Advice for getting over a plateau
s9foster
Posts: 25 Member
What are some things that have helped you break through a plateau when your weight, body fat percentage, and/or measurements are stuck?
0
Replies
-
How long has it lasted?0
-
Make sure I'm weighing my solid food, measuring cups for liquids. If I'm eating back exercise calories, make sure I'm not overestimating. Make sure these things are in check and don't worry unless it has been several weeks without loss because weight fluctuates up and down 2-3bs from one day to the next and up 5 from morning to night. Water retention from exercise can also temporarily mask loss as well as excess sodium, time of month, excess cortisol from stress/lack of sleep. I make sure I'm getting ample rest at night and days I don't do heavy exercise. Patience0
-
0
-
The lower you go the harder it gets to lose weight; as you lose more weight you might have to start (if your not already) weighing your food. What gets us by when we weigh more is enough to keep us at a stale mate further on down the line.0
-
If it's a true stall and not just me being impatient, it means I've gotten lazy somewhere, and there's creep. I need to go back to being strict with myself about weighing and measuring everything and logging it accurately.
To get it to stick, I usually take a day 'off' and eat at or near maintenance calories before diving back in and strictly measuring everything again. I find that helps reset the mental process for me.0 -
Everything has been stalled for about 3 months.0
-
If it's been 3 months you're eating at maintenance. Eat less and/or move more.0
-
I_Will_End_You wrote: »If it's been 3 months you're eating at maintenance. Eat less and/or move more.
0 -
Either your logging or your exercise burn, or both, are out ...refocus on these ...weigh and log accurately and with care ,.half your exercise calories
0 -
First I would make sure that my calorie goal is correct. It should be adjusted every 10 pounds. Sometimes people get a notification to adjust it, sometimes they don't. The last time I helped someone with a stall they found out they were eating over 200 calories more than they should have because they had not adjusted their goal since they started.
I would also ask other members to take a look at my food and exercise diary. Sometimes a extra set of eyes or two can see inaccuracies that you might not be able to see yourself.0 -
What are your stats and can you open your diary?0
-
5'8, 148 lbs, 23% body fat, 5 workouts a week- crossfit or circuits. I have a clean eating group so we track calories and protein intake there instead. Roughly 1800-1900 calories a day. A couple planned cheat meals a week and a few alcohol beverages that are included in that 1800-1900 average.0
-
When was your last diet break?0
-
I don't really consider it a diet just a lifestyle change. Been eating clean for a year or so pretty well. Couple cheats meals a week.0
-
Do you think your cheat meals could be hindering your progress? Why not log them and see? I found days I let myself go, I can easily hit 3k without thinking. And if you're limiting your food choices and only eating those foods you love on "cheats", I'd be bold enough to say it'd be a day eating up a deficit.
You also say "roughly " that many calories. Do you know 100%? I realize even in logging the best it won't ever be 100 but that statement stuck out to me.0 -
Good advice. We track calories off and on and yes I noticed if you have a cheat meal and beverages one night you may ruin your progress for the week. Thanks.0
-
do you weigh all your solid foods with a food scale?0
-
If I am food prepping and making food... yes. If I get a chicken taco salad somewhere with no shell or dressing, the meat, cheese, and veggies are a guess.0
-
You are actually the lowest weight you should be for your height anyway so I wouldnt worry! For 5ft8 between 10 stone 5lbs and 12 stone 1lb is within a healthy bmi x0
-
Thanks guys. 20 percent body fat and getting stronger is my goal. Inches lost would help to motivate also. The scale... it lies. I guess that doesn't bother me. Maybe I just need patience.0
-
Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.0
-
My personal trainer. She said I need fuel for performance in workouts. Push harder, lift more, and you burn more calories0
-
JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.0 -
My personal trainer. She said I need fuel for performance in workouts. Push harder, lift more, and you burn more calories
She is a trained professional but it seems too high to me. Your goal is apparently to lose weight, not really to bulk up... so you need fewer calories than you burn.
Looking at your ideal weight and your BMR, I came up with 1500 calories per day for you. I would suggest looking into what yours should be.
Another helpful thing for me is to carb cycle. On the days I do heavy lifting to failure I eat more. I will take my creatine and protein bar about an hour before my workout. On my cardio days I limit the carbs more.0 -
arditarose wrote: »JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.
Thanks for caring.0 -
arditarose wrote: »JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.
0 -
arditarose wrote: »JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.
I did not tell you to eat more. You're eating at maintenance.0 -
arditarose wrote: »arditarose wrote: »JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.
I did not tell you to eat more. You're eating at maintenance.
0 -
arditarose wrote: »JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
Well, where did you come up with your numbers? That seems low.
I did not say eat less, I said the calories your trainer gave you are for bulking up, not losing weight. Several people including Ms Rose have said if you maintained your weight for 3 months then you are eating maintenance calories.
Also, your numbers keep changing. First you said 1800-1900 and now you are saying 1600-1800. Im not picking on you, but like I said please calculate what your numbers should be.0 -
JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Where did you come up with your numbers? They seem a bit high to me. I am a male working out hard daily and I still am only at 1400 a day.
That's less than what i eat... I'm 5"8 140lbs, no exercise.
0
This discussion has been closed.
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