Why Aren't I Losing Anything?
littlemissunderstood
Posts: 50
I finally got a gym membership a little under two weeks ago and I have been getting my money's worth. I go almost every day. The only days I haven't gone were when I did a bootcamp class and it hurt to walk let alone work out and another day when the fire alarm went off and they wouldn't let anyone in. I even went yesterday even though I had a cold and it made me nauseous. I do either 45 minutes on the arc trainer OR a 45-60 minute long class + 20-30 minutes on the arc trainer.
I lost 1 measly pound in the first week, but the next two days I was super stressed and sleep deprived so I ended up going over my allotted calories though I'm fairly certain I didn't go far enough over to actually gain much weight if any. I shot up 6lbs over night and have only gone down 1 or 2 since. I know it's mathematically impossible and I'm just gaining water weight or my muscles are storing glycogen or something but it's just so discouraging. I feel like I should be losing more considering I'm working so hard at it : (.
That said, I suppose I do look more toned. My mom commented on my arms and to me my stomach seems over so slightly flatter. But I really want something concrete to go by and I think I should be losing.
I lost 1 measly pound in the first week, but the next two days I was super stressed and sleep deprived so I ended up going over my allotted calories though I'm fairly certain I didn't go far enough over to actually gain much weight if any. I shot up 6lbs over night and have only gone down 1 or 2 since. I know it's mathematically impossible and I'm just gaining water weight or my muscles are storing glycogen or something but it's just so discouraging. I feel like I should be losing more considering I'm working so hard at it : (.
That said, I suppose I do look more toned. My mom commented on my arms and to me my stomach seems over so slightly flatter. But I really want something concrete to go by and I think I should be losing.
0
Replies
-
Have you been using a measuring tape??0
-
2 weeks is not enough time to evaluate a new routine. Everyone does things differently. And we have no idea what your nutrition plan is like, what your deficit is, what your statistics are, what you realistically can expect to lose given your current situation...etc.
In other words, there's no way for us to answer your question in any reasonable fashion. If you're eating healthy, eating at a modest deficit, exercising, giving your body a rest day, getting enough rest, and drinking enough water, then trust the plan, give it a few months. and then evaluate.0 -
make sure you drink enough water and watch your sodium intake .. also give it some time, you will get there0
-
I agree with IcePrincess, check your measurements. Also, make sure that you weigh in at the same time every day. I notice a big difference if I weigh in in the afternoon. I try to only measure in once a week at the same time. (Before breakfast and after using the restroom) I have weighed in at night and then again the next morning and I could be 3-4 lbs lighter in the AM.0
-
Also from looking at your food diary, you need to eat more. I know it sounds backwards, but most days your are barely netting 1000 calories (food eaten less exercise). That's not enough fuel for your body to operate it's normal activities.
AND, two weeks may not be enough time to evaluate. Patience!0 -
use a measuring tape...you do need to eat more...and two weeks is not enough time, have patience with yourself relax and enjoy the changes your body is making :happy:0
-
Firstly, I think you need to eat more. You are not even getting 1000 calories a day, which means your body will go into starvation mode, and start eating away at muscle and retain the fat because you are not getting enough fuel for the fat you are trying to burn.
Secondly, I would definitely be using rest days. You need to give yourself and your body time to develop, and by going to the gym every single day you aren't allowing your body to recover and develop properly.
And lastly, I think you should give yourself more than 2 weeks to try and gauge and weight/size loss.
xx0 -
I agree with Jbonar's post. Your metabolism is out-of-whack and in starvation mode. Plus, you're eating way too many carbs and hardly any protein. When you're exercising as much as you are, your body needs increased amounts of protein.0
-
http://fattyfightsback.blogspot.com/2009/03/mtyhbusters-starvation-mode.html read that, it is very good for clearing up the misconceptions about starvation mode. And yes, I do get labs done to make sure I'm getting enough nutrients and then supplement/adjust accordingly. Right now I take tons of vitamin D and some iron.
As for the protein, yes, I need to be getting more. I'm vegan so it's tough but I think I need to replace some fruit and junk with beans and nuts. Will do. However, don't see how it will make me lose significantly more weight.
I don't see how I can be doing too much exercise. I don't do strength training every day which is what you're really supposed to give yourself a rest from. On the biggest loser, for example, they exercise practically all day.
I'm not sore after exercising and I'm not starving. I will wait longer before further evaluating my plan. Thanks for the feedback.0 -
That isn't an article, it's a blog, which means the person who wrote it can write whatever they want and get away with it. That's not a weight loss expert, or a Registered Dietitian who wrote it (I've been acquainted with her for her whole time on MFP). After doing quite a bit of research into how the body handles large calorie deficits, I'll say one thing with absolute certainty. The body can enter starvation mode, making it harder to lose weight (especially fat), the percentage of weight lost through lean tissue canabalization goes up, the percentage of energy converted to adipose fat does go up, the metabolic rate does go down, and immune function does go down. This is what starvation mode is defined as. It's not defined as the inability to lose weight, or anything to do with 1200 calories, or lack of micro-nutrients.
read through this research, then think about it a bit. I've done a ton of research into this. Starvation mode is real, people have odd conceptions of it, that may be false but the true term starvation mode is real.
http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=/PNS/PNS54_01/S0029665195000255a.pdf&code=9d7151f1b3d4573be4a6c55bf429b91c
I have more research if you want it. But this one is the most clear, concise, and easy to read study I've found. I've also read the whole Minnesota study, it's LOONG. And very boring, but I read it. Some of the conclusions mentioned in that blog are taken out of context, and she fails to mention many others. The biggest one that comes to my mind is the reduction in mental faculties and the obsessive behaviors that develop after long term starvation diets (note a starvation diet, and starvation mode are two completely separate things having distinctly different attributes)
Here's the quote of the conclusion of the study (which summarized a number of other well regarded scientific research projects done on the topic)In the early stages of starvation an increase in adipose tissue lipolysis (possibly due to a
decrease in plasma insulin) and fat oxidation are key steps which probably then lead to a
reduction in glucose oxidation. However, gluconeogenesis continues to provide glucose
for utilization by neural and other tissues, which does not appear as net whole-body
glucose oxidation. In association with this increase in lipolysis in the early stages of
starvation there is a small rise in resting energy expenditure, but this reverts to a
decreased energy expenditure after 72 h without food.
With more prolonged undernutrition, total energy expenditure falls but the mechan-
isms of this are not fully understood. Although one would expect a reduction in
food-induced thermogenesis in prolonged undernutrition, there is a lack of convincing
evidence that this occurs. It is clear, however, that in more controlled experimental
conditions glucose-induced thermogenesis is diminished in undernutrition. The mechan-
isms underlying this effect and the improved metabolic efficiency during refeeding
remain to be elucidated.
In layman's terms this says. It's well proven that for the first 72 hours the body does not feel the effects of underfeeding or starvation with regards to resting energy expenditure (REE, AKA resting metabolic rate) and in fact both REE and fat burning goes up. After that 72 hour window, the REE drops below normal and adipose fat storage (body fat) goes up as well. This is, as we can well see, starvation mode folks.
I say none of this to make anyone uncomfortable or to attack any person, I'm only trying to prove a concept that I believe in through research and study. I'm more than open to debate, as long as that debate has it's roots in facts and science, and not opinion. I'm not closed minded about this stuff. If a well documented study came out tomorrow disproving all of this, and it was repeatable science, then I'd strongly consider (and probably adopt) it's conclusions.0 -
Interesting read. Thank you.0
-
The link doesn't work. Do you recall the name of the article or do you have a working link?0 -
The link doesn't work. Do you recall the name of the article or do you have a working link?
sorry, must be cached, I uploaded it as a pdf (hope it's not illegal to do this)
try this link.
https://docs.google.com/leaf?id=0BwjKw54QZoQ6MmVhOGYxNTUtMjA5Yy00YTRlLThkOGMtNDQxM2E2MGYxODQz&hl=en&authkey=CNbY7ZsG0 -
Interesting, I have seen conflicting studies but haven't really taken the time to look at them carefully. I just feel like I'm eating too much when I eat all of my exercise calories. Sure, I like to. I wouldn't be on this site if I didn't like eating lol. But I'm just not generally physically hungry for that much. Also, I am incredibly frustrating. I've been gaining weight for a long time and I can't seem to lose more than 5-6lbs no matter what I try. I used to be soooo skinny. Do you happen to know how many calories are recommended? Everyone is all over the golden 1200 net calories rule. Does it have any basis? I was also wondering about theories about sleep being largely related to weight gain? I find it very hard to sleep before 12. Even when I get up early and exercise lots. I'm thinking of doing melatonin therapy to see if that helps.0
-
Honestly, I don't think you HAVE to be exercising like crazy. I don't think there's any benefit in forcing yourself to go to the gym every day, even when you're sick. That is NOT good for you, especially when you're not eating enough. Plus, that's not a sustainable lifestyle change. You can't keep busting your gut at the gym every day for the rest of your life. If your muscles are that sore, they could be retaining fluid while they heal, causing the number on the scale to stay the same or even go up (not sure if that's the exact scientific explanation, but I know if I've worked out hard and my muscles are sore, my weight is always up the next day)
In regards to calories, trust MFP - you have all the tools you need here. If you've correctly entered your details into MFP (your age, height, weight, and activity level), it will tell you how many calories you should be eating. I've lost almost 5kg (10lbs) just by sticking to my calorie allotment and adding in some additional exercise. I didn't go crazy with the exercise, didn't join a gym, I just started adding in some additional activity, like a workout video one day, a brisk walk the next, Pilates the next etc. I logged the exercise into MFP and I ate most of the calories back, so my NET calories were as close to 1200 as possible. And it worked. If I'm hungry, I eat, especially if I've exercised. If I happen to be at 1300 calories, that's ok, the world won't end. You just have to LISTEN to your body, there is no magic number that will cause the weight to drop off. As a rule, however, you shouldn't go UNDER 1200. That is the minimum recommended amount for women. You don't have to stay that low if it's not enough for you, and you definitely shouldn't go under it.
And most importantly, the scale is not the be all and end all. Your weight can fluctuate during the day due to all sorts of reasons. It's really not the best indicator of your size. As others have said, take measurements, and if people are telling you you're looking more toned, take that compliment! It's an achievement! Hang in there, and think of this as a LONG TERM lifestyle change, not a quick fix. You'll get there!!!0 -
It took me a full 17 days before I lost anything...well, that is not totally true, I lost INCHES, but not pounds. Don't put all your faith in the first few weeks..this is when your body is adjusting to exercise and a lower calorie diet, in the next month, you'll notice a LOT more and in the next 4-6 months, you'll be ecstatic! Try not to stress about 1 or 2 lbs, look at the big picture!0
-
It took me a full 17 days before I lost anything...well, that is not totally true, I lost INCHES, but not pounds. Don't put all your faith in the first few weeks..this is when your body is adjusting to exercise and a lower calorie diet, in the next month, you'll notice a LOT more and in the next 4-6 months, you'll be ecstatic! Try not to stress about 1 or 2 lbs, look at the big picture!
thanks for the encouragement I hope you're right!0 -
Another thing to consider is that if you're working the same muscle groups every single day, your muscles are retaining water for protection. Try bumping up your calories a little bit and maybe take a 2 day break from exercise and see if the weight comes off. When you exercise, try to work different muscle groups on alternating days. Your muscles won't get so sore if you do that.0
-
Here's the quote of the conclusion of the study (which summarized a number of other well regarded scientific research projects done on the topic)In the early stages of starvation an increase in adipose tissue lipolysis (possibly due to a
decrease in plasma insulin) and fat oxidation are key steps which probably then lead to a
reduction in glucose oxidation. However, gluconeogenesis continues to provide glucose
for utilization by neural and other tissues, which does not appear as net whole-body
glucose oxidation. In association with this increase in lipolysis in the early stages of
starvation there is a small rise in resting energy expenditure, but this reverts to a
decreased energy expenditure after 72 h without food.
With more prolonged undernutrition, total energy expenditure falls but the mechan-
isms of this are not fully understood. Although one would expect a reduction in
food-induced thermogenesis in prolonged undernutrition, there is a lack of convincing
evidence that this occurs. It is clear, however, that in more controlled experimental
conditions glucose-induced thermogenesis is diminished in undernutrition. The mechan-
isms underlying this effect and the improved metabolic efficiency during refeeding
remain to be elucidated.
In layman's terms this says. It's well proven that for the first 72 hours the body does not feel the effects of underfeeding or starvation with regards to resting energy expenditure (REE, AKA resting metabolic rate) and in fact both REE and fat burning goes up. After that 72 hour window, the REE drops below normal and adipose fat storage (body fat) goes up as well. This is, as we can well see, starvation mode folks.
In ref to SHBoss's post...
Just clarifying your layman terms of the science quote.
The science in the quote you note talks about increase in lipolysis (ie the breakdown of lipids in fat storage to free fatty acids for use in energy production), but it does not mention an increase in fat storage (reduction in lipolysis or change in biochemical pathways leading to fat storage) following that 72 hrs.
Is that bit not actually in the science quote you gave, as they layman terms quote seems to state that (ie you say fat storage increases). Or am I reading that incorrectly.0 -
It seems that most often on the forum people refer to starvation mode to people who are on a reduced calorie (but hopefully correct nutrition) food intake.
I am sure you have other (extensive) research for those on a reduced calorie (good nutrition) diet, but I am not sure that one can use an article that is most specifically related to extended fasting or starvation to address people saying they are in "starvation mode" when they are not fasting over an extended time.
Or am I misinterpeting what you have included the article for. Just curious (scientific mind, always curious)0 -
It seems that most often on the forum people refer to starvation mode to people who are on a reduced calorie (but hopefully correct nutrition) food intake.
I am sure you have other (extensive) research for those on a reduced calorie (good nutrition) diet, but I am not sure that one can use an article that is most specifically related to extended fasting or starvation to address people saying they are in "starvation mode" when they are not fasting over an extended time.
Or am I misinterpeting what you have included the article for. Just curious (scientific mind, always curious)
Actually, that summary is a report on multiple different experiments, in which they are clear to point out not only starvation but what they call "underfeeding" as well I.E. caloric deficit. Throughout the study they point out the differing effects of the body after short term moderate and prolonged fasting periods. The only real question they weren't able to give solid evidence for was the question as to why the body changes to a fat conservation metabolism after prolonged periods, although they give a solid hypothesis. Also that the effects take longer in underfeeding to manifest than they do with the total lack of calories (which would make sense).
Case in point, taken from the second section titled "Energy Metabolism in Starvation and Underfeeding"It is generally believed that resting and total energy expenditure fall in starvation and
underfeeding. Whilst this is undoubtedly true after a few days of undernutrition, it may
not be the case initially. The classical studies of Benedict et al. (1919) revealed a modest
rise in resting energy expenditure in the first 12 d of a prolonged period of underfeeding.
This was followed by the expected fall over the next 30 d. Similarly, the first 2 d of total
starvation are accompanied by increased resting energy expenditure (Mansell et al. 1990;
Webber & Macdonald, 1994), which is likely to be due in part to the energy costs of
gluconeogenesis, ketogenesis and fatty acid-triacylglyceroi recycling. The rates of
gluconeogenesis and fatty acid-triacylglycerol recycling seen after 2-3 d of starvation
could easily account for 5% of resting energy expenditure. As starvation proceeds there
is a fall in resting energy expenditure, such that it is normally below initial values after 4 d
of starvation (for review, see Elia, 1992).
Please note that when they talk of starvation, you have to remember starvation isn't the total lack of incoming
calories, it's an amount of calories insufficient to support the person, thus the effect of starvation
occurs.0 -
Please note that when they talk of starvation, you have to remember starvation isn't the total lack of incoming
calories, it's an amount of calories insufficient to support the person, thus the effect of starvation
occurs.
[/quote]
I will re read the sections and linked material based on you comment, however I made the assumption that starvation in the context of this report (and as a medical term) was absence of food (fasting as they say, which in a medical context has tended to mean no food only water - as in before an operation).
I did note that they did made mention of undernutrition (as separate from starvation), but I thought that was to differentiate from an absence of food rather than a deficit of food with the different studies to which they were referring.0 -
you'll notice in the study that they go over both a 0 calorie method, and an underfeeding method. While the timeline for the 2 are different (0 calorie NET is about 72 hours before complete change from fat burning metabolism) to 6 to 12 days for underfeeding. the results are similar in that the body changes from a system that uses fat oxidation as a secondary mechanism (after glycogen burning) for energy, to a mixed system using lean tissue as an alternate, and hormone levels that are attributed to higher fat storage rise in both cases.
I.E. after the threshold is crossed to "starvation mode" the body starts storing more fat and burning more lean tissue (amino acids AKA proteins) to account for a reduction in incoming usable energy and a lowering of the RMR to help compensate. This means that your maintenance calories go down, and the amount of fat you burn goes down, while the amount of protein you burn from lean tissue and ingested protein goes up. If you follow MFP's goals and don't adjust to account for the lower RMR you won't lose what MFP thinks you will as you don't have the same maintenance calories as someone who is at a normal metabolic rate. This can mean the weight loss can appear to be "stalled".
While the normal thought process would most likely be "don't eat as much", the body will continue in this downward sloping RMR, continuing to reduce metabolic rates until a virtual "floor" is hit, where the body just can no longer support any more reduced burn rate, where organ failure can begin (granted, this normally takes months of prolonged severe under eating but still, it's a medical probability). Typically and predictably, this is seen quite often in anorexics who notice first (besides the apparent "wasting" properties) bad skin and teeth, continuing on to gall bladder and renal issues. I'm not sure what the progression is medically speaking, or what the body deems the most "expendable" but skin, hair, teeth, and nails would seem most likely as they are one of the first sets of organs and structures to show severe signs of starvation.
I realize that most of us on MFP don't need to worry about anorexia (with respect to those who've had eating disorders in the past), the basic processes that cause it are still in play in the body when ever we are at a prolonged calorie deficit. The facts presented in this cumulative study seem to support those conclusions. I.E. it's important to keep a close watch on what your energy levels are, how much you are eating RELATIVE to how much you burn during the day (TDEE), and what a realistic goal should be.
I submit that if two woman who were genetically identical (twins for instance), who both were at the approximate same level of weight, lean tissue, and fat percentages (assuming both were at least mildly obese to start); were given the exact same diet and the exact same amount of caloric intake, assuming we could know the "tipping point" for starvation mode and stay out of it, we would, with almost 100% surity, be able to predict the results of both in the following situation:
Woman 1 would do little exercise, basically just maintaining her current activity levels.
Woman 2 would exercise hard, buring between 600 and 1000 calories a day.
No additional calories would be given to woman 2.
I suspect the conclusions would be:
After 2 weeks woman 2 would have lost significantly more weight than woman 1 and her percentages of fat vs. lean tissue loss would be significantly higher.
After 1 month woman 2 would have begun to plateau or would be fully invested in a plateau and would be losing significantly less weight than woman 1, and the fat loss vs lean tissue loss would have somewhat reversed (noting that exercising will stave off some of the muscle catabolism). At the same time woman 1 would have continued to lose weight at a relatively constant rate, with a similar amount of fat vs lean tissue loss as she had during the first few weeks.
The conclusion (assuming the above were the case) is that sure you can exercise while you lose weight, but you need to try to keep that energy balance while you do it. Growing your deficit doesn't necessarily mean more weight loss, and you won't lose the kind of weight you really want, at the levels you are hoping for (I.E. fat loss instead of lean tissue loss).0 -
......
The conclusion (assuming the above were the case) is that sure you can exercise while you lose weight, but you need to try to keep that energy balance while you do it. Growing your deficit doesn't necessarily mean more weight loss, and you won't lose the kind of weight you really want, at the levels you are hoping for (I.E. fat loss instead of lean tissue loss).
My main "issue" with regard to the concept of "starvation mode" as it gets called with respect to this forum (weight loss areas in general), is how the term is bandied about, without understanding.
I feel it is often suggested as being the cause of people who are significantly overweight /obese not losing weight when they have either been on the diet for only a short time and/or only in a minimal calorie deficit.
Initial attention of such (IMHO) should be: to increase fibre ( to increase "throughput and therefore get rid of that hidden unthought of weight), ensure food is being properly logged (including weighing it etc) to ensure no under reporting of calorie intake, and ensure calories claimed for exercise are correctly calculated to ensure no over reporting.
Of course that is aligned to ensuring calorie intake is good (ie all required nutients vitamins minerals protein)0 -
Well, I can't say I disagree with any of your points kimwig, although I'm fuzzy as to what you mean by "hidden unthought of weight" but I'll assume, and correct me if I'm wrong, you mean waste that isn't passing? Which, usually isn't a problem for most people unless they are constipated. I've had that conversation with 2 Gastroenterology doctors and both have said the same thing to me, I.E. people don't have waste sitting in their colon and intestines unless there's a problem in there, and if there was a problem, they'd know it.
That's kind of besides the point though, as I find giving people advice to eat more fiber is fine in my book, fiber does all kinds of good things in the body so I'm all for it.
I do agree that the term "starvation mode" has some interesting connotations attached to it, ones that I've been trying to straighten out for a long time. The idea (for instance) that you generally stop losing weight while in starvation mode. This is not necessarily (or usually) the case at all, it's more a case that you will lose LESS than you think you should, and much of the loss will be the weight you don't want to lose.
I also don't believe it's as easy as people think to enter starvation mode for those in the overweight (overfat) and obese category. With a lot of extra fat, comes a lot of extra calories available, and someone who is obese will need to create quite a large deficit and keep that deficit quite high in order to dip into that zone (you're talking somewhere in the neighborhood of 3 to 4 lbs a week for those in the obese category). What my main issue is, is people looking to lose 20 or 30 lbs and still trying to lose 2 lbs a week, or someone with a BF% ( a woman in this case) of about 24 or 25% and still trying to lose 2 lbs a week. They're just going to end up losing less weight than they could by eating more, and having a higher (significantly higher in extreme cases) percentage of any weight they do lose be LBM (Lean Body Mass, I.E. muscle, connective tissue...etc).
And of course, my other main issue is the people that look at 1 post with virtually no vitals or lifestyle information talking about a plateau and immediately replying that the person needs to eat more. I find myself talking to my monitor and saying "How do you know?" all the time. Then I catch myself and chuckle. Who cares that she's eating 1200 calories and not eating her exercise calories back. Maybe she's obese, maybe she has type 2 diabetes and has Hashimoto's disease and has a lower than normal metabolic rate, maybe she's 60 years old and her metabolic rate has slowed by 20%. Maybe she's 4'11" tall and has is sedentary and has a TDEE of 1380. We don't know, she didn't tell us any of that, blindly assuming that someone is not eating enough because they aren't eating their exercise calories is just as bad as someone who SHOULD be eating them who isn't, because it perpetuates bad information. Better to ask the right questions then assume things. Things like, what's your body fat %? What's your goal deficit? Do you have any medical conditions? Are you feeling sluggish or tired? .......... These questions at least give you a picture of the person before a theory can be floated.0 -
......
The conclusion (assuming the above were the case) is that sure you can exercise while you lose weight, but you need to try to keep that energy balance while you do it. Growing your deficit doesn't necessarily mean more weight loss, and you won't lose the kind of weight you really want, at the levels you are hoping for (I.E. fat loss instead of lean tissue loss).
My main "issue" with regard to the concept of "starvation mode" as it gets called with respect to this forum (weight loss areas in general), is how the term is bandied about, without understanding.
I feel it is often suggested as being the cause of people who are significantly overweight /obese not losing weight when they have either been on the diet for only a short time and/or only in a minimal calorie deficit.
Initial attention of such (IMHO) should be: to increase fibre ( to increase "throughput and therefore get rid of that hidden unthought of weight), ensure food is being properly logged (including weighing it etc) to ensure no under reporting of calorie intake, and ensure calories claimed for exercise are correctly calculated to ensure no over reporting.
Of course that is aligned to ensuring calorie intake is good (ie all required nutients vitamins minerals protein)
fyi, if you can read scientific research well (I.E. have a good grasp of chemistry), you'd do well to read "Advanced Metabolism and Human Nutrition" it's a college text (pretty advanced), but it goes deeply into the human metabolism, from a sub-cellular level all the way up. It's fantastic, it really opens the eyes on how our bodies process food and use energy. I warn you though, it's super heavy on the bio-chemistry front, and I'm not talking high school bio-chem either, this is the serious stuff. I was a Chemical Engineering major through most of my college days, and I had some struggles reading it. Granted it's been 16 years for me, but still, I'm pretty good with chemistry. If I hear one more word about Co-enzyme A my head might burst.0 -
Bump cause this thread has some really good info in it. :flowerforyou:0
-
I know how you feel lilmissunderstood...I experience the same...takes 1 lousy meal to undo all that good work. I'll lose 1kg (2lb) in 6 days, have a social event in which I eat an unhealthy meal on the 7th day - generally something with more carbs - then weigh in the next day and I'm back up by 1kg...yet it took 6 days to lose it! It can be very disheartening and frustrating...
But I have to realise and accept that weight will always fluctuate and I try to see things differently. I figure the food is still sitting in my stomach, I could be retaining fluids, it could also be hormone related...I wait 2-3 days after to see the impact of my naughty meal.
I now try to take the measurements of my waist and hips more seriously, and the figures on the scale as a motivator. If the numbers 1 month on haven't budged then I know that I have to change something.0 -
2 causes:
1. you are consuming too many calories.
2. too much sodium and/or not enough water.0
This discussion has been closed.
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
- 232.5K 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