How much do I eat if I don't know what I weigh?

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Replies

  • LAWoman72
    LAWoman72 Posts: 2,846 Member
    Zedeff wrote: »
    LAWoman72 wrote: »
    Zedeff wrote: »
    MrM27 wrote: »
    The fact that you thought that was a funny post is sad ^^

    The fact that OP comes to a help forum to ask how to determine their weight is a shameful post. I responded in kind. No effort earns no effort.

    That's strange, how so? "Shameful"? Hmmm, not really seeing it, personally.

    Shame: a painful feeling of humiliation or distress caused by the consciousness of wrong or foolish behavior.

    Do you not think that asking "how do I weigh myself?" is foolish?

    Do you not see that she's not asking how to physically weigh herself - i.e. "How do I stand on a scale?" or something - but rather is asking which weight she should choose given the extreme variation in her scales, and simply stated it in a way that didn't quite jibe with that? I mean she did explain what her question was. I'm not sure how that could have been missed.

    I see what you were going there, some sort of an attempt at humor, and actually, I generally like that style of humor, it's just that it happened to not apply to this particular post.

    Hope you figure it out, OP. :)

  • LAWoman72
    LAWoman72 Posts: 2,846 Member
    edack72 wrote: »
    keep one new battery flat surface and a 5lb bag of sugar

    Probably the best way to go, IMO. And then whichever scale you do decide to go with, stay with that one - don't hop on the others out of curiosity. It will only confuse the issue. Even if the scale you wind up using is a couple/few pounds off, by using the same one you'll see whether you're trending generally downward, upward or maintaining.
  • ironanimal
    ironanimal Posts: 5,922 Member
    Zedeff wrote: »
    LAWoman72 wrote: »
    Zedeff wrote: »
    MrM27 wrote: »
    The fact that you thought that was a funny post is sad ^^

    The fact that OP comes to a help forum to ask how to determine their weight is a shameful post. I responded in kind. No effort earns no effort.

    That's strange, how so? "Shameful"? Hmmm, not really seeing it, personally.

    Shame: a painful feeling of humiliation or distress caused by the consciousness of wrong or foolish behavior.

    Do you not think that asking "how do I weigh myself?" is foolish?

    Please cite where she asked how to weigh herself.

  • Zedeff
    Zedeff Posts: 651 Member
    Zedeff wrote: »
    More specifically, it's foolish precisely because the OP knows what to do and is using this to make excuses. Nobody on here is a certified scale repair person; we also can't telepathically fix this problem by saying "use the red one, the other two are wrong." The ONLY solution is for the OP to find a trustworthy scale and use it. She KNOWS this. Asking the question, when she already knows the answer, is a means of delaying the task at hand which is setting goals and starting off on a lifestyle change.
    It must be awesome to be you (perfect, without fault or flaw) AND to be omniscient.

    You're right, it IS awesome. Keep striving for those goals, you can be awesome one day too!
  • MKEgal
    MKEgal Posts: 3,250 Member
    Since the "how do I know my weight?" thing has been more than adequately addressed by now...
    .
    Additionally, if I don't know how much I weigh then how should I go about setting my daily calorie intake?
    What my doctor* & dietician told me when I started out was to take my healthy goal weight
    (based on BMI - see chart at link below) and multiply by 10 to get calories. Eat that. That's
    total, not net. Ignore net.

    Pay attention to what your weight does** over the next month, as well as your measurements.
    If they're going down, keep at it. When you hit a plateau, drop 50-100 cal. If you're not going
    down, you've found maintenance, so again drop 100 cal. If you're going up, cut 200 cal and
    again wait a few weeks to see what happens.

    http://www.shapeup.org/bmi/bmi6.pdf


    * endocrinologist specializing in weight loss issues
    ** after calibrating the scale, or figuring out which is most accurate, or simply deciding on
    which one you're going to use & stick with that one so you see a trend even if the number
    isn't accurate
  • Cranquistador
    Cranquistador Posts: 39,744 Member
    :no_mouth:
  • ldhudsonjr
    ldhudsonjr Posts: 31 Member
    This really isn't a productive conversation any longer...
  • DYELB
    DYELB Posts: 7,407 Member
    (The number of posts in this thread after 1 month)*pi = your weight in lbs.
  • magerum
    magerum Posts: 12,589 Member
    This all make me sad. I fear we're doomed as a people.
  • girlviernes
    girlviernes Posts: 2,402 Member
    edited March 2015
    Zedeff wrote: »
    More specifically, it's foolish precisely because the OP knows what to do and is using this to make excuses. Nobody on here is a certified scale repair person; we also can't telepathically fix this problem by saying "use the red one, the other two are wrong." The ONLY solution is for the OP to find a trustworthy scale and use it. She KNOWS this. Asking the question, when she already knows the answer, is a means of delaying the task at hand which is setting goals and starting off on a lifestyle change.

    I thought your first post was funny, but man we all have questions sometimes that might have relatively simple answers. There's no shame in asking. You're assuming an awful lot about her motives.
  • jazzine1
    jazzine1 Posts: 280 Member
    Mocking a person doesn't help solve the problem they are having. Being an a***hole doesnt either. Remember you were once a newbie too.
  • Dragn77
    Dragn77 Posts: 810 Member
    You can also try seeing if any local supermarkets have a scale? My local Publix has a scale by the front door for people to weigh themselves. I having noticed it in any of the other types of grocery stores, but maybe in LA has a grocery that does? Or a drugstore maybe? They all seem to have the blood pressure stations and health centers type things...

  • jennifershoo
    jennifershoo Posts: 3,198 Member
    Take a dumbbell with a known weight and use it to calibrate your scale.
    30lbs difference shouldn't happen.
  • jazzine1
    jazzine1 Posts: 280 Member
    Also Walmart has the blood pressure/health station all in one scales by the pharmacy dept.
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