Frustrated and want to cry

Lifetimestruggle
Lifetimestruggle Posts: 9 Member
edited November 10 in Motivation and Support
I started a very strict diet on 10/17/14 and I DO NOT cheat and my calories never go over 1000 a day. Yes I know it is low but it works for me. I do not log everyday and my profile is private. I eliminated all soda, fried foods, and junk food. I only eat baked meats and fresh veggies and I drink 80 oz of water a day. I go to the gym 5+ days a week, 2 days Zumba and do incline treadmill and weights. I have dropped 5 inches off my waist and I am down 23 pounds. I am very happy about that but what is sooo frustrating is I am busting my butt and the other two people are not putting in any effort at all and have dropped 40 for one and 34 for the other. I just needed to vent because I feel like crying. I know I should not compare myself to other people but I have just really felt really down and is all this effort doing any good. Should I not exercise? Since beginning a fitness routine my weight loss has significantly slowed. What am I doing wrong?

Replies

  • 52cardpickup
    52cardpickup Posts: 379 Member
    1) Comparing yourself to others.
    2) Not eating enough.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,984 Member
    Undereating significantly slows your metabolic rate. The body will compensate by reducing how much your burn. You burn most of your body fat at rest and NOT when you're exercising.
    And I agree with above poster.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png
  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    I'd want to cry, too, if I was only eating only 1000 calories a day.

    I'd want to cry, too, if I was comparing myself to other people.

    Read this: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1080242/a-guide-to-get-you-started-on-your-path-to-sexypants#latest
  • Lifetimestruggle
    Lifetimestruggle Posts: 9 Member
    I know I should not compare and I try not to, but for some reason today it really got to me. I tried upping my calories and I gained weight. I have been at the same weight now for a month.
  • Anaryne26
    Anaryne26 Posts: 23 Member
    edited January 2015
    First, congratulations of what you've lost so far! That's quite an accomplishment. 23 pounds in 3 months is a nice rate of weight loss.

    To address your concerns, 1000 calories a day is too low, to begin with. When you don't eat enough calories, your BMR will slow down.....which, in turn, will slow your weight loss down. At such low calorie intake, your body thinks it's starving, and will do all it can to conserve fuel for survival.

    Are you factoring in the calories you burn at the gym into your total calorie limit? Whatever you set your calorie/day limit at, if you're burning calories at the gym, you need to eat them back. At such a low limit already, if you're not eating back whatever you burn at the gym, you are really not eating enough calories, and once again, slowing your BMR down.

    People also lose weight differently, depending on their starting weight, BMR and other factors. So please don't take it personally if someone loses weight differently than you do....everyone does. :)

    Some suggestions for you: I'm not sure if you're male or female, or what your weight loss goals are, but I'd really look at putting your calorie/day goal at at least 1200 calories/day. I honestly think this plays a big role in what you're experiencing with your weight loss right now. Make sure to eat back those calories you burn at the gym....your body will thank you! If your body doesn't feel like it's starving, your BMR will stay higher, and you'll burn more calories, even when just sitting. Also, if you're doing the same workout everyday, your body can get used to it, and you'll burn less calories. Try switching up your workout routine to keep things fresh.

    I'm sure others will chime in with more suggestions for you. Don't get discouraged though; you're doing great!
  • LeanButNotMean44
    LeanButNotMean44 Posts: 852 Member
    I started a very strict diet on 10/17/14 and I DO NOT cheat and my calories never go over 1000 a day. Yes I know it is low but it works for me. I do not log everyday and my profile is private. I eliminated all soda, fried foods, and junk food. I only eat baked meats and fresh veggies and I drink 80 oz of water a day. I go to the gym 5+ days a week, 2 days Zumba and do incline treadmill and weights. I have dropped 5 inches off my waist and I am down 23 pounds. I am very happy about that but what is sooo frustrating is I am busting my butt and the other two people are not putting in any effort at all and have dropped 40 for one and 34 for the other. I just needed to vent because I feel like crying. I know I should not compare myself to other people but I have just really felt really down and is all this effort doing any good. Should I not exercise? Since beginning a fitness routine my weight loss has significantly slowed. What am I doing wrong?

    If what you are doing was working for you, I don't think you'd have posted this. :|

    Looking at your diary, I see a majority of unlogged days, days of WAY less than 1000 cals, and a few "Quick Add" calories.

    You have to be willing to put in the work to see results. This is not something one can half-*kitten* and still see success. Weigh and log EVERY morsel of food and make sure you are getting at least 1200 cals per day (might need more, but don't know your stats), keep up the exercise, and I promise you will see results.


  • daisyls85
    daisyls85 Posts: 63 Member
    I agree you should be eating at least 1200. As far as your friends loss, what were their starting stats? People who have more to lose will lose quicker at first.
  • Espressocycle
    Espressocycle Posts: 2,245 Member
    I don't know who the other two people are, but the more you have to lose, the easier it is to lose. You should be looking at percentage of excess pounds lost. If you have 50 to lose and someone else has 100, your five pound loss is better than their 9 pound loss.
  • SueInAz
    SueInAz Posts: 6,592 Member
    daisyls85 wrote: »
    I agree you should be eating at least 1200. As far as your friends loss, what were their starting stats? People who have more to lose will lose quicker at first.
    This. If you're going to go about comparing yourself to others (not a good idea but hard to stop doing, I know) you need to look at the percentage of original body weight lost, not simply pounds. Also if the people you're comparing yourself to are men, then you're only setting yourself up for disappointment anyway. Men usually outmass us and their bodies are just different. They always seem to be able to lose weight more easily.
  • PRMinx
    PRMinx Posts: 4,585 Member
    Just back in to say, in addition to what everyone else is saying, the problem with comparing yourself to others is that you just don't have the same body shape, bone structure, etc.

    There are girls on here who are 5'4 and weigh 115. And they look great! But, they have a different structure.

    If I tried to do that, I'd 1) be miserable because I'd be starving myself and 2) look sick.

    So I shoot to maintain at 135.

    Set your own goals for you and you alone. Tune out the rest.
  • Lifetimestruggle
    Lifetimestruggle Posts: 9 Member
    One is smaller than and the other is larger than me. I really do try and not compare but it is so hard! Especially when they come into to my office bragging! :( I still have 60 pounds to lose so I have a lot to go. I think I am just having my own pity party today! LOL... First time that I have really been down in the past few months. I have grown to love the gym and love that my body looks better (toned). Thanks for the advice everyone I really appreciate it.
  • bowlerae
    bowlerae Posts: 555 Member
    Anaryne26 wrote: »
    First, congratulations of what you've lost so far! That's quite an accomplishment. 23 pounds in 3 months is a nice rate of weight loss.

    To address your concerns, 1000 calories a day is too low, to begin with. When you don't eat enough calories, your BMR will slow down.....which, in turn, will slow your weight loss down. At such low calorie intake, your body thinks it's starving, and will do all it can to conserve fuel for survival.

    Are you factoring in the calories you burn at the gym into your total calorie limit? Whatever you set your calorie/day limit at, if you're burning calories at the gym, you need to eat them back. At such a low limit already, if you're not eating back whatever you burn at the gym, you are really not eating enough calories, and once again, slowing your BMR down.

    People also lose weight differently, depending on their starting weight, BMR and other factors. So please don't take it personally if someone loses weight differently than you do....everyone does. :)

    Some suggestions for you: I'm not sure if you're male or female, or what your weight loss goals are, but I'd really look at putting your calorie/day goal at at least 1200 calories/day. I honestly think this plays a big role in what you're experiencing with your weight loss right now. Make sure to eat back those calories you burn at the gym....your body will thank you! If your body doesn't feel like it's starving, your BMR will stay higher, and you'll burn more calories, even when just sitting. Also, if you're doing the same workout everyday, your body can get used to it, and you'll burn less calories. Try switching up your workout routine to keep things fresh.

    I'm sure others will chime in with more suggestions for you. Don't get discouraged though; you're doing great!

    ALL of this...I was in the same boat several months ago. I started a strict diet eating about 1,000 calories and working out though I tried to eat those exercise calories back. I was losing but it was torture. I bumped it up to 1,200 and then 1,500 and started gaining weight. There is no way I should gain at eating 1,500 calories when I logged/weighed everything I ate spot on. I think my body got used to eating such low calories that my BMR adjusted so by the time I increased my intake my body had already gotten used to "preserving" fuel aka not burning calories as fast.

    1.) You definitely need to eat more, I'd recommend 1,200-1,600 but you really need to use a TDEE/BMR/IIFYM calculator to determine what number is best for you and your goals. Even using the MFP calculator is fine.

    2.) Increasing your calorie intake may show an increase in scale weight at first but it is likely water retention from eating more carbs/sodium than you are used to. Plus if your BMR has dropped from eating such few calories then your weight could increase temporarily (but not drastically) because of that as well. Give yourself a few weeks for yourself to adjust.
  • VeryKatie
    VeryKatie Posts: 5,961 Member
    Hmmm I'm not going to comment on the rest, but you can't compare your pound to their pound. I'm sure you are all different heights and starting weights. Find out what their starting weight was, take pounds lost and divide by starting weight. Compare the percentages and see how that goes. And then stop comparing because it doesn't matter.
  • girlwithcurls2
    girlwithcurls2 Posts: 2,281 Member
    There is some good, healthy advice here. Try not to think of this as a "lifetimestruggle," but rather a lifetime of good health. Who knows where your friends will be in 6 months or a year. It doesn't matter. Maybe they're not taking the weight off in a healthy, sustainable way. Focus on you. You can decide where you want to be in the next 3, 6 and 12 months. The sooner you train yourself to just worry about you, the better. Your moniker implies that you are going to be "struggling" with this forever. That doesn't sound like a fun way to spend the rest of your life. Find new habits. Find fun things to do. Find new friends if you need to...
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    My weight loss slowed when I added exercise so I sat down to have a good think about it. I started on this plan to lose weight because I wanted my energy, my mobility back. I get these benefits from exercise! So I decided even if it takes me longer, I was not willing to give up the benefits from exercise now.

    For some reason recently my weight loss sped up again. And I have more energy and mobility to enjoy my lighter self.

    I'd hate for you to make rash choices (drop exercise, super-reduce food intake) from a single blip on the scale.
  • Lezavargas
    Lezavargas Posts: 223 Member
    Interesting video you might enjoy. If your not into the sciency stuff just watch the last 30. Talks about why we cant lose weight and that exercise isnt the answer to weight loss.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ceFyF9px20Y
  • cebreisch
    cebreisch Posts: 1,340 Member

    First things first:
    • If you're not logging every day, that's a problem. How do you know if you're not going over 1000 calories if you don't log your food?
    • If you're comparing yourself to others progress, it's a problem. You aren't them, and they aren't you. It is a certainty that there are struggles in their life, just as you have struggles in yours....you just don't know what their struggles are.
    • It is certain that if you're not logging your food, you don't know how much you're really eating, and if you're really doing all that exercise, you probably need to be eating more than 1000 calories.
    • If what you're doing is making you want to cry, you need to make some changes. Whatever you're doing has to be livable for you, and if you're crying and frustrated by other's progress, it's not working for you.

    My apologies if I'm being overly direct. It really is out of concern. If I was crying and upset, the last thing I'd want to do was watch what I ate, log it all, and go work out. (Obviously since I'm obese...) But I didn't lose 77 pounds by doing things that made me want to cry out of frustration.

    Talk to them and find out things they're doing that are helpful to them. There may be something that you can adapt to use to help make your journey less stressful. There are things that they're doing you will like, and things you won't. Use those things that you can to help you on your path.

    My suggestions:
    • log everything from food to activity
    • Keep up with the high quality foods, and make sure you're getting enough protein and fiber
    • keep drinking the water
    • keep working out
    • Look for opportunities to change up your routine in ways that are helpful. Anything that's not helping can go to the curb (at least for now).
    • Find ways to be able to de-stress.



  • NikiChicken
    NikiChicken Posts: 576 Member
    1) Comparing yourself to others.
    2) Not eating enough.

    Yes, yes and YES!

    1. Never, ever, ever, ever compare yourself to others. It only undermines yourself. You have no idea what they are actually doing and every body is different. What works for them may or may not work for you and what works for you may or may not work for them. Quit comparing yourself to others!

    2. To be sustain your weight loss, you have to be willing to do what you are doing for the rest of your life. Are you willing to exercise and eat the way you are now for the rest of your life? it sounds pretty miserable and absolutely unsustainable to me...

  • killerqueen21
    killerqueen21 Posts: 157 Member
    edited January 2015
    I started a very strict diet on 10/17/14 and I DO NOT cheat and my calories never go over 1000 a day. Yes I know it is low but it works for me. I do not log everyday and my profile is private. I eliminated all soda, fried foods, and junk food. I only eat baked meats and fresh veggies and I drink 80 oz of water a day. I go to the gym 5+ days a week, 2 days Zumba and do incline treadmill and weights. I have dropped 5 inches off my waist and I am down 23 pounds. I am very happy about that but what is sooo frustrating is I am busting my butt and the other two people are not putting in any effort at all and have dropped 40 for one and 34 for the other. I just needed to vent because I feel like crying. I know I should not compare myself to other people but I have just really felt really down and is all this effort doing any good. Should I not exercise? Since beginning a fitness routine my weight loss has significantly slowed. What am I doing wrong?

    Huh? Clearly that is not working for you. You need to reset. If those other individuals are bigger than you then they'll lose more weight. Do you even know what they're doing really? They may be starving themselves. You don't know that. Mind your own business, and I say that in a positive way.

    Comparison is the thief of joy. Eat more. Be patient. Keep going.
  • _FATNSASSY
    _FATNSASSY Posts: 107 Member
    The only person you should compare yourself to is YOU...yesterday... last week... etc
  • kellycasey5
    kellycasey5 Posts: 486 Member
    I have dropped 5 inches off my waist and I am down 23 pounds. I am very happy about that but what is sooo frustrating is I am busting my butt and the other two people are not putting in any effort at all and have dropped 40 for one and 34 for the other. I just needed to vent because I feel like crying. I know I should not compare myself to other people but I have just really felt really down and is all this effort doing any good.

    This might sound a bit harsh, but I have the best intentions for you and your success. So prepare yourself for a kick in the pants. This involves taking a long hard look at yourself and the situation you have presented here. I'll go bad cop. Others, oh well. Somebody was bound to try the approach. Today it was me.

    Hmmmm...so you've lost 23 pounds in 3 months and are happy, but aren't sure all of the effort is doing good. Which one is it? Or is "happy" and "doing good" two very different things in terms of your success and goals? What is "doing good" to you? These are goal related questions that only you can answer to yourself. If you decide the effort isn't worth it, stop. Only you can decide that. But remember that without these efforts you found yourself at a point where you decided to make a change. Why did you make the changes you did? That is for you to answer, to yourself. Then decide if all of your effort is "doing good" compared to the reason you started eating well and exercising. If it isn't, it may be time to re-evaluate your goals or perhaps make them more realistic, and adjust accordingly. You may benefit from seeing a registered dietician. That will me by suggestion on the calories and closed food log along with your activity and frustration with your progress and considering dropping exercise.

    I will also point out the EXTREMELY OBVIOUS: losing 8 pounds each week and only eating 1000 calories a day is not realistic for long term. That is my opinion, and I own it. If it works as well as you claim, great. If that is your reality, okay....but you won't lose 8 pounds every week. Try it, but you won't. I PROMISE, in the long run, you won't. But you are in your reality, and you can see how it is working for you. By all means, if exercising and eating like this is working for you, AWESOME. If you want to keep it up, SUPER. If not logging is your thing, OWN IT. I believe if it was "working for you" you wouldn't be frustrated and crying. That doesn't sound like working. But what works for you obviously has nothing to do with me.

    What works for me also doesn't involve two other people and whatever their goals are. What works for me only involves me. Again, it is your choice. I prefer to have friends for motivation and support. Support works for me. I understand others can be competitive. If that is more your thing, ok by me. If you choose to compete with these other 2 people, GREAT. You can also choose not to compete. Gosh aren't choice wonderful? If that competition is what you need to get up and go each day, TRUCK ON! Just understand that in every competition there is a winner and a loser (at least for cutthroat competitive types). In this case, you have negated your loss of 23 pounds and focused on their success in a negative way, and accused them of not putting in any effort at all. I am not sure if that makes you a poor loser to them, or a poor winner to yourself. Possible both. Either way, yuck. If you can't be proud of yourself, you could try to be proud of them.

    You are crying because other people lost weight? That they lost MORE weight than you? Or that you think you are working harder than them? I believe that is really the issue here, but I could be wrong. Other people gain and lose weight, and it has nothing to do with you. How hard you work has to do with you, and only you. Nobody can make you, and at the end of the day it is your responsibility. How hard THEY are working has to do with them, the work THEY put in, and only them. I also would hazard a guess if they really have lost 40 pounds and 34 pounds each in 3 months they ARE putting in an effort and have changed something. If they really weren't putting in any effort at all to lose weight or be more active or make changes in their lives they would not have lost so much weight. I am not saying what you did or what they did was healthy, as there are many ways to lose extreme weight quickly and I disagree with most of them.

    So maybe you are working harder than them. So maybe they really are working harding than you. SO WHAT???? Hard work is just that: hard work. Do it, don't do it, do it and complain about it, don't do it but don't complain, heck complain about others not doing it when they said they would, but to complain about the success of others??? Seems pretty low to me. I think it may be time to get over yourself and take a reality check. You have been successful. You are making healthier eating choices. You are exercising regularly. Seriously did you expect it to be easy? Results like yours take hard work. I am guessing their results also took a great deal of work. Busting your butt is your choice. Whether or not they bust their butts is their choice. If it is too hard, or making you unhappy, back off. If you just need more encouragement and support, find it here! Meeting your goals and making healthy lifestyle changes should make you feel good. If it doesn't, it is time to look inside yourself and see what gives.


    Should you not exercise...hmmm...yep you guessed it. Should you not exercise? Answer it. Should you work on being kind to yourself: absolutely, I'd say you should have started this yesterday, but get to it today. See the big picture here: you are well on your way in an exciting journey to succeed at your goals. Give yourself the chance to be successful! Set yourself up for successs! Support others as they struggle along. Work on being happy, today, right now, with who you are. You may be happy with the 23 pound loss, but clearly you are not happy overall since you say you feel really really down. Do not tie your happiness to your weight. Do something to cheer yourself up! Find people that support you. Surround yourself with the people that you love. Fix things in your life that need fixing. You already know what you are doing wrong, and have built in a defense right at the beginning of your post. See if you can see it. See if you feel like making changes to your approach. I'm getting off of my soapbox because my workout is calling. I wish you luck on your journey :)
  • 999tigger
    999tigger Posts: 5,235 Member
    I started a very strict diet on 10/17/14 and I DO NOT cheat and my calories never go over 1000 a day. Yes I know it is low but it works for me. I do not log everyday and my profile is private. I eliminated all soda, fried foods, and junk food. I only eat baked meats and fresh veggies and I drink 80 oz of water a day. I go to the gym 5+ days a week, 2 days Zumba and do incline treadmill and weights. I have dropped 5 inches off my waist and I am down 23 pounds. I am very happy about that but what is sooo frustrating is I am busting my butt and the other two people are not putting in any effort at all and have dropped 40 for one and 34 for the other. I just needed to vent because I feel like crying. I know I should not compare myself to other people but I have just really felt really down and is all this effort doing any good. Should I not exercise? Since beginning a fitness routine my weight loss has significantly slowed. What am I doing wrong?

    1. Sub 1200 calories generally you shouldnt do without medical supervision. Thats why MFP wont let you go below that without warnings.
    2. Yay for being very strict, it will also mean your plan is very brittle and inflexible.
    3. Yay for not logging every day, the single most importnat tool of MFP.
    4. Just seen your diary, its very poor and tbh eating as low as 500 calories screams eating disorder and dieting in a very unhealthy way.
    5. Comparing yourself to others is flawed in the way you do it.
    6. Cant say further as no idea of age, weight height target weight.

    What are you doing wrong? Too extreme, lack of understanding about nutrution, poor logging, ladds of other stuff. Its good you are exercising and that you have moderated some foods, but it seems you havent read what MFP tells you about a safe healthy diet and a lifestyle change, but gone too extreme and dont have the mindset to cope with it.

    I would reassess what and how you are doing things. being too hard on yourself, seems like a bad idea, when other people have a healthier approach, get less stressed and lose the same amount.
  • I didn't thoroughly read through every single response, but I don't think anyone has brought this up yet...
    One of the reasons your weight loss may be slowing now is because you're going to the gym more and building muscle. Muscle is much more dense and heavier than fat.

    The scale can be deceiving and as a few have said, I would recommend focusing on body composition. One of the easiest ways to do this by yourself is to log your waist measurement on a regular basis - maybe weekly or biweekly depending on how much you have to lose.

    I know for myself sometimes I find the scale discouraging, especially when I got to the point that you seem to be at right now when you're working the hardest but getting the least pay off on the scale. When I get frustrated I just remember that I'm gaining muscle and I like what I'm doing so if I lose some more fat then that's just a nice side-effect of my active lifestyle.

    Which brings me to my next point...
    One other thing I would like you to think about is that not all the work you are doing is for nothing. What you are doing now is maintaining all the weight loss progress you made. So it's a good thing.

    What might be a bad thing is if you are not enjoying it.

    To make it a life-long change, you gotta love what you're doing. I don't know you but I don't think you just want to lose weight, I think you want to feel good in your body and feel happy on a daily basis and be pleased with your reflection in the mirror. If exercising and eating right is becoming solely a means to an end (to lose weight), then even if you do make it last a lifetime you will always be frustrated and want to cry for the rest of your life.



    Do not stop exercising. But maybe if you don't really enjoy the gym that much then try to find something you'll love to do just for the hell of it. Instead of "working out" maybe you can learn to kick box or swim or cross country ski.

    I say this out of love: I think it would be good for you to loosen up a little. It's kinda like when you're watching the clock at the end of the work day...time goes by soooo slow! Instead, take your eyes off the scale and try to enjoy the ride for a bit. Don't worry about weight loss for a while and try to focus on developing a healthy lifestyle that you LOVE.

    Those are just my two cents, I hope you could take something from it!
    Cheers.
  • tempehforever
    tempehforever Posts: 183 Member
    I have no idea what any of my friends or family weigh, or how much weigh they do or don't lose. It sounds like this kind of talk is making you feel bad, so I'd just stop discussing weight loss with others, or at least so specifically.
This discussion has been closed.