconut milk, and curry (i enjoy makin thai cuisine).0
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I hope that your low carb/high fat diet is based on healthy unprocessed foods...
It's unrealistic to expect to lose all 70 pounds this year, at least in a healthy manner. Your body may not want to even go that low, depending on many factors. I'm the same height and 150 is about right for me. I only have 14 pounds to go and it will likely take me this entire year to lose it and maybe more. It's not a race; there is no finish line.
At your current weight you should be eating a bit more. Yes, more. Undereating leads to more problems later on. Trust me, been there, did it. Go to another site and find out your TDEE. Eat only a little below it, taking into account your exercise.
I don't do "scheduled" exercise, but I make sure that I sit less than before (always room to improve) and my feet are my transportation during the winter. I'm a single parent and own 2 big dogs and maintain a house and cook everything from scratch. So I have a naturally moderately active lifestyle. And I lift some heavy stuff here and there. The food is the main factor, but exercise will make you look and feel better. 90 minutes of lifting... wow, I don't know about that unless you are a professional and I'm not sure the pros do that.... 2 hour hikes sound nice. It isn't rocket science; find stuff you enjoy and do it, but not over-exercising just to see reducing numbers on the scale as fast as possible.
There are so many factors. Is your exercise much more than you were used to before changing your diet? If so, that's your answer right there. Inflammation, increasing muscle (this one's questionable of course), things like that can affect the number on the scale. You did add dairy... I'm wondering why.... On months that I do not eat dairy I lose twice the amount of weight than on months that I eat dairy, even in limited amounts. For me, yes the food choice matters that much.
Food quality matters (many will disagree), and exercise that fits with your current ability, and patience. It's only been 3 weeks! Also, the scale is the worst measure of progress. Find a lifestyle that you love and can stick with permanently (for me, it's ketogenic Paleo with IF-not for everyone, but perfect for me) and get the "I want to weigh x by x date" out of your mind. Tweak little things, ideally one thing at a time and give a month to see results.0 -
Maybe try a different way of eating? A more natural way perhaps? There's no reason to stick to a fad diet that isn't working. Either way, if you stick to the fad diet or not, you do need a deficit to lose weight. If you are still eating in access over what your body needs, or at maintenance, you wont lose.
What is a "natural way" of eating? When I low carbed my diet consisted primarily of meat, a plethora of vegetables, diary, some fruit and healthy fats. There are entire indigenous societies that have that kind of ancestral diet.
So, pray tell, what is "natural"?
You took the words right out of my mouth.0 -
Do you weigh solid foods and measure liquids accurately? otherwise you may be eating 10-50% more than you think you are.0
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This is NOT the place to ask about your diet. You should really find a message board that is more friendly to your diet style. You can see past posts and notice an extremely negative attitude to low carb diets.
My take:
You have started an excercise program that may also add muscle. You may actually still be losing fat but you also might be gaining muscle. The key is not pounds on the scale but inches off the waist, thighs, and neck. You also might want to measure your chest and arms if you are doing weight training. It is possible your diet is still going very well.0 -
I think your fat intake in general is a bit low. Up it more and see how you cope. Also, get in more water. I generally drink 12-15 cups a day, sometimes more than that. You can take a look at my diary to see what I typically eat. Might give you some ideas. I think you're definitely on the right track. Just tweak it a bit and ride it out.
And when the low-carb-naysayers come in here and start in on you, ignore them. They do this to anyone who dares to eat low-carb.....it's rather high-schoolish in behavior.0 -
Are you eating enough calories? When MFP put me at about 1200-1300 calories, I plateaued for weeks, until I raised my calorie goal to 1500. Also, I eat about 100g (no grains, legumes or added sugar, but more carb dense veggies and/or a little more fruit) carbs once or twice a week to keep my body guessing -- then it seems to respond better to 50g of carbs on the other days.
Also, if you're eating any kind of sugar substitute (artificial sweeteners), you are likely shooting yourself in the foot.0 -
This is NOT the place to ask about your diet. You should really find a message board that is more friendly to your diet style. You can see past posts and notice an extremely negative attitude to low carb diets.
My take:
You have started an excercise program that may also add muscle. You may actually still be losing fat but you also might be gaining muscle. The key is not pounds on the scale but inches off the waist, thighs, and neck. You also might want to measure your chest and arms if you are doing weight training. It is possible your diet is still going very well.
No way, you will not gain more than a couple of ounces in muscle in that timeframe in a deficit. Most likely if there is fat loss, it is offset by water retention due to the workouts, though with low carb there usually is less water retention anyway. So that is why I said it is probably a calories in error.0 -
I just read you are lifting for 90 minutes!!!! that is a long time to lift. I've been lifting weights for 25+ years and unless you are on the juice, that type of lifting can have many issues. I would strongly advise you limit your lifting to 45 minutes twice a week and, at most, 15 sets- That is not 15 different excercies.
If you add an excercise componet you have to increase your calories or the body will just turn that muscle into fuel.0 -
Have you tried to figure out your TDEE or is 1500 just a number you picked as a daily goal?
What is the % breakdown of fats/carbs/protein you are using? Fat should be at least 60%, and 70% is more in the area you need to be, then 5% carbs and 25% protein.
I'll also repeat about accurately weighing your food. Don't use cups or spoon measurements for anything but liquids.
Also, the drinking water part can't be said enough.0 -
Use this Calculator http://www.edify.net.au/lchf_macronutrient_calculator.php0
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I set my macros to 60% fat, 30% protein and 10% carbs. Make sure you're getting enough fat and not eating too much protein, which converts to glucose and thereby can spike insulin/stall weight loss. Make sure you're getting half your body weight in ounces of water every day - LCHF really does seem to require more water. And ignore the high school-esque haters - they're ignorant and refuse to understand because it's not THEIR way. Theres several things that could hinder your weight loss besides that and if you're like 70% of the population you're prob vit D deficient. Try taking at least 1000IU daily, preferably liquid format. Studies have shown vit D alone can aid weight loss.
I've been following the above guidelines and have been dropping between 1/2-1 pound a day despite having PCOS and low thyroid. In fact eating LCHF had been the only thing that has ever worked and I've tried everything from vegetarian to doctor overseen 900 calorie/day starvation diets.
The other thing is - watch your exercise. You can get too much of a good thing. After a certain point you're doing more harm than good and possibly risking injury - I should know - I pulled my achilles from overexercising a couple years ago.
For info (free) on LCHF, check out dietdoctor blog - lots of great articles and info. He has one in particular that addresses how to lose weight and what could be stalling you. And check out Gary Taubes' books - either Good Calorie, Bad Calorie or Why We Get Fat - they helped me understand what I was doing wrong previously.0 -
When I started eliminating some of the dairy, cut back on my protein a bit & up'd my fat- I started losing again without starving. I am still tweaking mine. I also try drink half of my body weight in water ozs. I also notice that sugar substitutes stall me I just started back Jan 6th, and I choose not to add nuts as of now.0
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