Massive Lifestyle Change- No results! :(
Beploveshomer
Posts: 283 Member
This is probably an oft-posted subject, but I need help! About 3 weeks ago I decided enough was enough, I felt sick and fat all the time. I am a 30 year old woman, 5'8" and 190lbs. I was eating all day, had a sugar addiction, and was drinking a 6 pack of corona 3 times a week. Also, I was almost completely sedentary, occasional walks. I knew what to do, so I did it!
-Cut down on booze, I have a couple glasses of red wine occ.
-I quit SUGAR! yay!
-Cardio 30 minutes 7 days a week
-Morning yoga and stretches
-Cut out white flour, bread, pasta, all that
My diet now consists of eggs, beans, nuts, venison, chicken, vegetables, fruits, and brown rice, sprouted grain bread.
Totals about 1800 cals. when I know I was eating around 2500 before.
I have completely OVERHAULED my life and I have nothing to show for it.
190 this morning.
I don't want to lose hope, but I feel it coming, "the give up"
ANY advice appreciated!
-Cut down on booze, I have a couple glasses of red wine occ.
-I quit SUGAR! yay!
-Cardio 30 minutes 7 days a week
-Morning yoga and stretches
-Cut out white flour, bread, pasta, all that
My diet now consists of eggs, beans, nuts, venison, chicken, vegetables, fruits, and brown rice, sprouted grain bread.
Totals about 1800 cals. when I know I was eating around 2500 before.
I have completely OVERHAULED my life and I have nothing to show for it.
190 this morning.
I don't want to lose hope, but I feel it coming, "the give up"
ANY advice appreciated!
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Replies
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Do you have a food scale?
And just my personal opinion, but when I have cut things out in the past I just end up binging on them eventually. Unless there is a medical reason, I would just eat everything, in moderation0 -
Have you had any recent blood work?0
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1. Do not get discouraged.
2. Are you counting your drinks? Seriously?
3. Although I personally don't pay attention to sodium because I cook salt free...watch your sodium intake.
4. Bread and rice is bread and rice. If you are counting the calories in it great. Bread...still check the sugar...in ALL forms.
(Subway ADDS more sugar to their wheat bread to sweeten it.)0 -
No I haven't. I had my thyroid checked a couple years ago because I was tired all the time and could't lose weight, and he said the results were fine and I just had "Woman in WIsconsin Winter" syndrome.
Jerk.0 -
Weigh and measure your food. If you haven't lost weight in 3 weeks, you're probably eating more calories than you realize.
Congrats on the healthy changes!!!0 -
It would help if you opened your diary.
Do you weigh all of your solid foods on a digital food scale?
My starting stats were almost identical to yours (5'7", 190lbs). I lost on 1750cals/day and the scale moved pretty regularly in the beginning. A food scale made all the difference.0 -
If you're not weighing, you don't know how much you're really eating. Also, it would help if your diary was open.0
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3 weeks isn't very long. Please don't give up, because you're doing everything right. Honestly, if you're saying the words "give up" then you haven't made a lifestyle change yet. You're on a diet, and you need to figure out how to convert it into something you can live with. That probably means finding new lighter foods to be the basis of your diet, but still eating old favorite foods in moderation until such time as you find you genuinely don't enjoy them anymore.
Use an app called HappyScale. It will let you track your daily fluctuations. You may have lost a small amount of fat in that time (1- 2 lbs), but you can't see it on the scale because it gets lost in normal daily water loss changes..
The other thing to keep in mind is that before you started, you weren't staying the same, you were gaining. A few years back I went on an exercise kick. I went to the gym regularly for 8 months. I didn't lose a pound. But I also didn't gain, where my pattern before was that I was gaining 1 lb per month. So it wasn't ineffective at all, even though it was discouraging.0 -
Weigh and measure your food. If you haven't lost weight in 3 weeks, you're probably eating more calories than you realize.
Congrats on the healthy changes!!!
Yes, this ^^.
It's kinda pointless if you don't weigh your food or count your drinks.
Many people tend to forget what they've had to drink as well....if it's not been logged.
I used to drink around 400 cals worth of Orange Juice in one day and thought i was being healthy. When in fact, that was almost 1/3rd of my daily calorie allowance! :noway:
Needless to say, i now weigh my drinks and have cut back on drinking orange juice.0 -
Massive lifestyle change - no results YET... if this really is a lifestyle change then 3 weeks isn't long enough to judge if it's working....
And as others have said, you need to weigh and log everything, you will maintain or gain if you eat too much food, whether it's 'healthy' or not.0 -
I don't believe this didn't make some change! What is your cardio routine? Is it intense enough that you may have lost fat and gained muscle? Are both 190s from the same time of day?
Steps to take:
1. Take your measurements now -- neck, waist, hips -- record them in MyFitnessPal -- do this every 2 weeks
2. Try on your tight jeans/pants and see if they fit better
3. Try your most worn belt and see if the peg fits in a new hole instead of the old one0 -
With gaining muscle foe me the scale did not reflect weight loss until the 4 week. I've lost a good trouser size so taking your measurements might show you the trade out of fat for muscle
I've been at it for about 5 weeks, just this past 2 weeks about 5 lbs fell off.
I would definitely use a food scale. My stats are 1200 calories before working out and I try not to eat back all the calories burned. I'm 47 5'5", now 175.0 -
Don't give up. It really takes a while for changes to show up- took me a good 3 weeks of logging all food. LOTS of cardio. By week 2, I stopped eye- balling my food and measured it. I was eating more than I realized. I may be eating too little now and I am adjusting again so I don't lose too fast.
Same with wine- I measure that out too. 5 ounces of wine looks like 2 oz- not like a full glass like I thought. So I was drinking 20 oz of wine thinking I was being sooooo good with just 2 drinks! It was really FOUR drinks! I was really surprised and try to avoid it completely during week. The drinking thing is still a constant struggle.
Congrats on making healthy changes and sticking with it for 3 weeks! If you aren't doing body measurements, do that so it will motivate you when the scale doesn't move. I also enjoy looking at my nutrition reports to see what nutrients I am hitting.0 -
You asked for advice, so I'm offering.
First, I am 5' 8" and weighed 191 lbs. when I got serious as well... last year! It's taken me a while to lose weight, but it's sooo worth it.
Second, you say you felt sick and fat all the time. If you give up, you'll feel sicker and fatter.
Third, it appears to me as if you're making too many drastic changes at once. Rather than totally cutting out certain foods (that you probably enjoy), just moderate and count your calories. Over time, you'll get use to the moderation, and it won't feel like deprivation, but still continue to count. It's very easy to overestimate how much you're eating.
The first thing I weighted after I got a food scale was cereal. I thought I could "eyeball" a serving. I overestimated by more than twice what it should have been!! That was a real wakeup call for me about weighing and calorie counting.
Fourth, you probably need a day of rest from cardio. Rest is every bit as important as the work itself.
And finally, and most importantly, find what works for you and DON'T GIVE UP!! If giving up is an option for you, you will probably find yourself back here in a few years... heavier and sicker.
Remember this quote when you're feeling weak: "Don't give up what you want most for what you want right now!"
Hang in there!0 -
My diet now consists of eggs, beans, nuts, venison, chicken, vegetables, fruits, and brown rice, sprouted grain bread.0 -
People get really focused on WHAT they eat instead of HOW MUCH they eat.
Log truthfully.
Give it 2 months.
If no change, double-check with your doc.0 -
This is probably an oft-posted subject, but I need help! About 3 weeks ago I decided enough was enough, I felt sick and fat all the time. I am a 30 year old woman, 5'8" and 190lbs. I was eating all day, had a sugar addiction, and was drinking a 6 pack of corona 3 times a week. Also, I was almost completely sedentary, occasional walks. I knew what to do, so I did it!
-Cut down on booze, I have a couple glasses of red wine occ.
-I quit SUGAR! yay!
-Cardio 30 minutes 7 days a week
-Morning yoga and stretches
-Cut out white flour, bread, pasta, all that
My diet now consists of eggs, beans, nuts, venison, chicken, vegetables, fruits, and brown rice, sprouted grain bread.
Totals about 1800 cals. when I know I was eating around 2500 before.
I have completely OVERHAULED my life and I have nothing to show for it.
190 this morning.
I don't want to lose hope, but I feel it coming, "the give up"
ANY advice appreciated!
Do you accurately weigh and measure your food? Do this for two months straight before you make changes again. And I mean, everything solid goes on a digital scale, everything liquid goes in a measuring cup.
Also, progress is S-L-O-W-W-W-W and scale weight fluctuates seemingly on a whim. Find other ways to measure success: what's the tale of the (measuring) tape? How do your clothes fit? Have you taken progress photos? Are you running faster, lifting more weight?
You'll drive yourself to distraction going by just the scale!
Good luck!0 -
Totals about 1800 cals. when I know I was eating around 2500 before.
I have completely OVERHAULED my life and I have nothing to show for it.
I don't really doubt your estimations... but, using words like 'about,' and 'around' when speaking of calories here, doesn't really work. You are going to be told repeatedly, that if you don't weigh everything you eat, you don't really know. A lifestyle change doesn't necessarily equate to less calories in and more calories out than before.
That said..... you do have something to show for it. You have 3 weeks in to a completely overhauled life. You may find you start losing weight, just with the changes you've made... it just may take a few more weeks. Or you may have to make some more adjustments to see progress. But, regardless, you do have something to show for it, although it's not something anyone but you will notice yet. You have started your 'journey.' Giving up would be ridiculous. That would have been like me quitting drinking 20 yrs ago or so, and saying... Jeez, I don't really feel much different after 3 weeks, so *kitten* it, I'm just gonna go back to being a drunk.
Hang in there. Sort through the advice here. Make some adjustments if you think it will help. Just don't quit.
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Weigh and measure your food. If you haven't lost weight in 3 weeks, you're probably eating more calories than you realize.
Or you could simply be a healthy young woman with fluctuating weight due to a normal cycle. Three weeks is not enough. Keep at it. You're in this for the long haul, right OP?0 -
Yes weigh all your solid food , use the barcode scanner in the mobile app...I watch Netflix while walking on my treadmill while at home.....get outside take a walk on a real trail when possible....are your settings correct on your profile?0
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Go see your doctor. He can rule out physical problems, give you a nice ballpark on a goal weight and daily calorie levels, tell you what kind of foods you should and shouldn't be eating and oversee your weight loss journey.
People pus so much time and energy into trying to figure things out, getting different ideas from different places, trying to decide which are right. It's much easier to just go see the one person who knows best.
If you don't like your doctor, get a new one. Go see the doctor and do what he says. That's the best plan.0 -
what did people do before there were scales to weigh and measure food? they still lost weight...im still learning this thing but to be honest in my opinion you don't need scales, exercise equipment and all that other stuff to lose weight. like some have said you can eat whatever you want but in moderation. if youre just starting out you probably wont see the scale move as much. it takes some time. im a very impatient person and I would love to go from 175 to 150 over night but it just doesn't work like that. keep at it. youll be glad you did0
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what did people do before there were scales to weigh and measure food? they still lost weight...
I'm pretty sure they got fatter. You've been paying attention to our obesity stats?0 -
My diet now consists of eggs, beans, nuts, venison, chicken, vegetables, fruits, and brown rice, sprouted grain bread.
To those suggesting muscle gain--this would be minimal, if at all, because you don't gain muscle on a calorie deficit, unless it's newbie gains and you are pretty obese.
OP, you've received good advice about weighing food and logging everything you eat. Also, make sure you choose correct entries from the database because there are many incorrect ones. www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1234699-logging-accurately-step-by-step-guide0 -
In my experience I didn't cut out any food. I just eat food in moderation. Fast food, sugar or not I still eat them. Usually it takes two months for or bodies to adjust to our new healthy routine. So yep. Two months later before I dropped 5 pounds. He he. Anyways, don't lose hope. PATIENCE is the key! So cheer up my friend. You'll get there in no time0
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Okay. 1800 calories seems kind of high unless you didn't enter your settings right. I'm 5'7" at SW 215 my calories were 1690 set at sedentary no exercise. My BMR is around 1548 now. So after losing some I've changed from sedentary no exercise to sedentary with 5x a week 30 minutes. Still at 1610. If I followed MFP no exercise my calories are in the 1420 range. I think you need to check your settings.
Also start weighing your foods and don't forget drinks.0 -
You started exercising which can cause you to retain water. You could well be retaining enough to mask 'real' weight loss. Plus our cycles throw things off re water weight. Give it a couple more weeks as the water weight fluctuations should stabilize.
This is assuming that you are logging accurately and eating at a deficit.0 -
Okay. 1800 calories seems kind of high unless you didn't enter your settings right. I'm 5'7" at SW 215 my calories were 1690 set at sedentary no exercise. My BMR is around 1548 now. So after losing some I've changed from sedentary no exercise to sedentary with 5x a week 30 minutes. Still at 1610. If I followed MFP no exercise my calories are in the 1420 range. I think you need to check your settings.
Also start weighing your foods and don't forget drinks.
1,800 is not high at all based on her stats.0 -
Okay. 1800 calories seems kind of high unless you didn't enter your settings right. I'm 5'7" at SW 215 my calories were 1690 set at sedentary no exercise. My BMR is around 1548 now. So after losing some I've changed from sedentary no exercise to sedentary with 5x a week 30 minutes. Still at 1610. If I followed MFP no exercise my calories are in the 1420 range. I think you need to check your settings.
Also start weighing your foods and don't forget drinks.
1,800 is not high at all based on her stats.
Yep. And IMO Higher is better because you can probably fit in more foods you like, which will greatly help long term compliance to your new lifestyle. Lower numbers usually come from setting up the tool to lose weight in the higher range every week, like 2 lbs a week instead of 1 or even .5 depending on what you feel you can accomplish0 -
Okay. 1800 calories seems kind of high unless you didn't enter your settings right. I'm 5'7" at SW 215 my calories were 1690 set at sedentary no exercise. My BMR is around 1548 now. So after losing some I've changed from sedentary no exercise to sedentary with 5x a week 30 minutes. Still at 1610. If I followed MFP no exercise my calories are in the 1420 range. I think you need to check your settings.
Also start weighing your foods and don't forget drinks.
1,800 is not high at all based on her stats.
Yep. And IMO Higher is better because you can probably fit in more foods you like, which will greatly help long term compliance to your new lifestyle. Lower numbers usually come from setting up the tool to lose weight in the higher range every week, like 2 lbs a week instead of 1 or even .5 depending on what you feel you can accomplish
Oh crap. I just checked my MFP numbers. 1800 *is* .5 lbs a week for a 30 year old 5'8" 190 lb sedentary woman. To lose weight eating 1800 calories you either have to be very precise with your food logging and weighing, and/or exercising to earn more food calories. If you're not weighing your food on a food scale OP, it really may be quite likely that you're wiping out your deficit by consuming too many calories0
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