Two weeks of strict diet/excercise and no results!?!
samanthaannee2014
Posts: 20 Member
Before joining mfp I have been dieting and doing 40 minutes of cardio / strength training 5-6 days a week. I'm drinking the 8 glasses of water a day and did my two week weigh in and absolutely no change!! It is so frustrating! Has this happened to anyone else? Is this normal? Will my body ever stop retaining water?!??
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Replies
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Samantha,
Welcome. Two weeks is nothing. You have to give it time.
Find out what your calorie limit is to lose the amount of weight you want to lose. With 40 pounds to lose, I would suggest that 1-1.5 pounds a week might be healthy and sustainable.
Weigh all your solids and measure your liquids. Log every single thing you put in your mouth. Read packages and use that food scale (measure in grams) to ensure that you are making accurate entries.
Since you exercise, you will want to eat a portion of those calories back. If you use MFP estimations, I suggest eating only about 60-70% back, since MFP estimations are WAY overestimated. If you use a heart rate monitor, calorie counts are usually more accurate.
You also need to be patient. Weight loss is not linear. Think of losing weight as making lifestyle changes that will sustain you for the rest of your life.0 -
Samantha,
SLLRunner is completely right. You have to give it more time. Healthy weight and diet changes are like running a marathon. You get very little instant gratification. Keep at it! I lost 40 lbs the first time I did this. I'm starting again at 0 trying to lose more here on myfitnesspal. I only will weight myself every 5 weeks. I like to do that because then I don't obsess on the number but rather how I feel and how my clothes fit. Also, I chose 5 weeks because that's what the myfitnesspal tells you "if every day were like today..." at the end of your daily food diary so I can see if it is accurate!
Keep at it and good luck!0 -
If you want to love water weight, the most efficient way is to stop eating white carbs such as bread, rice, pasta and potatoes. It is super hard but that's how I started losinf weight. Between 800g and 2 kg per weeks. :bigsmile:0
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If you want to love water weight, the most efficient way is to stop eating white carbs such as bread, rice, pasta and potatoes. It is super hard but that's how I started losinf weight. Between 800g and 2 kg per weeks. :bigsmile:
I don't think it matters whether one eats bread, pasta, potatoes - as long as the calorie deficit is there.
No need to make this more complicated than it actually is.0 -
If you want to love water weight, the most efficient way is to stop eating white carbs such as bread, rice, pasta and potatoes. It is super hard but that's how I started losinf weight. Between 800g and 2 kg per weeks. :bigsmile:0
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Never mind. Deleting this post. Good luck!0
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:flowerforyou:0
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Yeah, it's very easy to just tell people "calorie in vs. calorie out" because? because it's science...However, human bodies are so complicated and figuring out that right deficit takes time and continous experiements...When hormones are calling the shot, it makes it harder to figure out how much one really need to eat to get the right number...after years of trying different kinds of numbers, I am still at loss. But I guess not seeing result works sort of like motivation in my case as it keeps me going...it sucks but think of it as going uphill...if you don't push, you will go backward...0
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Oh yeah, my doctor did tell me to cut out all white carbs (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, etc.)
I don't want to be overly dramatic but anyone who tells you to cut out entire groups of foods is just parroting bad advice. Think about it for a second - billions of people in the world eat rice multiple times a day and they're not overweight.
Cutting out the evil "white foods" was how I started my journey into restricted eating to disordered eating to an eating disorder. The weight I've lost here is all about calories in vs. calories out.0 -
Yeah, it's very easy to just tell people "calorie in vs. calorie out" because? because it's science...However, human bodies are so complicated and figuring out that right deficit takes time and continous experiements...When hormones are calling the shot, it makes it harder to figure out how much one really need to eat to get the right number...after years of trying different kinds of numbers, I am still at loss. But I guess not seeing result works sort of like motivation in my case as it keeps me going...it sucks but think of it as going uphill...if you don't push, you will go backward...
Thank you for saying that. I took my post down because I can't handle people being mean about it right now. It's nice to know I'm not the only one who has dealt with this. :flowerforyou:0 -
Oh yeah, my doctor did tell me to cut out all white carbs (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, etc.)
Yea... your doctor is telling you to follow a fad instead of actual science. Which is scary.0 -
Water weight is just water weight. What you want to lose is fat. It takes patience. It takes consistency. It takes dedication (logging accurately, measuring, weighing). But stick with it and the results will come.
I eat carbs every day, including the dreaded "white" ones.0 -
:happy:0
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Have you had a day or two out of routine? Maybe did a different workout? Ate more calories one day?
If your body becomes use to what your doing, most likely, you won't see results. Confuse your body a little bit.
Good Luck!!0 -
Oh yeah, my doctor did tell me to cut out all white carbs (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, etc.)
Yea... your doctor is telling you to follow a fad instead of actual science. Which is scary.
Most doctors have very little training/experience in the field of nutrition. If you want professional guidance, talk to a nutritionist.0 -
Oh yeah, my doctor did tell me to cut out all white carbs (bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, etc.)
Yea... your doctor is telling you to follow a fad instead of actual science. Which is scary.
That's exactly why I don't post often or bother with friends on this site. People come here for support and motivation and instead they get meanness from people hiding behind the anonymity of the Internet. I don't believe in "one size fits all" approaches. Everybody is different. My doctor gave that advice to ME for ME. I'm going to believe the guy with the medical degree and years of experience rather than an anonymous poster on a weight loss site.
I'm always surprised at what people think is mean. My doctor made me read The China Study and tried to make me a vegan because he thinks that it is the healthiest diet in the world I told him to shove it and proceeded to lose almost 30 pounds in three months by doing it my way.
Most doctors, especially GPs, are not nutrition experts.0 -
Yeah, it's very easy to just tell people "calorie in vs. calorie out" because? because it's science...However, human bodies are so complicated and figuring out that right deficit takes time and continous experiements...When hormones are calling the shot, it makes it harder to figure out how much one really need to eat to get the right number...after years of trying different kinds of numbers, I am still at loss. But I guess not seeing result works sort of like motivation in my case as it keeps me going...it sucks but think of it as going uphill...if you don't push, you will go backward...
Thank you for saying that. I took my post down because I can't handle people being mean about it right now. It's nice to know I'm not the only one who has dealt with this. :flowerforyou:0 -
:happy:
Most doctors receive very little training in nutrition. It is barely mentioned in the medical school curriculum, and most doctors send their patients to a nutritionist when issues of weight loss or special diets come up. It is entirely possible that your doctor has specific training (either formal or self-directed) regarding nutrition. However, it is not uncommon for doctors to make blanket unfounded comments regarding nutrition.0 -
Be Happy with "No Change". I actually GAINED several pounds in the beginning. Talk about discouraging! Eat right and start exercising and GAIN! But finally on day 41 the scales started moving. It just takes time for your body to realize you mean business and this isn't just another "Exercise and Eat Right for 2 weeks" Fad. Something else I'm not sure of is I read where if you are Vitamin D deficit you will not lose. I started taking 6000 mg of Vitamin D3 10 days ago and now the scales is starting to move. Not sure of the connection. I don't drink milk and I haven't been outside alot. When I am this summer, I'll cut back on dosage. You can take too much.0
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Yeah, it's very easy to just tell people "calorie in vs. calorie out" because? because it's science...However, human bodies are so complicated and figuring out that right deficit takes time and continous experiements...When hormones are calling the shot, it makes it harder to figure out how much one really need to eat to get the right number...after years of trying different kinds of numbers, I am still at loss. But I guess not seeing result works sort of like motivation in my case as it keeps me going...it sucks but think of it as going uphill...if you don't push, you will go backward...
Thank you for saying that. I took my post down because I can't handle people being mean about it right now. It's nice to know I'm not the only one who has dealt with this. :flowerforyou:
I don't know her story but as far as I see, I dont think she meant any mean post in this particular thread but just generally speaking...I could be wrong...
I have been here a little bit more often than before recently and start noticing several threads almost daily where people ask question (frequently asked questios that type) and answers were not always very ...pleasant to hear. As little time as i spent here, I have seen quite a few thread where the OP just decided to leave at the end...I guess we all have touchy spots and some just rub the wrong way...but still...when people ask why they are not losing thinking they are doing everything they can, "you are lying to yourself" might be the last thing they(we) want to hear...I guess that's what's going on here...0 -
Don't listen to the people who say low carb is a fad.
They can't wrap their mind around the fact that some people are more sensitive to carb intake than others.
They think if everyone ate 1200 calories of sugar and that's all, then those people would lose weight.
They can't seem to understand that one person's genetic makeup and reactions might be totally different to another person's.
And they refuse to accept decades of medical evidence and RESULTS to prove it.
One other thing I want to suggest is that if you are doing cardio and weight resistant training 5-6 a week, you may be over-doing it. That much stress on your body can actually work against your weight loss. And/or you could also be losing inches of fat but replacing it with muscle, which is more dense and thus heavier than fat. Do your clothes fit the same on your body as they did 2 weeks ago?0 -
Take your measurements. The scale does nothing but measure your relationship with gravity. I spent two months with the scale not moving but I was smaller by 2 sizes. 2 weeks isn't enough time to really judge results and you may need to make some adjustments to your nutrition, ie good vs bad carbs, lean protein & fresh veggies & fruit. Hang in there! Oh, and lifting weights at first can make you retain water but keep it up & it will pay off in the long run! :flowerforyou:0
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http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/819055-setting-your-calorie-and-macro-targets
If you aren't already using one, get and use a food scale. Weigh all solids. Measuring cups/spoons are not accurate:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVjWPclrWVY
Neither is guessing:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1270280-food-weighing-scale-miracles
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1080242-a-guide-to-get-you-started-on-your-path-to-sexypants
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1235566-so-you-re-new-here
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/872212-you-re-probably-eating-more-than-you-think
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1234699-logging-accurately-step-by-step-guide0 -
Your diary is private - make sure you are logging honestly and accurately and weighing and measuring your foods. Don't get discouraged, this takes time and patience. If you don't have a food scale pick one up, it doesn't need to be fancy, I have just a cheapie I got a Walmart for about $10 but make sure it weighs in ounces and grams and that you can "tare" it.
Eat a healthy well balanced diet and be consistent and it will all fall into place, your profile says your goal to lose is 40 lbs which really isn't that much. Do what you can maintain - if your cals are too low and you don't think you can sustain it, change your weekly goal to a lower number (ie: 1 lb per week vs 2 lbs per week).
Keep track of your exercise and establish good habits. It takes time to figure out what works for you. Good luck. :flowerforyou:0 -
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Oh my goodness thank you so much for all of the great feedback!! (Minus that little argument)
I am slowly seeing the scales move now ( what a relief, I'm doing something right!! )
I pretty much made this topic out of desperation, It's extremely discouraging eating clean and jogging up flights and flights of stairs with no results.. Two weeks in and I felt like I was going to have thunder thighs forever! ( yes I'm dramatic but I haven't had chocolate in close to three weeks ) The general consensus I've gotten IF I am really keeping my diet healthy and mixing cardio with strength training is that every body reacts differently to sudden change of lifestyle... Hope that is a fair assumption... I just really thought you would see the biggest weight drops in the first few weeks?0 -
Thank you for the encouragement!! I'm going to keep going for once I'm dedicated to this and mfp is making this so easy!
Is there any way you can track your muscle gain vs fat loss?0
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