An objective look at why you may not be progressing
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ninerbuff
Posts: 48,526 Member
Lots and lots of people panic or complain that they aren't losing weight. So here are a few things you need to HONESTLY consider:
Have you been consistent? That "wella uh besides the _________ I had" ISN'T being consistent.
Are you actually measuring correctly? "Looks right" isn't the same as actually being precise.
Are you getting enough rest? 4-5 hours of sleep ISN'T the same as 7-8 hours.
Is your calorie deficit TOO HIGH? That rush of 6lbs in the first week doesn't last into the 2nd, 3rd or 4th week. Sure it worked the first week, but just about any calorie deficit will. Be smart. You WON'T outsmart your body.
There are processes you have to follow to get the results you want. So before you panic, step back and reassess.
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
Have you been consistent? That "wella uh besides the _________ I had" ISN'T being consistent.
Are you actually measuring correctly? "Looks right" isn't the same as actually being precise.
Are you getting enough rest? 4-5 hours of sleep ISN'T the same as 7-8 hours.
Is your calorie deficit TOO HIGH? That rush of 6lbs in the first week doesn't last into the 2nd, 3rd or 4th week. Sure it worked the first week, but just about any calorie deficit will. Be smart. You WON'T outsmart your body.
There are processes you have to follow to get the results you want. So before you panic, step back and reassess.
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
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Replies
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Thanks for this. I looked back on my calorie intake since I started MFP and I eat over my daily goal about half of the time. Maybe a little more. So I'm tracking well, but still eating too much. It shows on the scale.2
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bump0
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I needed this today!! Thank you!0
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Very rarely does anyone mention the importance of sleep and weight loss.
Thank you.2 -
bump
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Good, simple guidelines. You can definitely breakdown each of these points into huge discussions, but this is really easy to read and should make people think.1
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Very true. Out of self-defence, we seem to leap to conclusions that we are special, there's something wrong with our bodies, that something environmental is working against up but really, 99.9% of the time, we're doing something wrong. Science doesn't lie. As much as people love to say it, on the whole - no, everyone's NOT different. If you've stopped losing, the most obvious answer is generally the right one, and that is that you're doing it wrong.
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Good post.0
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i definitely have to put some more time into researching my numbers...there are times when I eat at huge deficits and see very little progress on the scale, and times when the exact opposite is true. i'm still a little stumped by that.2
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Lack of sleep will affect every aspect of my weight loss. When I get tired I get sloppy with my weighing and logging.
Another culprit is mental exhaustion and/or poor attitude. I find that changing things up a little and refocusing helps me to recommit.4 -
Thank you for this post!0
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It's tough though, sleep is the one thing I can't change. I'm a single mother of an 8 month old. If he decides not to sleep, I don't sleep. I'm always working on keeping him on his schedule, but babies do what they want sometimes.
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Alatariel75 wrote: »Very true. Out of self-defence, we seem to leap to conclusions that we are special, there's something wrong with our bodies, that something environmental is working against up but really, 99.9% of the time, we're doing something wrong. Science doesn't lie. As much as people love to say it, on the whole - no, everyone's NOT different. If you've stopped losing, the most obvious answer is generally the right one, and that is that you're doing it wrong.
If you've got a medical condition, that's an incentive to do your absolute best at taking good care of your body... NOT an excuse to keep on abusing it.
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Legend! Bumping cause of the pure awesomeness0
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So true. I have been eating more and more sugar. I haven't lost anything in 3 weeks. I know exactly why I am not losing.0
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Bowsergirl wrote: »It's tough though, sleep is the one thing I can't change. I'm a single mother of an 8 month old. If he decides not to sleep, I don't sleep. I'm always working on keeping him on his schedule, but babies do what they want sometimes.
I hear you.
I'm well into my third year of child sleep deprivation, as soon as terrible sleeper number one started sleeping, I popped out terrible sleeper number two, who is now 14 months. She's only just stopped waking every 2 hours, and is down to twice/thrice nightly.
It really can be beyond one's control. But, what I have found is, while I used to eat my tiredness, I actually feel better since I stopped. I used to reach for the quick carby/sugary fix to get me through, but in hindsight, it didn't do anything much at all.
I'm still as tired, but I've lost the weight I wanted. I feel better for that, and more energetic too. Now if only I can get some sleep, my skin might start looking better and those dark circles under my eyes might bugger off.
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Bowsergirl wrote: »It's tough though, sleep is the one thing I can't change. I'm a single mother of an 8 month old. If he decides not to sleep, I don't sleep. I'm always working on keeping him on his schedule, but babies do what they want sometimes.
Yup. Sleep deprivation is unavoidable for me. My son has nursing care 3 nights a week so I get 7 hours of sleep those nights. But the other 4 nights I'm lucky if I get 5 hours. It's hard to lose weight when you're exhausted! Possible, but hard.0 -
Bowsergirl wrote: »It's tough though, sleep is the one thing I can't change. I'm a single mother of an 8 month old. If he decides not to sleep, I don't sleep. I'm always working on keeping him on his schedule, but babies do what they want sometimes.
Being a stay at home dad and taking care of my DD since she was an infant, I noticed that when I "shut everything down" at nap time, it made it easier for her to lay a fall asleep.................as well as myself. Not the answer to your problem. Just a tip I learned.
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
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Alatariel75 wrote: »Very true. Out of self-defence, we seem to leap to conclusions that we are special, there's something wrong with our bodies, that something environmental is working against up but really, 99.9% of the time, we're doing something wrong. Science doesn't lie. As much as people love to say it, on the whole - no, everyone's NOT different. If you've stopped losing, the most obvious answer is generally the right one, and that is that you're doing it wrong.
If you've got a medical condition, that's an incentive to do your absolute best at taking good care of your body... NOT an excuse to keep on abusing it.
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
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Good post--timely with everyone returning after summer sins and trying to get back into it. Thanks for the wakeup call.0
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