Wrk out 5x's a wk eat 1200 cals but gaining lbs HELP!

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For the past 4wks I have been busting my butt trying to lose weight and at first it was working. Now I'm at week 5 & instead of the scale going down it keeps going up. I am super discouraged and don't know what to do. I am working hard just to get the opposite of what I'm working for (such is life for me)...

Does anyone have any advice that would help? Please be nice, I'm already down on myself enough ????
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Replies

  • logg1e
    logg1e Posts: 1,208 Member
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    Do you want to open your diet so we can offer some thoughts?
  • martinel2099
    martinel2099 Posts: 899 Member
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    There's no way you're only eating 1,200 calories and working out 5x per week. My guess is that you're seriously under-estimating your food intake.

    Plenty of women lose weight while exercising eating 1,800 to 2,000 calories or more per day.
  • AlinaRose17
    AlinaRose17 Posts: 92 Member
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    IMHO 1200 calories is far too low. You are likely stalling your metabolism and making further weight loss difficult. I would add more calories but look how your macros (protein, fat, carbs) are coming into play. Keep protein high to support muscle (more muscle present means more fat burned) time your carb intake to right when you wake up or right before/after you workout, and keep fat to under 20-25% of your total caloric intake.

    Being smart about what you are eating can often be more important than how much you eat. Good luck!
  • logg1e
    logg1e Posts: 1,208 Member
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    Just to give an alternative view, I was on 1200 calories for the first couple of months and losing pretty much 2lb per week.
  • mandez19
    mandez19 Posts: 179
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    IMHO 1200 calories is far too low. You are likely stalling your metabolism and making further weight loss difficult. I would add more calories but look how your macros (protein, fat, carbs) are coming into play. Keep protein high to support muscle (more muscle present means more fat burned) time your carb intake to right when you wake up or right before/after you workout, and keep fat to under 20-25% of your total caloric intake.

    Being smart about what you are eating can often be more important than how much you eat. Good luck!

    Agreed. Eating smart is better than blindly following an MFP calorie quantity. Fuel your work outs and take in protein. No carbs late at night.
  • kgeyser
    kgeyser Posts: 22,505 Member
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    IMHO 1200 calories is far too low. You are likely stalling your metabolism and making further weight loss difficult. I would add more calories but look how your macros (protein, fat, carbs) are coming into play. Keep protein high to support muscle (more muscle present means more fat burned) time your carb intake to right when you wake up or right before/after you workout, and keep fat to under 20-25% of your total caloric intake.

    Being smart about what you are eating can often be more important than how much you eat. Good luck!

    Agreed. Eating smart is better than blindly following an MFP calorie quantity. Fuel your work outs and take in protein. No carbs late at night.

    Eating carbs late at night has no impact on weight loss if you are in a deficit.
  • RGv2
    RGv2 Posts: 5,789 Member
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    IMHO 1200 calories is far too low. You are likely stalling your metabolism and making further weight loss difficult. I would add more calories but look how your macros (protein, fat, carbs) are coming into play. Keep protein high to support muscle (more muscle present means more fat burned) time your carb intake to right when you wake up or right before/after you workout, and keep fat to under 20-25% of your total caloric intake.

    Being smart about what you are eating can often be more important than how much you eat. Good luck!

    Agreed. Eating smart is better than blindly following an MFP calorie quantity. Fuel your work outs and take in protein. No carbs late at night.

    Eating carbs late at night has no impact on weight loss if you are in a deficit.

    This, and "blindly following MFP calorie quantity" would lead to weight loss if done at least semi-accurately. There is no way op is accurately taking in 1200 calories and gaining weight, no matter the "quality".
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,039 Member
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    For the past 4wks I have been busting my butt trying to lose weight and at first it was working. Now I'm at week 5 & instead of the scale going down it keeps going up. I am super discouraged and don't know what to do. I am working hard just to get the opposite of what I'm working for (such is life for me)...

    Does anyone have any advice that would help? Please be nice, I'm already down on myself enough ????

    Reading OP's post carefully, she HAS lost weight - 5lb in 4 weeks which is pretty good progress.
    Now she has had 1 week when she gains.

    This does not mean her plan is not working or she is eating more than she thinks - it just means weight loss is not linear and some weeks show slight gain while others show loss.
    As long as the overall trend is downward, then what you are doing is working fine.
  • daydreams_of_pretty
    daydreams_of_pretty Posts: 506 Member
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    You might want to consider the possibility of water weight or hormonal bloating. If you are accurately tracking and continue to work out, then your weight loss will catch up with you. I had a week were I stalled, but this week my loss has started catching up. Try to focus on measurements or your workout performance. If you're eating at a deficit and working out then you are losing weight, it just hasn't shown up on the scale yet. It will, though.
  • wanttobethin66
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    Are you sure you are measuring and/or weighing your food intake? Another possibility . . . you may need more calories due to all the exercise. Your body may be in "starvation mode". Try upping the calories a 100 to 200 per day for about a week and see if there is a change.
  • logg1e
    logg1e Posts: 1,208 Member
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    Are you sure you are measuring and/or weighing your food intake? Another possibility . . . you may need more calories due to all the exercise. Your body may be in "starvation mode". Try upping the calories a 100 to 200 per day for about a week and see if there is a change.

    "Starvation mode" is a very unpopular theory on MFP. Be warned weary traveller!
  • acorsaut89
    acorsaut89 Posts: 1,147 Member
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    IMHO 1200 calories is far too low. You are likely stalling your metabolism and making further weight loss difficult. I would add more calories but look how your macros (protein, fat, carbs) are coming into play. Keep protein high to support muscle (more muscle present means more fat burned) time your carb intake to right when you wake up or right before/after you workout, and keep fat to under 20-25% of your total caloric intake.

    Being smart about what you are eating can often be more important than how much you eat. Good luck!

    THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for not saying starvation mode . . . I cannot stress this enough!

    OP - so basically if you're running on 1,200 calories/day and you made this switch from - let's say - 3,000 calories/day then at first you shocked your body into loosing a lot of weight because your body just isn't use to running on that little and of course you'll loose a lot. However, over time (and the amount of time is different for each person) your body will adapt to running on these calories so it's more efficient and works just as well without needing that many calories; your body learns to do basic, daily functions on 1,200 calories rather than on 3,00 when, at first, it was used to doing it on 3,000 calories so when it only got 1,200 there was a huge amount of energy needed to live and that resulted in a drop in weight.

    What will then happen is if you increase dramatically for any reason, your body won't have a need for any extra calories and it'll be a gain for you, over your TDEE.

    Further - are you sure you're eating what you track you're eating? No one will know but you, however being honest with yourself will give you the results you're looking for. If I eat a whole can of pringles, no one is going to come and scold me for it but I am scolding myself because the next day at the gym I feel so sluggish. You're only accountable to yourself, but this should be the most important thing you do. If you aren't honest about what you're eating, it just won't work. I am not saying eat this, not that - what you eat is up to you. But just be honest about it, log it, see how you feel about it in relation to the other things you eat and move on. Don't dwell on it and say since you ate that on Thursday, the whole week is done might as well wait until Monday. Naw - I've had days where I ate McDonald's for lunc and did spin at 5:30; those are the days I probably need it the most, too.

    What kind of exercises are you doing? I also find MFP grossly, grossly over estimates the amount of calories it says you burn from various exercises.

    Also, are you weight training? Simply put more muscle = more calorie burn, even at rest. So if you have more muscle you will burn more calories doing the same exercises. This can be helpful, depending on what your ultimate goal is; like if you want to run a marathon, weight training is pointless but some kind of cross training can be really helpful.

    Last - but definitely certainly not least - it takes time. The weight didn't go on over night did it? Probably not (although it might seem like it some days), so it's not going to come off over night. It took me 2 years to lose and keep off 80 lbs (which was stage 1) and I still have 80ish to go. It takes so much effort and constant attention to your health to get back into it once you've gained it and I know it's hard because you think "Well it definitely didn't take this much effort to gain all of this, why does it take so much to lose it?" It's really hard to stay healthy sometimes with all the distractions and "cheats" out there, but stay positive - it will happen if you stick to it :)

    Edited for my bad spelling :(
  • acorsaut89
    acorsaut89 Posts: 1,147 Member
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    Just to give an alternative view, I was on 1200 calories for the first couple of months and losing pretty much 2lb per week.

    But you aren't on 1,200 calories now, meaning it isn't sustainable and is completely unrealistic.
  • Carli38
    Carli38 Posts: 5 Member
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    When you workout do you do the same workout everyday? I did that one time a long time ago, and your body gets used to the same workouts and they no longer work for you. Make sure you are changing it up everyday
  • IllustratedxGirl
    IllustratedxGirl Posts: 240 Member
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    If you are weight training, your muscle will retain water wile recovering which can cause bloating and weight gain. I'm dealing with that right now. The scale has gone up but I *know* it's water retention due to lifting heavier weights
  • jasonmh630
    jasonmh630 Posts: 2,850 Member
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    Are you sure you are measuring and/or weighing your food intake? Another possibility . . . you may need more calories due to all the exercise. Your body may be in "starvation mode". Try upping the calories a 100 to 200 per day for about a week and see if there is a change.

    Starvation mode doesn't exist. Chances are she's eating more than she thinks she is.
  • misschoppo
    misschoppo Posts: 463 Member
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    There's no way you're only eating 1,200 calories and working out 5x per week. My guess is that you're seriously under-estimating your food intake.

    agree with this
  • Natasha_Fit_Fab
    Natasha_Fit_Fab Posts: 93 Member
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    I was discouraged also but I brought a measuring tape to take some measurements in my problem areas and found that I was not losing weight but I was losing inches....which helped me to regroup myself and stay the course!!
  • erdmanski1341
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    Don't be discouraged and don't get caught up in all the internet scientists and diet experts that typically weigh in.

    It likely is simple - you are burning fat and building muscle. The weight gain from building muscle can easily offset the fat weight you have burned. Unfortunately, most people in your situation watch the scale daily and get discouraged by the results (or lack of) - this usually leads to people losing motivation and abandoning their programs which most often are working.

    It will take some time to see significant weight loss and physical changes will come slowly, but they will come. Like some others will suggest, focus more on your workouts improvements (time, reps, etc.) and less on your weight and net calories.

    Bottom-line: If you are working out more and eating healthier than you were, you are getting in better shape. Just be patient and keep it up.
  • KylaDenay
    KylaDenay Posts: 1,585 Member
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    How can it keep going up?! Its only been 1 week you see a gain on the scale. Maybe water weight. It is not linear and can fluctuate weekly. I suggest weighing yourself once a week, ever 2 weeks or once a month. Give it some time. No need to be discouraged just yet.