Help me to understand please
MBL512
Posts: 32 Member
I will start off by saying that I understand my weight is on the lower side of normal. (I am 5-4 and am now up to 111 lbs, but as of a week ago I was 106) My goal is to maintain where I currently am. I have recently significantly increased my calories from where they had been. I had been eating 600-1000, but have been eating closer to 1600-2000 per day. I am gaining very rapidly on this calorie intake and am concerned that this trend may not level off. I am not weighing or measuring my foods any more, and I would prefer not to start again. I am fairly certain I am within 5-10% of accuracy with what I am logging. Do you suggest I decrease my intake again by just a very small amount or just ride it out for another couple of weeks? I am confused by what my body is doing.
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Replies
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Definitely ride it out. Whenever you increase calories by such an amount it takes time for your body to adjust. Give it another couple of weeks before reassessing.0
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I agree....ride it out.0
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shadowofender wrote: »Definitely ride it out. Whenever you increase calories by such an amount it takes time for your body to adjust. Give it another couple of weeks before reassessing.
I think I shocked my poor body with such a rapid increase! Will be riding it out.I agree....ride it out.
Will do. I am tired of my weight bouncing all over the place and am worried that it would just keep going upward. I am barely tolerating it where it is. LOL0 -
What is there to understand? You are underweight now.0
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atypicalsmith wrote: »What is there to understand? You are underweight now.
I am not technically underweight at this time. I know I am on the low end of normal though. What I was not understanding was why such a rapid gain in a short period of time when the calories in do not add up to such a gain. I was only wondering if the general consensus was that I just hold steady where I am in regards to intake or cut back to closer to my BMR in order to maintain. I have been underweight in the past, and that is not my goal.
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atypicalsmith wrote: »What is there to understand? You are underweight now.
I am not technically underweight at this time. I know I am on the low end of normal though. What I was not understanding was why such a rapid gain in a short period of time when the calories in do not add up to such a gain. I was only wondering if the general consensus was that I just hold steady where I am in regards to intake or cut back to closer to my BMR in order to maintain. I have been underweight in the past, and that is not my goal.
It's water weight. Give it a couple of days and it will go down again.0 -
atypicalsmith wrote: »atypicalsmith wrote: »What is there to understand? You are underweight now.
I am not technically underweight at this time. I know I am on the low end of normal though. What I was not understanding was why such a rapid gain in a short period of time when the calories in do not add up to such a gain. I was only wondering if the general consensus was that I just hold steady where I am in regards to intake or cut back to closer to my BMR in order to maintain. I have been underweight in the past, and that is not my goal.
It's water weight. Give it a couple of days and it will go down again.
Thank you.
Trust me, I am seriously holding out hope that this is the case for part of this gain.
I have been significantly underweight at my own doing and I no longer want that. I just don't want to go in the other direction so quickly that it pushes me to start under-eating again. Not sure if this makes sense or not?
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atypicalsmith wrote: »atypicalsmith wrote: »What is there to understand? You are underweight now.
I am not technically underweight at this time. I know I am on the low end of normal though. What I was not understanding was why such a rapid gain in a short period of time when the calories in do not add up to such a gain. I was only wondering if the general consensus was that I just hold steady where I am in regards to intake or cut back to closer to my BMR in order to maintain. I have been underweight in the past, and that is not my goal.
It's water weight. Give it a couple of days and it will go down again.
Thank you.
Trust me, I am seriously holding out hope that this is the case for part of this gain.
I have been significantly underweight at my own doing and I no longer want that. I just don't want to go in the other direction so quickly that it pushes me to start under-eating again. Not sure if this makes sense or not?
It makes perfect sense, but be careful that you eat enough calories. Too little is just about as bad as too many.0 -
106 was underweight for your height, so you're better off now. The increase in food led to an increase in glycogen stores, which increased water weight. Unless you ate 17,500 calories over TDEE, it's nothing to worry about. I'd worry more about the damage you may have done to your body eating so little.0
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Great job recognizing you needed to eat more! Give it a week and it will stable off, as it's water retention.0
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atypicalsmith wrote: »atypicalsmith wrote: »What is there to understand? You are underweight now.
I am not technically underweight at this time. I know I am on the low end of normal though. What I was not understanding was why such a rapid gain in a short period of time when the calories in do not add up to such a gain. I was only wondering if the general consensus was that I just hold steady where I am in regards to intake or cut back to closer to my BMR in order to maintain. I have been underweight in the past, and that is not my goal.
It's water weight. Give it a couple of days and it will go down again.
Thank you.
Trust me, I am seriously holding out hope that this is the case for part of this gain.
I have been significantly underweight at my own doing and I no longer want that. I just don't want to go in the other direction so quickly that it pushes me to start under-eating again. Not sure if this makes sense or not?
Were you in treatment for this? If so, maybe check in with your team.
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106 was underweight for your height, so you're better off now. The increase in food led to an increase in glycogen stores, which increased water weight. Unless you ate 17,500 calories over TDEE, it's nothing to worry about. I'd worry more about the damage you may have done to your body eating so little.Liftng4Lis wrote: »Great job recognizing you needed to eat more! Give it a week and it will stable off, as it's water retention.
Thank you!!!!!
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atypicalsmith wrote: »
It makes perfect sense, but be careful that you eat enough calories. Too little is just about as bad as too many.
Thank you. Finding that middle ground is so difficult.kshama2001 wrote: »
Were you in treatment for this? If so, maybe check in with your team.0 -
atypicalsmith wrote: »
It makes perfect sense, but be careful that you eat enough calories. Too little is just about as bad as too many.
Thank you. Finding that middle ground is so difficult.kshama2001 wrote: »
Were you in treatment for this? If so, maybe check in with your team.
MBL do you know what your TDEE is?
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christinev297 wrote: »
MBL do you know what your TDEE is?
It has been very inconsistent and unreliable due to the frequent and significant changes in my weight over the last few years. It is roughly 1500- give or take a bit. 4-5 months ago, I was losing weight eating over 4000 cal/day while doing little to no physical activity. Then, more recently, it seemed that I would maintain on 600 cal/day. It's been super crazy and makes zero sense. I just need to leave things alone, gain the weight that I am meant to, and call it a day.0 -
Well then I agree with the others, stick it out and try and find your maintenance calories.
Good luck, you'll get there xx0 -
christinev297 wrote: »Well then I agree with the others, stick it out and try and find your maintenance calories.
Good luck, you'll get there xx
Thanks! One day at a time I suppose.
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My understanding is that going from diet to maintain you gain back water weight etc that was lost by eating in a deficit.
Just like how at the start of most weightloss you have massive losses from water weight, when you stop you gain that back. I guess to get to a normal level.
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My understanding is that going from diet to maintain you gain back water weight etc that was lost by eating in a deficit.
Just like how at the start of most weightloss you have massive losses from water weight, when you stop you gain that back. I guess to get to a normal level.
I do understand the water/sodium/glycogen thing, but I always seem to forget it when I see the number on the scale changing. Thank you for the gentle reminder!
I decided to NOT weigh myself for a few weeks. I do not want to derail my positive thinking by seeing a number in front of me.0 -
I'm also 5'4" and for me around 1300-1500 calories a day seems to maintain that weight. But I'm also pretty inactive. You could always just keep going and if you gain too much back just trim the calories a little.0
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I used to easily maintain on 2000-2500 a day. Would eat in that general range. Maintained for years at a time. I have a bad habit of screwing up my metabolism with severe restriction and weight losses. Not even sure where my maintenance is at this point. I will be staying off of the scale for a few weeks and will just allow myself to continue where I am and hope that the gain doesn't continue. I suppose if it does, I am good at getting the weight back down again. LOL0
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Stick it out. Please stick it out. 600-1000 is very unhealthy. Most of your recent gain will be water weight anyway. Throw away your food scale and try to find middle ground here. ( give it time and you should even out with 1600-2000) I eat 2000 per day without gaining any real weight so don't worry . throw away your real scale too and just worry about getting healthy.0
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thorsmom01 wrote: »Stick it out. Please stick it out. 600-1000 is very unhealthy. Most of your recent gain will be water weight anyway. Throw away your food scale and try to find middle ground here. ( give it time and you should even out with 1600-2000) I eat 2000 per day without gaining any real weight so don't worry . throw away your real scale too and just worry about getting healthy.
Thank you for your kind and reasonable response. That middle ground just seems to be so difficult to find. I have not weighed or measured any of my foods for well over 2 weeks. I am not putting myself on a scale either. Worried what I would do if I don't like the number. Just going by how my clothes feel for now. I think I have leveled off in regards to the gaining. Not sure, but I think I have. Will find out in a couple of weeks.0 -
I think it's incredibly brave of you to open up about this. Youll find your middle ground in no time and your body will love you for it. I find some light stomach exercises help move the water around quicker too, which helps with any bloating you may experience. Keep going strong0
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HelenaDixson151 wrote: »I think it's incredibly brave of you to open up about this. Youll find your middle ground in no time and your body will love you for it. I find some light stomach exercises help move the water around quicker too, which helps with any bloating you may experience. Keep going strong
Thank you.
I am eating a couple of foods that I have not allowed myself to have for many years. No compensatory behaviors either. Staying off the scale- that is getting hard for me! I went from weighing 4-6 times a day to nothing. But, I do think my weight has stabilized. I will try the stomach exercises- I want to start working out and toning up a bit more. Not happy with how my weight gain came back on. LOL
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