Is 10 lb weight loss a reasonable goal?
katsushii
Posts: 31 Member
Seems I've always fluctuated significant poundage throughout the day, and through the week. About 5-8 yrs ago (ages 17 through 20, about 5'6.5"), I used to maintain an average weight of 130 lbs, give or take 5-6 lbs. Now, at age 25 and 5'7.5", it's an average of 140 lbs, give or take 5-6 lbs.
One of my goals on MyFitnessPal is to return to the average of 130 lbs. But with the regular weight fluctuation, is 10 lb. loss a reasonable goal? It typically looks like people aim for high amounts such as 50lb or 100lbs. Should I am for a higher amount of weight loss, e.g. 20 lbs? More?
Thank you in advance.
One of my goals on MyFitnessPal is to return to the average of 130 lbs. But with the regular weight fluctuation, is 10 lb. loss a reasonable goal? It typically looks like people aim for high amounts such as 50lb or 100lbs. Should I am for a higher amount of weight loss, e.g. 20 lbs? More?
Thank you in advance.
0
Replies
-
This content has been removed.
-
There's two options I see...you can aim for the 10 pounds (which will take a while...20 would put you almost at/if not underweight, so I wouldn't advise that), or you can do a body recomposition where you eat at maintenance/just below and lift heavy weights in order to lose body fat.0
-
You could certainly aim for 10 pounds. Set your weight loss goals for 0.5 pounds per week and be patient - the scale may not budge at all many weeks but eventually you'll get there.0
-
At 5'7.5", 140 is a perfectly healthy weight.
If you're not currently satisfied with how your body looks, I would advise ditching the scale, start a weight training and exercise program and try to recomp the make-up of your body.
0 -
I'm about the same age as you, same height. You are already a healthy weight. I think 130s is also a healthy weight for our height. You don't need to lose more just because other people do. They weigh more than you and have more to lose. What you want/need to lose is a personal thing. If you are uncomfortable at your current weight, fine, just be careful because you can't go too far without being unhealthy. If you don't like how your body LOOKS, maybe try a recomp - workout to add muscle mass. If it's just the number that bothers you, really stop focusing on it. That number means nothing.0
-
There's two options I see...you can aim for the 10 pounds (which will take a while... [...]), or you can do a body recomposition where you eat at maintenance/just below and lift heavy weights in order to lose body fat.20 would put you almost at/if not underweight, so I wouldn't advise that)
I am realizing my goal is to lose fat, not necessarily weight. For whatever reason, I have been equating these to the same thing. Thanks again, malibu!0 -
I will look into body recompositioning. This is a brand new concept for me. Thank you for the quick and helpful replies!
Thanks very much, LadyLallybroch, for your helpful and relateable reply. I am going to do my best to work out and convert fat to muscle mass. There's still a lot for me to learn.
Thanks also to juggernaut and to kshama for your helpful replies and encouragement.0 -
I will look into body recompositioning. This is a brand new concept for me. Thank you for the quick and helpful replies!
Thanks very much, LadyLallybroch, for your helpful and relateable reply. I am going to do my best to work out and convert fat to muscle mass. There's still a lot for me to learn.
Thanks also to juggernaut and to kshama for your helpful replies and encouragement.
Most of us who want to "lose 10 pounds" really want to lose fat, not weight. The advice to start a weight training regimen is sound. I'll give you a little personal experience.
I started wanting to lose about 20 pounds (5'3.5" at just over 140 lbs). I got down to 122 pounds but wasn't entirely happy with the way I looked, lost focus, had to stop running for awhile, etc. put some weight back on. When I was ready to recommit I started running seriously again AND weight lifting. I currently bounce between 130 and 135 and am wearing the same clothes I was wearing at 122. I'm about as small as I was before but I can eat more and maintain that size. Muscle weighs more than fat by volume, so you're smaller at the same weight. For that reason, when you start weight training the scale needs to be left behind other than as a sanity check.1 -
Ah, thank you very much for your reply, SueInAz. That's awesome to know, and congrats to you.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K 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
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions