Impossible to not gain your weight back ?!

I use to weigh 145 and now I weigh 120. I am 5'6.5. I have weighed between 145-150 throughout all of high school and first year University. Over the past year I have lost about 25-30 pounds and I think I look much better. However, I think my 145 pound weight is the weight that my body is "suppose" to be at. At that weight, I still ate very healthy as we are a healthy family. And I found it very easy to maintain that weight. To lose all the weight I had to workout tons and eat less calories than most people here have to. So, if I eat more "normal" again (like 1800-1900 cals a day), will I eventually gain all the weight back again? Do we all have a "set" weight?

Replies

  • caracrawford1
    caracrawford1 Posts: 657 Member
    What you're referring to is set point theory--the idea that your body is comfortable at a certain weight and will fight to stay there. I'm not one hundred percent sure that I personally subscribe to that--although I will say that when I regained weight I had lost my body went back up to its original weight and it was quite easy to maintain there--if only because I was eating whatever I chose with caution thrown out the window with the exception of working out a lot (which I mistakenly thought was my saving grace).
    If you have a larger frame, and you don't feel well at a lower weight or it requires restriction below your caloric needs then I would say you need to be at a higher weight that will be more sustainable for you.
    I do think that a part of weight is genetics--if you look around at peoples families you will notice that they generally have similar builds-- but you do have some control over that. I think there may be a weight your body may be predisposed to, but that certainly does not mean weight loss or maintaining a lower weight is out of the question. If it is unrealistic/unreasonable to maintain, you will have to find a happy medium between your low weight (harder to maintain) And what may appear to be your "set point"
  • lisab64mfp
    lisab64mfp Posts: 89 Member
    I kinda believe that we do have a "set weight" that our bodies are "happiest" at.. I've done the gain/lose thing twice (so far 3rd time is a charm - at/below goal for 3+ years now) -- each time my weight went back up to ~200 lbs and stayed there for years.. My 2nd time losing weight my weight plateaued at ~162 -- I lost weight that time through exercise only (no diet change). This time through changing my diet and incorporating exercise - my weight is ~142. It goes up a few pounds when I'm on vacation (don't eat normally or track what I eat) but within a few months of eating "normally" it's back to ~142.

    Were you truly unhappy w/how you looked and felt at 145/150? Is being ~120 worth it?
  • pkw58
    pkw58 Posts: 2,038 Member
    OP- it is not impossible to maintain your weight. I regained the same weight 3 times over almost 30 years due to just going back to my old habits. I am not going to do that this time, and true to my promise to myself in December 2011, I am maintaining and logging away.

    I do advise you to go to a specialist and re-affirm what you would need to weigh (within a range of 5 pounds down or up) of what you should weigh. I idd, and it was very reassuring.
  • stephe1987
    stephe1987 Posts: 406 Member
    It's not impossible, but it is difficult. Before you lost weight, you were used to eating a higher number of calories each day. If you eat that same amount at a lower weight, you will slowly gain it back. If you want to maintain at a lower weight, you need to figure out what the maintenance is at your new weight and don't eat more than that. I think too many people go crazy during weight loss and do "diets" that they will not be able to maintain. You need to have small portions but still eat what you like and make sure you are eating good nutrition (carbs, fats, proteins). The "bad" stuff (sugar, sodium) should be treated as a treat and kept to a small portion of your diet. I think 80% health and 20% indulgent is good. Don't deprive yourself (the mistake people often make while they're losing weight) but don't overeat or you'll gain it back (mistakes people often make when they reach their goal).
  • nxd10
    nxd10 Posts: 4,570 Member
    But what is that set weight?

    My 'natural' weight seems to be 150. That's what I weighed when I graduated from college. Any time I got even a minimal amount of exercise my weight went back to there until I was 40. I went back to that after both my kids were born. I'm 5'10". That's a healthy weight for me (21.5 bmi). That's about where I am now (I'm slightly under because I'm active in the summer, but I expect I'll get back there in the fall).

    When I gained weight I sat at 165 for 10 years. I sat at 171 for 5 years. I zooped up to 185 for 6 months before I lost.

    But what was interesting was that when I came DOWN I sat at those weights again. I stalled at 172. I stalled at 163. I stalled at 155. So those do seems to be points of homeostasis for my body.

    Anyway, I've read research that says that people can reset their set point, but it takes a year and half. I'm a stubborn woman. I can do that. I've gone almost that far aleady.
  • einzweidrei
    einzweidrei Posts: 381 Member
    Back in HS, I never went over 143 pounds. I thought it was great because I ate like crap.

    Then, when I got more sedentary, my weight went up to around 155. But fine, I didn't go above that for like five years.

    Then my weight went up again, even more sedentary, to around 170 pounds. That was enough.



    Somehow, I've managed to maintain since December around 125-128. I had NEVER been that weight, not even in HS when I was pretty active. My body seems okay here. I'm maintaining on around 2K/day PLUS I eat back any exercise calories. I actually did 5:2 to lose the weight and try to do 6:1 just so I can take the calories from my "fast day" and move them to my "feast day" where I eat whatever I want all day, no calorie counting at all. I do think people have ranges that their body seems to move into but I don't think there's any real set point.
  • TiberiusClaudis
    TiberiusClaudis Posts: 423 Member
    Just adding my 2 cents: How does one know what their set point is? By how they feel, how they look, how others think they look, by what they weighed in HS or before their first kid?

    I thought I looked pretty good when I was about 185lb and 15% BF. I wanted the althetic/fit look. I was pretty happy about it.
    Then I went up to 203 and about 18%BF. I was big..like musclar big and by far the strongest I've ever been in my life. Love the sense of power I had.

    Now I'm at 173 at 6% BF. I have a six pack (finally) and I'm amazed I was able to get to this level of leaness. I love the look, but hate how "tight" I have to keep my diet.

    Point is, once you take up this healthy lifestyle (diet/exercise/recovery)...you literally have all KINDS of choices on what type of body you want. If you are happy where you are...great...but how do you know you won't be even happier a little leaner or a little stronger. :tongue:
  • FatFreeFrolicking
    FatFreeFrolicking Posts: 4,252 Member
  • Wasatcher
    Wasatcher Posts: 40 Member
    It doesn't seem true for me now but through my 20s I stayed at the same weight the matter what I ate. There's no way I was consistent. So under certain circumstances it makes sense to me that there is a setpoint.
  • Docbanana2002
    Docbanana2002 Posts: 357 Member
    Here's my theory about that : I think we all have certain "default" settings when it comes to diet and exercise. By that I mean, the behaviors we naturally engage in when we do what we want to do. These are rooted in our biology and probably also learned over time from parents, friends, spouse, coworkers, etc.. For example: Some people naturally want to eat a lot, some less. Some LOOOOVE food and some find eating a chore. Some react to anxiety by starving, some by eating. Some people are more sensitive to hunger pangs, some people will ignore them or seem to not have them (I have a very thin coworker who swears he doesn't experience hunger and could fast for days and feel no differently than when full. So he has to remind himself to eat). Some people like "healthy foods", some don't. Some people really worry about what their body looks like, others less so. Some people are very active and get bored if not moving, some people are happiest on the couch. Some like and are good at sports, some not. And so on.....

    When my mother doesn't pay attention to her food and exercise and just does what comes naturally, she will weigh between 115 and 120 (the bottom of the normal BMI for her). In her youth, she would gravitate more to 105 or 110 which was underweight. Back then, she regularly forced herself to eat to maintain a healthy weight.

    When I don't pay attention to my food and exercise and do what comes naturally, I weigh about 250 pounds (morbidly obese BMI). I was able to settle in and maintain that exact weight (give or take a couple of pounds) for several years with no effort or attention. 15 years ago I settled around 230 but I think aging took some toll and pushed me higher (I'm 42 now)

    I don't think that MY BODY wants to weight 250 or that my mom's body wants to weigh 117 (or 107 in her youth). I think that the sum total of all the habits we have, when practiced regularly, with our particular physiology, land me/her in that general zone.

    In order to maintain what I have lost. (again), I realize that it is important for me override those "defaults" in a permanent way. And to even try to change/reset the defaults if I can. To actively pay attention to my food and activity and to force myself to act against the grain and to do that enough that going back to my old ways would feel like a change from normal. When I do that, I lose weight. I can keep the weight off, too... until I start acting naturally again (or "natural" reverts to type).

    In the OP's case, I think it is purely a matter of personal choice whether you want to make the effort--and it is effort--to override the defaults every day. The cost is a lot of attention and self-control. The benefit is a skinnier body. Is is worth it? You have to choose. In my case, the benefit isn't just a skinny body but a body that doesn't have high cholesterol, blood pressure, plus a whole host of health risks that come with morbid obesity. I also feel more energetic and can engage in lots of cool hobbies that I wouldn't do at that other weight. I've always loved pretty clothing and dressing beautifully, but at a normal size I have so many more options in that way AND like the way I look in a wider range of clothes (today I own leggings and skinny jeans for the first time ever... I used to look like an elephant on stilts in those things). So there is more benefit for my cost. So here I am doing it. When I get into the normal BMI range and have a healthy body fat percent, I'll probably stop. Because I'm fighting myself enough just to be there, I don't think being in the lower normal BMI zone is worth it to me. I'm healthy, happy, active, and think my body looks okay.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    Here is the why behind why it happens. Kinda setpoint for sure.

    And if you took a big deficit to accomplish your loss, probably getting the bad effect discussed too.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2i_cmltmQ6A

    This should be required viewing for anyone who thinks setpoint theory isn't true.

    There is several complex hormonal changes going on when you lose fat, in an attempt for the body to maintain the level it had or gain it back.
  • kimberlyblindsey
    kimberlyblindsey Posts: 266 Member
    Here's my theory about that : I think we all have certain "default" settings when it comes to diet and exercise. By that I mean, the behaviors we naturally engage in when we do what we want to do. These are rooted in our biology and probably also learned over time from parents, friends, spouse, coworkers, etc.. For example: Some people naturally want to eat a lot, some less. Some LOOOOVE food and some find eating a chore. Some react to anxiety by starving, some by eating. Some people are more sensitive to hunger pangs, some people will ignore them or seem to not have them (I have a very thin coworker who swears he doesn't experience hunger and could fast for days and feel no differently than when full. So he has to remind himself to eat). Some people like "healthy foods", some don't. Some people really worry about what their body looks like, others less so. Some people are very active and get bored if not moving, some people are happiest on the couch. Some like and are good at sports, some not. And so on.....

    When my mother doesn't pay attention to her food and exercise and just does what comes naturally, she will weigh between 115 and 120 (the bottom of the normal BMI for her). In her youth, she would gravitate more to 105 or 110 which was underweight. Back then, she regularly forced herself to eat to maintain a healthy weight.

    When I don't pay attention to my food and exercise and do what comes naturally, I weigh about 250 pounds (morbidly obese BMI). I was able to settle in and maintain that exact weight (give or take a couple of pounds) for several years with no effort or attention. 15 years ago I settled around 230 but I think aging took some toll and pushed me higher (I'm 42 now)

    I don't think that MY BODY wants to weight 250 or that my mom's body wants to weigh 117 (or 107 in her youth). I think that the sum total of all the habits we have, when practiced regularly, with our particular physiology, land me/her in that general zone.

    In order to maintain what I have lost. (again), I realize that it is important for me override those "defaults" in a permanent way. And to even try to change/reset the defaults if I can. To actively pay attention to my food and activity and to force myself to act against the grain and to do that enough that going back to my old ways would feel like a change from normal. When I do that, I lose weight. I can keep the weight off, too... until I start acting naturally again (or "natural" reverts to type).

    In the OP's case, I think it is purely a matter of personal choice whether you want to make the effort--and it is effort--to override the defaults every day. The cost is a lot of attention and self-control. The benefit is a skinnier body. Is is worth it? You have to choose. In my case, the benefit isn't just a skinny body but a body that doesn't have high cholesterol, blood pressure, plus a whole host of health risks that come with morbid obesity. I also feel more energetic and can engage in lots of cool hobbies that I wouldn't do at that other weight. I've always loved pretty clothing and dressing beautifully, but at a normal size I have so many more options in that way AND like the way I look in a wider range of clothes (today I own leggings and skinny jeans for the first time ever... I used to look like an elephant on stilts in those things). So there is more benefit for my cost. So here I am doing it. When I get into the normal BMI range and have a healthy body fat percent, I'll probably stop. Because I'm fighting myself enough just to be there, I don't think being in the lower normal BMI zone is worth it to me. I'm healthy, happy, active, and think my body looks okay.
    ^This---you took the words out of my mouth, probably more eloquently though.
    I used to agree with the set point theory; however, I think I have the tendency to eat carb heavy food(leading to that comfortable weight) because it was part of my upbringing, background and culture, and now I have to override that default to eat more veggies and protein, but it's a conscience effort everyday to do so.
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    I agree with Docbanana BUT I think there's a big difference between a 'set point' that is in the morbidly obese category and a set point that is well within the normal category. IMO a set point in the obese category is an excuse. Once you're a reasonable weight, it's different though.

    I'm a bit in the same boat, if I go under 135 pounds I end up hungrier (5'5"), and it makes it harder to go under, and I've pretty much maintained at 133-135 pounds for 3 months.. even though I'd love to see 130 or 125. I mean, I could exercise more to lose, but I tried that and it didn't work either (I was working out 2 hours a day for a while, just ended up hungrier as a result). So I'm guessing maintaining at 125 would be pretty tough for me.

    But I absolutely don't think it's impossible to maintain a reasonable weight.
  • dopeysmelly
    dopeysmelly Posts: 1,390 Member
    I agree with Docbanana. I think it's all a matter of the weight our bodies result in dependent upon the habits and lifestyle we subject it to and our genetic makeup.
  • spoiledpuppies
    spoiledpuppies Posts: 675 Member
    It's possible to keep it off. I lost 50 pounds about 11 years ago, and pretty much kept it off since then. I just got used to eating less and being more active. A few pounds started creeping back on, so I joined MFP a year ago. Since then, I lost almost 40 more pounds. I expect to keep it off too, other than intentional gain from heavy weight lifting/muscle building. I might have to be more aware of my habits than others, but as long as I stay active and reasonably good about eating (AND continue to weigh in every day--this works for me!), I'm entirely optimistic.
  • Meerataila
    Meerataila Posts: 1,885 Member
    If I have a set weight I never hit it. My weight gain slowed down sometimes, but it never stopped. For all I know, if I hadn't gotten the get up and go to lose weight, I'd be bed-bound and seven hundred pounds right now.

    If I had a reasonably healthy weight that I could easily maintain, I'd do it. Even if it meant not wearing a size four. But I don't. So I figure, even if I gain it all back and then some eventually, I still bought myself some extra years by losing down from 245 and by all the other times I lost weight instead of continuing to gain.
  • gotolam
    gotolam Posts: 262 Member
    Your body wants to weigh what you put into it.
  • FitOldMomma
    FitOldMomma Posts: 790 Member
    I don't know if I believe the 'set point' theory.
    It really is all about calories in/ calories burned.


    If we revert back to what we think is 'normal' eating, we're just reverting back to old habits.

    Personally, I think it all comes down to being ever mindful of what we're eating and being sure we're getting enough exercise to maintain that balance.
  • FitOldMomma
    FitOldMomma Posts: 790 Member
    Your body wants to weigh what you put into it.

    ^^^^this!
  • chadya07
    chadya07 Posts: 627 Member
    hmmmm.... i think that it sounds more like YOU want to weigh what you were. and if you were happy there thats fine.

    where you were is where you got doing what you wanted. right.

    everyone wants what they want to be what they need.

    sometimes it is, sometimes it aint.
  • arguablysamson
    arguablysamson Posts: 1,709 Member
    I use to weigh 145 and now I weigh 120. I am 5'6.5. I have weighed between 145-150 throughout all of high school and first year University. Over the past year I have lost about 25-30 pounds and I think I look much better. However, I think my 145 pound weight is the weight that my body is "suppose" to be at. At that weight, I still ate very healthy as we are a healthy family. And I found it very easy to maintain that weight. To lose all the weight I had to workout tons and eat less calories than most people here have to. So, if I eat more "normal" again (like 1800-1900 cals a day), will I eventually gain all the weight back again? Do we all have a "set" weight?

    You can re-adjust your setpoint weight, but you have to be at the lower weight for a good amount of time -- longer than 4 months or so. I've done that. I'm 187 at present and my body keeps trying to keep me at 195ish. This is my new normal weight range. So whatever measures you take to get where you want to be, you need to get comfortable there for a while and when you go to upping the calories, you find that your body maintains weight rather well. This has been my experience.
  • Jodsmission
    Jodsmission Posts: 130 Member
    Well I am NOT taking weight related ideology from someone who works for Kraft Foods. Click Author information just because it came from NIH doesn't mean its from NIH studies.
    So where would this set weight be? Would it be the weight (as someone else mentioned ) that I was in HS ,College and after my babies? Which was between 112-118. Cause I frankly think that might be too thin at 44. Would it be at the weight I gained to? Or the plateau I have hit?
    It baloney! After you lose your body has to have time to settle. It has to get used to being this new size . That's why you start seeing all new bumps and lumps. Keep lifting . Keep watching. We are our own worst enemies.
  • garnerish
    garnerish Posts: 67 Member
    Setpoint weight is ridiculous in the sense that your body KNOWS what weight it wants to be at.

    The only reason you think you have a set point is because your eating routine means you consume enough calories to maintain that. And so when you go back to eating what you did before the weightloss, that's where you'll end up.
  • CoolBreeze84
    CoolBreeze84 Posts: 11 Member
    Your body wants to weigh what you put into it.

    Exactly this. When you reduced your calorie intake, you lost weight. If you increase your intake to what it used to be, then you will weigh what you were when you ate like that.
  • W31RD0
    W31RD0 Posts: 173 Member
    I agree that people tend to look best at a certain bodyweight. But if you are consuming more calories than you burn eventually you will gain weight. I don't know why you feel you have to workout harder or count calories more than anyone else here, but everyone here is in the same boat as you; trying to attain their goals.
  • happycauseIride
    happycauseIride Posts: 536 Member
    I find this an interesting topic. I am bumping to read more later when I have more time.
  • sshintaku
    sshintaku Posts: 228 Member
    Setpoint weight is ridiculous in the sense that your body KNOWS what weight it wants to be at.

    The only reason you think you have a set point is because your eating routine means you consume enough calories to maintain that. And so when you go back to eating what you did before the weightloss, that's where you'll end up.

    Question about this - if I eat about 1500 cal a day, I can maintain at 126-127. If I eat more than that, say 1700-2000, I pop up to 130 (what I've weighed most of my adult life) and stay there. Shouldn't I theoretically be able to maintain my weiht on the same amount of calories? I've been experimenting with this for about 3 months now, and this is definitely the pattern.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    Setpoint weight is ridiculous in the sense that your body KNOWS what weight it wants to be at.

    The only reason you think you have a set point is because your eating routine means you consume enough calories to maintain that. And so when you go back to eating what you did before the weightloss, that's where you'll end up.

    Question about this - if I eat about 1500 cal a day, I can maintain at 126-127. If I eat more than that, say 1700-2000, I pop up to 130 (what I've weighed most of my adult life) and stay there. Shouldn't I theoretically be able to maintain my weiht on the same amount of calories? I've been experimenting with this for about 3 months now, and this is definitely the pattern.

    "pop-up to" would imply a fast gain of 3-4 lbs.

    So you know the math for fat gain or loss, right. 3500 calories about per pound.
    So you would need to eat in excess of true maintenance 10500-14000 over whatever period of time that takes for 3-4 pounds to be only fat weight.

    So eating 200-500 more would take 21 - 70 days, depending on the averages there.

    So was the "fast" weight gain in 21 to 70 days of increased eating level?

    I'm betting you saw muscle glycogen stores finally top off which has attached water, you are merely living with depleted to some level all the time.

    So how quick was the 3-4 lb gain?
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    So it appears all the naysayers didn't educate themselves on things beyond calories in / calories out.

    Which as basic math is true.

    But are you all aware your calories in can actually affect and lower your calories out?

    And the setpoint aspect of hormone feedback loops is based on the amount of fat, which is the controlling factor of leptin, which is an effecting hormone for metabolism.

    Expand the mind beyond the basics and understand there is a complex system here, one that you can indeed work with, but if you don't understand it, you'll never get it or appreciate what you can cause to happen to it, and merely saying eat less is setting up for long term failure, unless one loves eating 20-25% less than possible during weight loss and in maintenance too, and will adhere to it.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2i_cmltmQ6A

    Now, those researchers took rather negative viewpoint of body ever coming out of it.

    Another more recent study shows you can, and to a posters comments earlier, it could take a long while, since rarely does anyone have access to lab research on their BMR, sedentary TDEE, measured calorie burn exercising, LBM and BF%, ect.

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/heybales/view/reduced-metabolism-tdee-beyond-expected-from-weight-loss-616251
  • Debbie_Ferr
    Debbie_Ferr Posts: 582 Member
    Your body wants to weigh what you put into it.

    THIS. so true !