Juice fasting/very low calorie diet - 18lb loss
Replies
-
LauraDubbleya wrote: »Everyone loses their weight in a way that works for them.
OP, I think if you try to think about weight loss as a long term prospect and not something to do quickly and "get it over with," you'll find you have better, longer-lasting results. A small deficit made up of a variety of foods with balanced macronutrients, accompanied with a reasonable exercise regime, will get you there. Unless you have to be on set for a modeling or movie shoot in 3 weeks, you don't need to rush to get there.
0 -
yopeeps025 wrote: »When I hear juicing i feel get out the blender with real fruits, veggies, and protein powder.
REAL FRUITS?!! With all that poisonous sugar? are you insane?
0 -
trinatrina1984 wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »When I hear juicing i feel get out the blender with real fruits, veggies, and protein powder.
REAL FRUITS?!! With all that poisonous sugar? are you insane?
I have seeing and laugh when people grind up the fruit snack.
0 -
annabellemayh wrote: »annabellemayh wrote: »Hi guys!
I've been unhappy with my body for so long now, and last Easter I did a strict exercise and diet regime for about two weeks. The weight came off and I was really happy. Unfortunately over summer I put that weight back on, about 10lbs, as well as another stone making me 12st 4lbs. Going back to uni in September I took my scales and decided I would lose it. Since the beginning of October I did the 5:2 diet for two weeks and then started a juice fast (two juices and one meal a day) which I have been on for 7 days now. I weighed myself this morning and I've lost 18lbs since the beginning of October.
Is all of this water weight or will I have lost some fat as well? I've been so thrilled and can feel my jeans fitting better however I'm scared it's all just temporary and will come piling back on and worse once I come off the fast in another week.
Any motivation, advice or personal similar stories are much needed to keep me on track! I don't want to juice fast forever but I'm so scared of the weight piling back on!
Annie xxxxxx
I am a registered Cambridge Consultant if I can help with anything? xx
Unsure why I have been reported as spam?!?!
I am currently following MFP and have never mentioned Cambridge diet until someone has asked for information and has voiced there worries over eating again?
That was not me, I have not reported you. I've never heard of the Cambridge diet, what is it?
I think it may have been another user, sorry I was only trying to help.
I understand your worries over putting weight on if you change to eating regular meals per day rather than shakes/meal replacement/juices as many of my clients do.
Eating juiced drinks made by yourself is really good although you do have to think long term.
Remember its what suits you personally best, some things work for others and wont do for yourself. Other people will always have there own opinion.
Cambridge diet is a very low cal diet ranging from 460 to 1500cals
Best of luck in your weight loss
0 -
I started off with a narky response too but i'm gonna have another go…
When you start eating again, you may increase a little in body weight because when you eat carb foods, your body holds more water. Its normal. That said, i expect you would surely have lost some fat but most of the weight gain you see within the first few days of eating normally again, will be water weight and that should happen even if you are eating at a calorie deficit. It would only stay at its current low weight if you stick to a low carb diet.
This year i've done some time on low carb, and 5:2. I would never do a juice fast. I prefer my fruit whole. I would suggest you start straight away with ditching the juices and eating the fruit and vegetables you are currently drinking. Then from that you can transition back to including a few more of anything else that's lacking. Its likely you are not eating sufficient protein. And are probably short on a few other vitamins too because not all vitamins come from fruit and vegetables, ditto minerals. Try to make you diet ultimately on that includes a wide variety of foods but always a lot of fruit and vegetables.
Do not be too overly strict about fats. If most of your fats are something like olive oil then you will do yourself no harm and your diet will probably more sustainable because the food you eat will taste better.
I eat whole fat dairy, a little bit of butter. Not much meat fat because i try to avoid it in general. I eat quite a lot of olive oil but not much other vegetable oil. I am trying other nut oils and use sesame when doing asian food. I also eat oily fish for omega 3 fatty acids.
I have followed a sweets free plan all year. Its great. i love it and i'm doing it for the rest of my life. I do get to eat desserts sometimes but in what i have determined to be very low risk situations. I recommend figuring out something like this for yourself with regard to any foods that you find it difficult to practice self-control. I generally find abstinence much easier than moderation but i have already gone on long enough so won't bother with the detail of my program. But i've just weathered some low mood weeks and if there's one thing that can bring all your best intentions unstuck its low mood and or stress. When i get those situations coming up i get help as soon as i can - in the form of counselling. I usually only need one session with my wonderful psychologist. And it works. Along with my commitment to my sweet free life.0 -
Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?0 -
juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
0 -
Patttience wrote: »I started off with a narky response too but i'm gonna have another go…
When you start eating again, you may increase a little in body weight because when you eat carb foods, your body holds more water. Its normal. That said, i expect you would surely have lost some fat but most of the weight gain you see within the first few days of eating normally again, will be water weight and that should happen even if you are eating at a calorie deficit. It would only stay at its current low weight if you stick to a low carb diet.
This year i've done some time on low carb, and 5:2. I would never do a juice fast. I prefer my fruit whole. I would suggest you start straight away with ditching the juices and eating the fruit and vegetables you are currently drinking. Then from that you can transition back to including a few more of anything else that's lacking. Its likely you are not eating sufficient protein. And are probably short on a few other vitamins too because not all vitamins come from fruit and vegetables, ditto minerals. Try to make you diet ultimately on that includes a wide variety of foods but always a lot of fruit and vegetables.
Do not be too overly strict about fats. If most of your fats are something like olive oil then you will do yourself no harm and your diet will probably more sustainable because the food you eat will taste better.
I eat whole fat dairy, a little bit of butter. Not much meat fat because i try to avoid it in general. I eat quite a lot of olive oil but not much other vegetable oil. I am trying other nut oils and use sesame when doing asian food. I also eat oily fish for omega 3 fatty acids.
I have followed a sweets free plan all year. Its great. i love it and i'm doing it for the rest of my life. I do get to eat desserts sometimes but in what i have determined to be very low risk situations. I recommend figuring out something like this for yourself with regard to any foods that you find it difficult to practice self-control. I generally find abstinence much easier than moderation but i have already gone on long enough so won't bother with the detail of my program. But i've just weathered some low mood weeks and if there's one thing that can bring all your best intentions unstuck its low mood and or stress. When i get those situations coming up i get help as soon as i can - in the form of counselling. I usually only need one session with my wonderful psychologist. And it works. Along with my commitment to my sweet free life.
Thank you for your kind response. I intend to follow a low carb diet for the first month of coming off the juice plan and will be eating a high protein high (good) fat diet with lots of vegetables. I'm also trying to cut out sweets and sugar, after being on the fast for 7 days I find I don't crave them at all which is one positive. The fast was supposed to be a kickstart to inspire my weight loss not a long term plan, I know many people criticise 'jumpstarting' a weight loss however I do feel inspired with my current weight loss and I think the determination to keep it off will help me continue healthily. Thank you for all your advice xxxx
0 -
yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Makes sense...
0 -
yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Personally, I find it a lot easier to stick to my diet when I know I can just open the fridge and juice some fruit and veg as opposed to calorie counting every meal. I just find it easier, if I was at home opposed to university I would probably not juice as I would have more time to plan my shopping etc.0 -
juliemouse83 wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Makes sense...
It can also be just lazy. I get lazy post workout so I also juice that meal and relax.
0 -
OP this is the definition of weight loss insanity ..you did juice fasts/cleanses, lost weight, put it back on, and now you are doing the same thing, and asking how it will turn out. To answer your question you have lost lean muscle, water weight, and probably some fat. When you go off the juice fast you will probably gain about five pounds in water weight/glycogen replenishment...
A more sustainable solution would be to figure out a 500 per day calorie deficit and start a heavy lifting program to retain the muscle that you have not already lost...0 -
yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Makes sense...
It can also be just lazy. I get lazy post workout so I also juice that meal and relax.
I was gonna make a meat shake joke but I can't think of one.0 -
annabellemayh wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Personally, I find it a lot easier to stick to my diet when I know I can just open the fridge and juice some fruit and veg as opposed to calorie counting every meal. I just find it easier, if I was at home opposed to university I would probably not juice as I would have more time to plan my shopping etc.
But you still need to weigh and log the fruit/veggies in your juice. SO it's the same thing.
Unless you're buying prepared juice which I think is stupid. I don't like juicing in general but if you're going to do it, you might as well make it yourself. It's cheaper that way and you have better control on what's in it (not saying sugar content here but in terms of flavors). Plus if there's any leftover fruit/veggie stuck in your juicer/blender/whatever, you can compost it for your garden and grow more fruits/veggies.-2 -
A large amount of what you've lost is likely water weight, along with some fat and lean body mass. To have lost 18lbs of fat in a couple of weeks, you would have had to burn/cut around 63,000 calories more than you've eaten. If you use the generic 2000 calories a day average that people burn per day, that's 28,000 calories. So if you ate NOTHING for two weeks, you'd (again, just using 2000 as an example) burn around 28,000 calories.
Juice fasting is lame and just leads to re-gaining weight. Just do it the correct way. Eat food at a reasonable deficit for your height, weight and activity level.
EDIT: I just realize you said you've been doing this for 7 days, not two weeks. (don't know where I came up with that) So yeah.....sorry, but most of that is not fat.0 -
trinatrina1984 wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Makes sense...
It can also be just lazy. I get lazy post workout so I also juice that meal and relax.
I was gonna make a meat shake joke but I can't think of one.
So it isn't just me, then? Because I was half tempted to add "Gonna throw my chicken in a blender to take it with me..." but decided against it.
0 -
OP this is the definition of weight loss insanity ..you did juice fasts/cleanses, lost weight, put it back on, and now you are doing the same thing, and asking how it will turn out. To answer your question you have lost lean muscle, water weight, and probably some fat. When you go off the juice fast you will probably gain about five pounds in water weight/glycogen replenishment...
A more sustainable solution would be to figure out a 500 per day calorie deficit and start a heavy lifting program to retain the muscle that you have not already lost...
Wat? That is too much work for us busy folks.
0 -
OP, you say you hit carbs hard when you put the weight back on. You have to understand that it wasn't the carbs - juice is actually predominantly simple carbohydrates (try entering a juice of any kind on MFP and look at the info) - but you went back to eating too much, of everything.
I know it is hard, but you need to start logging foods. If you want to drink juice, fine, just enter it on MFP along with the solid foods you are eating. Then transition to more of the solid foods, the ones that you see yourself eating 20 years from now. If you keep it at a deficit (-15-20%) you won't gain the weight back and continue losing (although you know you'll "gain" some water weight in the first week). Learn portion control. You'll have an easier time maintaining your ideal weight if you know how much to eat of the foods you love.0 -
You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.0 -
OP I don't fast or participate in juicing but I must say kudos to you for staying positive and kind during this thread and its responses. I wish you much success during your weight loss journey.0
-
yopeeps025 wrote: »OP this is the definition of weight loss insanity ..you did juice fasts/cleanses, lost weight, put it back on, and now you are doing the same thing, and asking how it will turn out. To answer your question you have lost lean muscle, water weight, and probably some fat. When you go off the juice fast you will probably gain about five pounds in water weight/glycogen replenishment...
A more sustainable solution would be to figure out a 500 per day calorie deficit and start a heavy lifting program to retain the muscle that you have not already lost...
Wat? That is too much work for us busy folks.
oh how stupid of me ..I forget the reasonable calorie deficit and exercise is too much hard work, as opposed to daily juicing and cleanses, which are simple and magical...LOL-1 -
annabellemayh wrote: »yopeeps025 wrote: »juliemouse83 wrote: »Just out of curiosity, OP, if you are consuming 1200 calories per day, why would you choose juice 2x daily + 1 healthy meal over 3 healthy meals for the same 1200 calories?
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm just curious. I would much rather have ample amounts of protein, fats & carbs for my daily calorie allowance than liquid, but that's just me. What would juice x2 daily do for you that food won't?
Let you drink on the go so OP can stay active.
Personally, I find it a lot easier to stick to my diet when I know I can just open the fridge and juice some fruit and veg as opposed to calorie counting every meal. I just find it easier, if I was at home opposed to university I would probably not juice as I would have more time to plan my shopping etc.
But you still need to weigh and log the fruit/veggies in your juice. SO it's the same thing.
Unless you're buying prepared juice which I think is stupid. I don't like juicing in general but if you're going to do it, you might as well make it yourself. It's cheaper that way and you have better control on what's in it (not saying sugar content here but in terms of flavors). Plus if there's any leftover fruit/veggie stuck in your juicer/blender/whatever, you can compost it for your garden and grow more fruits/veggies.
I am juicing it myself I just find it easier to buy the vegetables and fruits I need for the week and know that they are there ready whereas with meals I find more things end up going to waste or don't get used etc I just find it's working for me0 -
MyaPapaya75 wrote: »OP I don't fast or participate in juicing but I must say kudos to you for staying positive and kind during this thread and its responses. I wish you much success during your weight loss journey.
Thank you very much, it's really kind of you to say so!
0 -
britishbroccoli wrote: »You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.
Hi thank you for your advice I'm 5'6, 19 years old and currently 154lbs so I am within my healthy weight range however I personally feel unhappy with my weight. I have lost 18lbs since returning to university and have been here 6 weeks, the 1st October was when I started actively dieting and exercising I may well have lost more before this date simply through eating less than usual.
I intend to follow a low carb high protein diet after coming off the fast with plenty of exercise I hope to maintain/rebuild any muscle lost.
Thank you
0 -
I_Will_End_You wrote: »A large amount of what you've lost is likely water weight, along with some fat and lean body mass. To have lost 18lbs of fat in a couple of weeks, you would have had to burn/cut around 63,000 calories more than you've eaten. If you use the generic 2000 calories a day average that people burn per day, that's 28,000 calories. So if you ate NOTHING for two weeks, you'd (again, just using 2000 as an example) burn around 28,000 calories.
Juice fasting is lame and just leads to re-gaining weight. Just do it the correct way. Eat food at a reasonable deficit for your height, weight and activity level.
EDIT: I just realize you said you've been doing this for 7 days, not two weeks. (don't know where I came up with that) So yeah.....sorry, but most of that is not fat.
I have lost 18lbs since returning to university which is 6 weeks ago now, 1st October was when I actively started dieting but I do think most of the weight has come off the past two weeks. My body is slimmer and that is giving me the motivation to pursue a healthy eating plan once I come off of the juice fast where hopefully I can keep the weight off and maintain muscle through high protein and exercise Thanks for your estimates that's really helpful!
0 -
annabellemayh wrote: »britishbroccoli wrote: »You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.
Hi thank you for your advice I'm 5'6, 19 years old and currently 154lbs so I am within my healthy weight range however I personally feel unhappy with my weight. I have lost 18lbs since returning to university and have been here 6 weeks, the 1st October was when I started actively dieting and exercising I may well have lost more before this date simply through eating less than usual.
I intend to follow a low carb high protein diet after coming off the fast with plenty of exercise I hope to maintain/rebuild any muscle lost.
Thank you
Okay... this was what I was looking for right here. You are within range of a healthy BMI. You do not need to do rapid weight loss or VLCD's to get results. It is a dangerous game to play for individuals who are not morbidly obese.
It doesn't really matter if you want to fast or juice so long as you are getting a sufficient amount of calories to sustain your body's needs. Based on this TDEE calculator (http://thefastdiet.co.uk/how-many-calories-on-a-non-fast-day/) that is designed for the 5:2 fast, you should be eating at least 1490 calories on non-fast days just to meet your body's caloric needs. Honestly, I would suggest eating around 1600 calories a day. You should still be well enough below your TDEE to successfully lose weight without causing damage to your body's organs.
* I used the "lightly active" activity level to make this determination.
0 -
I was doing a similar type fast for religious reasons and did lose a lot of weight but when I stopped (at my husbands request, because I was not thinking well), most of it was gained back. My REAL success has been sticking with the amount MFP set for me. Sometimes I have gone over from having a big meal or take out; but the weight is coming off and staying off. I think your real success will be when you eat consistently and are not restricting yourself. You also look too young to have your daily allowance set for 1200. You're setting yourself up for failure. I know for me the only thing that would have kept that weight off (that I lost when doing intermittent fasting) would be to keep doing the same, which is not practical for a healthy well being. I wish you success and great health. Take care.0
-
annabellemayh wrote: »britishbroccoli wrote: »You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.
Hi thank you for your advice I'm 5'6, 19 years old and currently 154lbs so I am within my healthy weight range however I personally feel unhappy with my weight. I have lost 18lbs since returning to university and have been here 6 weeks, the 1st October was when I started actively dieting and exercising I may well have lost more before this date simply through eating less than usual.
I intend to follow a low carb high protein diet after coming off the fast with plenty of exercise I hope to maintain/rebuild any muscle lost.
Thank you
My emphasis. Given the portion I highlighted, you might consider speaking to a counselor about body image and body dysmorphia; many universities have folks on staff who are well-versed in helping people with body-image issues.0 -
UsedToBeHusky wrote: »annabellemayh wrote: »britishbroccoli wrote: »You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.
Hi thank you for your advice I'm 5'6, 19 years old and currently 154lbs so I am within my healthy weight range however I personally feel unhappy with my weight. I have lost 18lbs since returning to university and have been here 6 weeks, the 1st October was when I started actively dieting and exercising I may well have lost more before this date simply through eating less than usual.
I intend to follow a low carb high protein diet after coming off the fast with plenty of exercise I hope to maintain/rebuild any muscle lost.
Thank you
Okay... this was what I was looking for right here. You are within range of a healthy BMI. You do not need to do rapid weight loss or VLCD's to get results. It is a dangerous game to play for individuals who are not morbidly obese.
It doesn't really matter if you want to fast or juice so long as you are getting a sufficient amount of calories to sustain your body's needs. Based on this TDEE calculator (http://thefastdiet.co.uk/how-many-calories-on-a-non-fast-day/) that is designed for the 5:2 fast, you should be eating at least 1490 calories on non-fast days just to meet your body's caloric needs. Honestly, I would suggest eating around 1600 calories a day. You should still be well enough below your TDEE to successfully lose weight without causing damage to your body's organs.
* I used the "lightly active" activity level to make this determination.
Thank you very much for your help, I will certainly follow my TDEE once I am off the fast. So you are aware however, I was not in the healthy weight range for my height before I lost the 18lbs, I was classed as 'overweight'. That is why I am keen to keep this weight off once I come off the fast, so I can continue my weight loss more slowly and healthily. The 18lbs may well have come off because I was overweight and had been eating a very high carb diet so was probably retaining a lot of water!
0 -
RllyGudTweetr wrote: »annabellemayh wrote: »britishbroccoli wrote: »You lost 18 lbs in 3 weeks. Of that 18, I am guessing you lost:
6-12 lbs water weight. Of this, you will all or most of this back when you go back to eating the way you did before
3-6 lbs muscle, organ tissue, etc. Of this, you will gain very little back when you start eating normally. However, you will gain more fat because your body won't be able to burn as much as it could before you went on a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD). You will also look worse than you did before because muscle is more dense. 1 lb of muscle takes up way less space than 1 lb of fat.
2-6 lbs of fat. Again, you will gain this back when you go back to your old eating. You will gain it more rapidly because you will have lost muscle density.
I provided a range because, without your before-and-after stats (body fat %, height, weight, goal weight) it's hard to get very accurate.
I do not know how much you burn during your exercises 2-3 times a week. Whatever you are burning is subtracted from the 1,200 calories you are eating. Unless you are exceptionally short and already in the normal weight range, most women should not net below 1,200 calories a day. Below that and you're going to be losing muscle, bone density, hair, fingernails. If you're even burning 100 calories in your 2-3X workouts, you're netting 900-1000 calories a day.
You cannot maintain your muscles at that big a deficit.
I've lost 51 lbs by netting 1400-1550 per day, average. Most days I work out a little bit so that I can eat around 1600-1700 calories. In the first 3 months or so I was 30 lbs down.
Hi thank you for your advice I'm 5'6, 19 years old and currently 154lbs so I am within my healthy weight range however I personally feel unhappy with my weight. I have lost 18lbs since returning to university and have been here 6 weeks, the 1st October was when I started actively dieting and exercising I may well have lost more before this date simply through eating less than usual.
I intend to follow a low carb high protein diet after coming off the fast with plenty of exercise I hope to maintain/rebuild any muscle lost.
Thank you
My emphasis. Given the portion I highlighted, you might consider speaking to a counselor about body image and body dysmorphia; many universities have folks on staff who are well-versed in helping people with body-image issues.
Thank you for your advice. For the most part I am happy with my image however with the weight I have gained over the past three years I have become increasingly introverted, lacking confidence and not the girl I used to be at 10st. I feel uncomfortable in clothes. I am not a skinny girl by any means despite being in my healthy weight range.
Thank you for your help however1
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K 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
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions