:-( Less calories, more exercise ≠loose weight!! :-(
Replies
-
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Firstly
Thank you to all those that have taken the time to reply :-) I can appreciate how busy every one is.
I cut my calories to 1200ish... I don't cook with oil etc, cant stand peanut butter. Learnt on the first day not to eat baked potato and butter lol!!
Using the exercise bike I managed to use up at least 1000 calories a day (give or take 10% what the bike said and what other info sites said varied) Some days I managed over 2000 ((give or take 10% ) a few days I missed (as per other posts caused terrible piles - thank goodness for medication).
I was just so pleased I had found something I could do, make it fit into my time and felt I had accomplished something.
No weight loss for a few weeks.
Yes it could be time of the month... addressed water retention and over night gained 4 lbs!! (the day before did about 1500 on the bike)
Amazingly I did not feel that hungry after doing the morning cycle (varied minimum of 500 calories and often used up 1000 give or take 10% ) so often did not eat until later which helped me keep the calories low. Have tried (pain in bottom depending) on doing at least 500 calories 2 - 4 times a day...
Yes I have scales and learnt how much was 50g of cereal and 80g of milk. Tend to keep to a big salad in the evening and can then easily weigh the protein. Yes I know a tomato is X and 6 slices of cucumber is Y etc :-)
Yes it may be medical as my body is very messed up - which will not help, and not going into details.
SO just back to the 1200 (ignore this starvation thing) and keep cycling and hope the plateau does not continue for much longer, surely something has to give! :-)
I'm pretty sure those burns are ridiculously overestimated
How are they measured ?
If you're doing steady state cardio get a programmable heart rate monitor with a chest strap for a better measurement ...not if you're doing any form of HIIT though
Seriously 1000 calories is a huge burn and would probably take a couple of hours, particularly on an exercise bike which burns fewer than a road bike
Hmmm so you can be polite and take on board advice
Must just be me0 -
Just read this whole thread... Oh dear!
OP you have been given all the answers you need by other people already. Buy a scale, weigh absolutely everything you eat and if you insist on believing the ridiculously over-inflated burn your stationary bike is giving you that's fine - as long as you continue to not eat back those calories (which you say you aren't).
Also, I couldn't see anywhere in this thread your stats (height, weight, age, gender) or what your deficit is set to. I am going to assume it's set to 2lbs a week. I would cut it to 1lb or even 0.5lb.
I am 5'3 with 38lbs to lose. I eat 2000 calories a day and lose a pound a week fairly consistently. I walk a lot (15-20k steps every day) and do some strength training. I also have a stationary bike - 40 minutes on the highest resistance level would burn me about 250-300 calories. I use an activity tracker with heart rate monitor to get that figure. I am confident it's accurate as my loss each week is on target (I eat these calories back) and I have 3 months of data to check against. The reading on my bike display is always in excess of 800 calories. I disregard that number and the weight is falling off.
Also, there are worse things you could do than listen to rabbitjb. She knows what she's talking about!
Good luck!0 -
What you believe in at the moment isn't working. Believing something doesn't make it true.0
-
I'm in the exact same boat I've been doing body combat every other day this is new to me so I'm assuming my lack of weight loss is due to water retention however!! Rabbitjb gave me some advice to eat back only half my calories to which I'm taking on board. Can I just say I burn around 400-500 for body combat for 55 minutes via a HRM and that's if I really push myself you need to not trust that bike0
-
Just my own experience to throw in here:
About two years back I was doing an hour a day on my elliptical machine at home. High intensity, as hard as I could manage, for a solid hour. The machine and MFP, along with other sites, were all saying I was burning 1200+ calories in that hour. Surprise, surprise, my weight loss wasn't showing it.
I bought a HRM to find out why, and turns out I was only burning around 500 calories in that time. So counting the exercise as too many calories was being detrimental to my weight loss. I started counting it as less, and the weight started coming off.0 -
Ok, I had a look at your profile and I'm a little worried/curious. You state in your profile that youSo I need to get rid of the weight - starving again if necessary if that is the only way my body can do it.
I tried all last year but even though no clothes I just could not find the motivation :-(
This programme is helping, a few things I had not realised the calorie content of...
Could you please humour us and post your stats? Age / current weight / height / goal weight? It would also help if you opened your diary - YES you said that you don't want to share because of personal issues but it really would help - you can always delete anything you don't want shared and to be quite honest - I doubt that anyone is going to go back more than 3 months in your diary!
You said you have a little one - are you a stay-at-home carer or do you work outside the home? What do you do for work (this might have an impact on your activity levels)?
I think that if you really are weighing everything that you put in your mouth, logging everything that you put in your mouth, staying at or below your calorie goal and nothing is changing weight-wise - you need to see a doctor and explain all of this to them.
Otherwise, if you're not weighing your food - get a digital scale and start doing so.
If you're not logging your food, start doing so - not at the end of the day when you might forget what you consumed, but as you are consuming it (or even pre-log!)
If you're not drinking the recommended amount of water - start doing so.
Also, I'd completely ignore whatever burn the machine (or whatever you used to workout the burn) and just try sticking to your calorie goal for a month. It might even help to completely stop with the bike altogether and just focus on your calorie intake.
Yes - a month. Then re-evaluate.
I'm really trying not to be the bad one here - but if you look at my profile pic you'll see my recorded weight over the last 12 months - I'm not trying to maintain, I'm aiming to lose but because I a) don't log consistently over extended periods of time b) don't eat to or under my caloric goal over extended periods of time; I haven't lost weight consistently. I am very good at maintaining at the moment and it simply due to me and my food intake/logging. You can see where I've logged/weighed and where I haven't. Simple.0 -
You're looking for magical fixes without taking yourself out of your comfort zone. No open diary, and you're the fittest athlete in the world even though your body won't shed the fat. Of course.
My advice - pick one or two people. Lock your diary with a key and give them the passcode. They'll review your diary and let you know what you might be doing wrong
Also read these, with or without a diary review they might help you figure out where your food log is much higher than you think:
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1296011/calorie-counting-101/p1
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1234699/logging-accurately-step-by-step-guide/p1
Since you're interested in fitness and also improving your body shape, read this: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1161603/so-you-want-a-nice-stomach/p1
And yes, we'll post wherever we damn well please. It's a public forum0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »Trying everything but listening to people who have done it who have actual answers. Why is it so much harder to believe that your bike is inaccurate then believing your body is a magical special snowflake? And you can't dictate who answers your thread. Welcome to the internet.
I dont believe the bike is inaccurate as the other person in the house struggles as others have mentioned they do and they just are in the same room and see what I do.
As previously stated I even had them pop on as I found it easy as they could see, and they struggled to do what I was doing AND they have been very shocked at how quickly I have built up from yes like others struggling to stay on at a low level for 15, 20 mins.
I also use a special cushion as WOW those seats hurt and I was damaging my bottom by being on so long and so I had to find a way to solve that problem too.
Yes I know I cant STOP people from replying to this thread, that is why I asked politely... if they now choose to waste their time, you are correct I cant stop them, but I can ignore it, I cant be forced to read it ;-D
A cushion, plus something interesting to watch on the laptop, I am sorted, I have to push past about 15, 20 mins as that seem to be a hurdle (when yes I do want to give up! BUT DO NOT) I uses to come off and fall in a heap and stuggle to the shower but prior to being ill and going away my recovery time shocked me :-)
I may not be loose the weight but my legs look so much better and I am much fitter too :-)
or I was prior to ill and holiday... dreading getting back on :-S
Just because the bike is truly on 20, and very hard to peddle for most, doesn't mean the burn is accurate. There is a difference between the difficulty being accurate and the algorithm that calculates burns being accurate.
Does your machine display heart rate? If so, try this calculator. Calories Burned. Enter your gender, weight, age, average heart rate while on bike, and time. Click Calculate. Ignore the calories burned per hour box. Read the Total Calories box.
And pull your head out, and realize that rabbit wasn't arguing with you, but was actually trying to help you, which is very kind of her.0 -
Honestly just take the exercise out of the equation completely. Don't even factor it in. Just focus on CICO for one month. Then see where your at.0
-
I think there's a brand of exercise bike commonly used in Britain that overestimates burn REALLY badly because I've seen 2 other people publish similar things! They both used British spellings. And they were both using exercise bikes. And they were both getting crazy burns.0
-
Are you only doing aerobic exercise with no anaerobic? If you've been doing only aerobic for a while without anaerobic exercise, your body can burn fat as well as muscle to fuel itself during exercise. The loss in muscle can lower your BMR (compared to when you had more muscle). Maybe you can try adding in anaerobic exercise (weight lifting, or bodyweight exercises if you don't have access to weights). This also has the added effect of burning calories after the workout (while your muscles are recovering), more so than cardio. It will help change your proportions, so you look good underneath bodyfat as well. I've been at a low weight / body fat, but didn't look as good as I could have if I had done anarobic exercise to build muscle.
Hope this helps!0 -
Right so.... forced myself back on the bike...
67 min distance 19k
Speed averaged 18 - 20 and rpm averaged about 50
.... calories burnt is about??
Thanks0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Right so.... forced myself back on the bike...
67 min distance 19k
Speed averaged 18 - 20 and rpm averaged about 50
.... calories burnt is about??
Thanks
No idea. Even if you provided the intensity, it would be hard to translate what that means for your particular bike. Other options for estimating would be if you had the total Power in Watts, or if you wore a heart rate monitor. Both would still be estimates. The only thing you can truly control is your consistent food input, and patience
0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Right so.... forced myself back on the bike...
67 min distance 19k
Speed averaged 18 - 20 and rpm averaged about 50
.... calories burnt is about??
Thanks
No idea. Even if you provided the intensity, it would be hard to translate what that means for your particular bike. Other options for estimating would be if you had the total Power in Watts, or if you wore a heart rate monitor. Both would still be estimates. The only thing you can truly control is your consistent food input, and patience
Would also add that your height, weight, age etc will play a factor. What number does the MFP database give you if you log it? I would take half of that number.0 -
I say go to the doctor and get some basic bloodwork done. If your thyroid is off, or something like that, all the diet and exercise in the world won't fix it. Make sure your thyroid and other hormones are OK, that you're not vitamin or mineral deficient, etc.0
-
hahaha doctors and bloodwork, not a hope in hell - some people will understand that, others wont.
If you understand that you wont be nasty
and if you dont understand that dont comment on what you do not understand ;-)0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »hahaha doctors and bloodwork, not a hope in hell - some people will understand that, others wont.
If you understand that you wont be nasty
and if you dont understand that dont comment on what you do not understand ;-)
i dont understand as i live in the UK, and my doctor would just refer me, but why would i be nasty about your situation? relax no one is here to get at you.0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Right so.... forced myself back on the bike...
67 min distance 19k
Speed averaged 18 - 20 and rpm averaged about 50
.... calories burnt is about??
Thanks
Roughly 500
But you log that, and you eat that (if following MFP) and then after 8 weeks you check your weight loss, if you're losing more than expected (providing your food logging is accurate) then you can eat more calories, if you're losing less then you eat back fewer calories
or get yourself a chest strap HRM (I use a Polar FT4) if you're doing steady-state (eg not interval training) for a more accurate estimate0 -
onedayTHISYEAR wrote: »Right so.... forced myself back on the bike...
67 min distance 19k
Speed averaged 18 - 20 and rpm averaged about 50
.... calories burnt is about??
Thanks
0 -
Hi oneday
Reading your profile it sounds as though you've been through a terrible time, sorry to hear that. People here really aren't being mean, they're trying to help but it's very difficult to offer useful advice with limited information. Different people find different things work for them but in the general sense everything comes back to numbers. Without your weight, height, age and target weight loss per week it's very difficult for people to advise what might be going wrong so they offer all the solutions they can think of.
The only thing I can say is that, if I'm reading it correctly, you ONLY ever eat 1200 calories a day? Assuming you have set your weight loss to 1 pound per week then your BMR would be 1700 a day. Taking rabbit's calculation above (which is definitely more reasonable than 1000 calories a session) then if you did 2 bike sessions a day and burnt 1000 calories your total calorie expenditure (CO) would be 2700 while your intake (CI) would only be 1200 which is less than 45% of your daily requirement and this is too low.
Or to look at it another way, if you eat 1200 calories to give you a 1 pound weight loss and then you burn an extra 1000 calories, your net calorie intake is only 200. Would you try and survive on 200 calories a day?
So, if anything, I would say you're not eating enough. Try using 500 calories an hour for cycling as a guide and then eat at least half of your exercise calories on top of the 1200 a day. Give it a couple of weeks and see if things start moving. And best of luck.
P.S I'm new to MFP Community but sadly not to weight loss!!0 -
.0
-
Weight is still not fun.
My weight there is no logic to at all.
Anyone wants to say - I am not telling the truth, just save your time and mine. Trying to understand to solve a problem. When I am not, I am not here. When I am not keeping to things, I KNOW and I dont post .... there is no purpose to it. I dont lie to myself. When I can attempt to do this, I am here trying NOT lying!
There is far more to his weight loss then calories, read different things about stress hormones cortisone? etc and that and unknown factors make far more of a difference, I am sure, for me.
I had not been keeping to things, but my weight stayed pretty stable at about 10 stone.
Need to break that 10 stone!
Went on an all inclusive, alcohol, three meals a day, (one maybe two a day at home), chips, bread, chocolate, jam, LOTS of desserts, next to no exercise, very little swimming, not needing to walk, even for shopping.
Returned home, I had put on about 2lbs!!! (yes weighed myself before an after as I was dreading the after but wanted to be realistic, and was going to enjoy what I could of the holiday)
Within two weeks of being home, walking a lot for shopping and dragging a shopping trolley, doing the 5k 'walks' twice a week, a little cycling. Back down to no alcohol, 1 - 2 meals a day, more water, no chips etc etc
- I had put on 9lbs!!!!
I started doing 5k 'walks' (they should be runs but lol!!! not a chance) in the summer, (once a week) they are timed independently so... In all those months, my times have not improved :-( I have not become better :-( I cannot run any more of the route than at the beginning. Some times (due to state of health) I just about manage to get around. I have had to give up some times, due to exhaustion or it beings on ibs!!
So so frustrating!!
I know some of my problems will be due to the attack, menopause and other things but so wish I could find a way though and just get my weight down and feel better being me.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K 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
- 424 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