Going on week 4 and still gaining weight Help Please

cedarsidefarm
cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
edited November 2024 in Social Groups
Hi, I'm new here and am looking for advice. Ok, I didn't expect to lose any weight while my body adopted to a lifetime of caloric restrictions but to gain 3 lbs is that normal? I'm on day 23. I started out on the always hungry diet, then moved to stage 2 and don't use his recipes as much because I lowered my goal for carbs to below 50. He gives you a goal of percent of carbs in the diet in the book but I found that a plain number was easier to aim for. My goal each day is to eat less than 50 carbs. If/when I go over it is usually because I miscalculated the carbs in what I had planned to eat, not because I cheated. I have not had any bread, rice, potatoes, cake, cookies or bread (I said that already) and bread for 23 days. Bread was a big part of my life. I made it from scratch and developed different flavors for different soups and proteins. But I gave it all up because I gained over 45 pounds. I'm almost 180 and can't afford to gain much more weight at a heigt of 5' 4".

I quit smoking by chewing nicotine gum 2 years ago. I gave up the gum a year ago. I have not smoked since I started chewing the gum. I still chew from 3 to 5 sugar free pieces (not nicotine, plain gum) a day. Yes, they have 1 to 2 carbs per piece and I count them. I'm perfectly healthy, no diabetes, no thyroid condition, no high cholesterol, no high blood pressure.

I am a 57 year old female (keep it a secret, even my Mom doesn't know my real age). :) my husband and I run a small organic farm. So, I get plenty of exercise. Here's why I think I may need some time to get my body back to normal. For most of my life, I have smoked and eaten only one meal a day, except when I was pregnant. I gained a lot of weight with each pregnancy but it came off as soon as I went back to smoking. Now that I quit, it seems like nothing I do helps me lose weight. My Mom is over 200 lbs and I've watched her struggle all her life on low calorie diets but they never worked. So, I know I have to do something different.

Is this weight gain something to worry about? Should I go back to counting calories and carbs and/or fasting? Should I get those strips that use urine to determine if I'm in keto? Are the strips useful? How long is it advisable to stay on this diet while gaining and not losing weight? Should I lower my carbs even further?

Since I cut carbs, I feel better and for the first time in a really long time, I am NOT constantly hungry. The swelling in my joints has gone down. If I could lose some weight, this would be the perfect diet for me. I've done the weight watchers thing and I have lost a lot weight. But I was so absolutely hungry all the time with the hunger getting worse and worse the longer I staid on the diet. And my finger nails got dry and brittle and I never had any energy. I finally gave up weight watchers and went back to smoking and eating one meal a day.

I don't want to ever pick up a cigarette again. Please, let me know if what I'm experiencing is to be expected considering how badly I treated my body with the smoking, caloric restrictions and fasting, or if you think I should change something.

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Replies

  • ali59oc
    ali59oc Posts: 130 Member
    The great thing about life is that everyday is a new day. And that applies to your way of eating. Going low carb is a lifestyle change.

    I definitely think you need to log your food. I lost 65 pounds on LCHF. I am also 57. When I started reintroducing carbs back into my diet, WHAM! 22 lbs. back on. I'm in the process of losing that 22 lbs. now (15 to go!) and it has been harder for me this time.

    I keep my carbs under 20g per day. I just have to, we're all different though. Don't waste your money on keto sticks, You will know when you are in ketosis, trust me.

    Do not start smoking again! That's just a nasty habit all the way around. I think your weight gain could be water retention, not enough fat, too many carbs. What I did to start losing again was drop the carbs way down and up the fat and salt. Send me friend request and you can see my diary.

    Don't give up hope! It does work, really!
  • no_day_but_2day
    no_day_but_2day Posts: 222 Member
    If you open you diary, it may be helpful to see what exactly you're eating. In my opinion, I think it's best to watch both calories and carbs. HOWEVER, you can raise your calorie intake a little more than you were. For example, I lost some weight only counting 1200 calories a day and gained it all back because of what you said. I was ALWAYS hungry and tired. I started LCHF/Keto in January and I have more energy and I'm almost never hungry. I kept the calories rather high at first 1800-2000 but I'm trying to gain muscle and lose fat so I lowered it just recently to 1400. However, I only have about 20 more lbs to lose.
    It's hard to determine what's causing you to gain weight if we don't know what you're eating.
  • no_day_but_2day
    no_day_but_2day Posts: 222 Member
    OH YA. Ketostix are silly. I bought them and stopped using them. Also, I used to smoke as well. I recommend swimming to cure you of any desire to go back. It's just not worth the step backwards.
  • cdebracy
    cdebracy Posts: 91 Member
    My wife had some thyroid and other hormone issues that went undiagnosed for years. She also gained weight and found it almost impossible to lose it. You may want to check with your doctor about doing some blood work so you can rule it out.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    ali59oc wrote: »
    The great thing about life is that everyday is a new day. And that applies to your way of eating. Going low carb is a lifestyle change.

    I definitely think you need to log your food. I lost 65 pounds on LCHF. I am also 57. When I started reintroducing carbs back into my diet, WHAM! 22 lbs. back on. I'm in the process of losing that 22 lbs. now (15 to go!) and it has been harder for me this time.

    I keep my carbs under 20g per day. I just have to, we're all different though. Don't waste your money on keto sticks, You will know when you are in ketosis, trust me.

    Do not start smoking again! That's just a nasty habit all the way around. I think your weight gain could be water retention, not enough fat, too many carbs. What I did to start losing again was drop the carbs way down and up the fat and salt. Send me friend request and you can see my diary.

    Don't give up hope! It does work, really!

    Thanks so much. I have been logging here for 23 days. My goal is to eat about 50% fat and I've been reaching that very easily. It's tough for me to get below 50g of carb but I can do it if I try. I think I'll keep trying low carb for a little while longer....I really don't want to go back to starving myself and always being hungry.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    OH YA. Ketostix are silly. I bought them and stopped using them. Also, I used to smoke as well. I recommend swimming to cure you of any desire to go back. It's just not worth the step backwards.

    Thanks for the info. Another poster said the sticks were not very useful too.

    I really don't want to go back to smoking. (I think I wont be able to to tell you honestly. The last time I smoked it really hurt my throat.)

    I do eat an awful lot of calories they are in the 1600 to 1700. But I have to usually cut back to 1200 to lose any weight.

    I also went through a period where I could not get enough nuts, cashews, peanuts, mixed nuts, almonds even sunflower seeds. It was like I could not get enough and then suddenly (after about 2 weeks) my cravings stopped. I think it was because my husband is on a renal diet and he can't eat nuts, peanut butter or seeds so I just did not keep them around.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    cdebracy wrote: »
    My wife had some thyroid and other hormone issues that went undiagnosed for years. She also gained weight and found it almost impossible to lose it. You may want to check with your doctor about doing some blood work so you can rule it out.

    Yeah, I've been thinking that maybe my body has changed since my last physical. I go in on April for my annual physical and I'll get the doctor to check it all again. You never know. Thanks.
  • ali59oc
    ali59oc Posts: 130 Member
    You need to get your Macros straight. Go here and it will tell you:
    http://keto-calculator.ankerl.com/
    I do 5% Carb/70% Fat/25% Protein and aim for 1100 calories a day to lose.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    ali59oc wrote: »
    You need to get your Macros straight. Go here and it will tell you:
    http://keto-calculator.ankerl.com/
    I do 5% Carb/70% Fat/25% Protein and aim for 1100 calories a day to lose.

    Oh my, You are a very strong person. I don't think I could survive on 1100 calories a day. That would be about 22 points on Weight Watchers. Whenever I went below 30 points on Weight Watchers I would stop losing weight altogether and then the hunger would get so bad I could not sleep at night. 30 points was about 1500 calories a day. But even then I was always hungry, tired and my fingernails got all dried and cracked.

    My macros are 10% carbs/60%/fat/30% protein based on what I've been doing. I went to your link and they want me to eat about 1500 calories a day. Which I did on Weight Watchers and lost but I also got all those hunger pangs and constant tiredness.

    I do heavy physical work, throwing bales of hay, dragging bags of feed. Dragging and pushing unhappy 200 to 150 pound sheep, chasing lambs and leading excited 175 pound dogs. Digging out sheep and chicken manure; planting and tilling. This is my job. I do it 7 days a week unless it's raining like today. And I'm gaining weight. There is something I'm missing here that calories in and calories out is not addressing.

    I don't mean to be rude and you have obviously found a system that works well for you. But if I go down in calories, why would I even want do LCHF? I could cut my calories, eat all the beautiful bread I can make and be hungry and lose weight. LCHF would then be just calorie counting without the wonderful bread. I don't know about this.
  • mlinton_mesapark
    mlinton_mesapark Posts: 517 Member
    If you put aside the calorie question for now and focus on adjusting your macros only, I think you'll be setting yourself up for success. Maybe start with 70% fat, 20% protein and 10% carbs, or something close to that.

    More fat = more satiety. Really! If you eat enough fat, you won't be hungry in between meals. You may be surprised at how far you can space your meals. You could even go back to eating once a day, if you want, but you might want to wait on that until you've tested changing your macros. See how you feel, and give your energy level a chance to adjust, maybe a couple of weeks.

    On the flip side, more carbs = less satiety. Protein can get converted to carbs in the liver via gluconeogenesis. If you eat more fat and less of everything else, your body will make the switch to running on ketones, which feels different from running on glucose, more smooth and steady.

    I find I can stay in ketosis if I aim for 50g total carbs per day, with roughly a 70/20/10 ratio. Of course, people's sweet spots vary. I'm about to turn 36, very active mom of 3 young kids, not an athlete, but I don't sit down much either.

    Also, major kudos to you for quitting smoking! I quit going on 11 years ago, after being a pack-a-day smoker for the most part of 10 years. You gave yourself a big raise and a major health boost, and you'll never regret it.
  • SamandaIndia
    SamandaIndia Posts: 1,577 Member
    1100 is too low imo. Having knowledge of calories is useful though.until we adapt to low carb we can still crave food n overeat. Hell, I could eat half a day's worth of energy in cashews without noticing! Thus we can overeat early on. For many people, our body starts to realise we are full n can be trusted to eat what it needs, not more. Maybe try low carb and observe calories, without judgement.

    I hope this works for your weight and your health
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    If you put aside the calorie question for now and focus on adjusting your macros only, I think you'll be setting yourself up for success. Maybe start with 70% fat, 20% protein and 10% carbs, or something close to that.

    More fat = more satiety. Really! If you eat enough fat, you won't be hungry in between meals. You may be surprised at how far you can space your meals. You could even go back to eating once a day, if you want, but you might want to wait on that until you've tested changing your macros. See how you feel, and give your energy level a chance to adjust, maybe a couple of weeks.

    On the flip side, more carbs = less satiety. Protein can get converted to carbs in the liver via gluconeogenesis. If you eat more fat and less of everything else, your body will make the switch to running on ketones, which feels different from running on glucose, more smooth and steady.

    I find I can stay in ketosis if I aim for 50g total carbs per day, with roughly a 70/20/10 ratio. Of course, people's sweet spots vary. I'm about to turn 36, very active mom of 3 young kids, not an athlete, but I don't sit down much either.

    Also, major kudos to you for quitting smoking! I quit going on 11 years ago, after being a pack-a-day smoker for the most part of 10 years. You gave yourself a big raise and a major health boost, and you'll never regret it.

    Ok, I'll try that ratio. I just freaked when the link initially said I had to go down to 765 calories and then I realized I had made a mistake. But it still wanted me to cut fat and I thought fat was my friend and I'm just confused.

    So I know my calories about once a week go very high about 1800 on average. But then I settle back down. This might sound crazy, but for so long I have fasted and cut calories that about once a week my body decide to test me to see if I will continue to feed it fat instead of carbs. Thanks for the help.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    1100 is too low imo. Having knowledge of calories is useful though.until we adapt to low carb we can still crave food n overeat. Hell, I could eat half a day's worth of energy in cashews without noticing! Thus we can overeat early on. For many people, our body starts to realise we are full n can be trusted to eat what it needs, not more. Maybe try low carb and observe calories, without judgement.

    I hope this works for your weight and your health

    Thanks, I guess I should have known this would not be easy but in a different way than counting calories wasn't easy.
  • Sunny_Bunny_
    Sunny_Bunny_ Posts: 7,140 Member
    It gets easy because it puts you in control of your hunger. Do you call the shots and cravings or blood sugar.
    Fat is your friend. And you should find that you can have more calories on low carb than on high carb. That's pretty typical
  • ambergem1969
    ambergem1969 Posts: 224 Member
    I think if you follow the advice above and lower your carbs down a bit, and up your fat, you will see one of the great benefits of this way of eating, which is a much reduced appetite! You will end up naturally limiting your calories anyway. Eat within your percentages when you get hungry, stop before you are too full, and you should be okay.

    And as for the exercise you are getting everyday, once you are better adapted to burning fat, you should have plenty of energy to get the jobs done.

    I think your body may be trying to heal itself so it may take some time for it to trust that you are going to feed it enough of the nutrients (good fats, adequate protein) it needs...then hopefully you'll see your weight start to move.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
    edited March 2016
    Personally, I gain weight if I don't count calories, low carb or not, simply because I eat too much. Low carb isn't automatically a weight loss bullet, you still have to eat less than you expend.

    How many calories did MFP give you?
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    Personally, I gain weight if I don't count calories, low carb or not, simply because I eat too much. Low carb isn't automatically a weight loss bullet, you still have to eat less than you expend.

    How many calories did MFP give you?

    Thank so much for the advice. I just find it very disappointing to have to restrict my calories on top of cutting out my most favorite food ever - bread. But I honestly think I am overdoing it on calories since I never really let my own hunger guide me on how much to eat except when my hunger became uncontrollable.

    The MFP gave me 1500 calories, which in my experience is the minumum I can eat and lose weight without stalling out my weight loss. At first it gave me 765 but I had put in the wrong weight. It kind of scaed me until I realized I had done it wrong.
  • cedarsidefarm
    cedarsidefarm Posts: 163 Member
    I think if you follow the advice above and lower your carbs down a bit, and up your fat, you will see one of the great benefits of this way of eating, which is a much reduced appetite! You will end up naturally limiting your calories anyway. Eat within your percentages when you get hungry, stop before you are too full, and you should be okay.

    And as for the exercise you are getting everyday, once you are better adapted to burning fat, you should have plenty of energy to get the jobs done.

    I think your body may be trying to heal itself so it may take some time for it to trust that you are going to feed it enough of the nutrients (good fats, adequate protein) it needs...then hopefully you'll see your weight start to move.

    Thanks for the advice. I'm going to try it for another 4 weeks but after that, if I don't lose weight, I'll go to counting calories again.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
    I'll leave this link here, incase you are using measuring cups/spoons. If so, watch the video

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10346234/not-losing-tips-suggestions-help-please#latest

  • Sunny_Bunny_
    Sunny_Bunny_ Posts: 7,140 Member
    Hi, I'm new here and am looking for advice. Ok, I didn't expect to lose any weight while my body adopted to a lifetime of caloric restrictions but to gain 3 lbs is that normal? I'm on day 23. I started out on the always hungry diet, then moved to stage 2 and don't use his recipes as much because I lowered my goal for carbs to below 50. He gives you a goal of percent of carbs in the diet in the book but I found that a plain number was easier to aim for. My goal each day is to eat less than 50 carbs. If/when I go over it is usually because I miscalculated the carbs in what I had planned to eat, not because I cheated. I have not had any bread, rice, potatoes, cake, cookies or bread (I said that already) and bread for 23 days. Bread was a big part of my life. I made it from scratch and developed different flavors for different soups and proteins. But I gave it all up because I gained over 45 pounds. I'm almost 180 and can't afford to gain much more weight at a heigt of 5' 4".

    I quit smoking by chewing nicotine gum 2 years ago. I gave up the gum a year ago. I have not smoked since I started chewing the gum. I still chew from 3 to 5 sugar free pieces (not nicotine, plain gum) a day. Yes, they have 1 to 2 carbs per piece and I count them. I'm perfectly healthy, no diabetes, no thyroid condition, no high cholesterol, no high blood pressure.

    I am a 57 year old female (keep it a secret, even my Mom doesn't know my real age). :) my husband and I run a small organic farm. So, I get plenty of exercise. Here's why I think I may need some time to get my body back to normal. For most of my life, I have smoked and eaten only one meal a day, except when I was pregnant. I gained a lot of weight with each pregnancy but it came off as soon as I went back to smoking. Now that I quit, it seems like nothing I do helps me lose weight. My Mom is over 200 lbs and I've watched her struggle all her life on low calorie diets but they never worked. So, I know I have to do something different.

    Is this weight gain something to worry about? Should I go back to counting calories and carbs and/or fasting? Should I get those strips that use urine to determine if I'm in keto? Are the strips useful? How long is it advisable to stay on this diet while gaining and not losing weight? Should I lower my carbs even further?

    Since I cut carbs, I feel better and for the first time in a really long time, I am NOT constantly hungry. The swelling in my joints has gone down. If I could lose some weight, this would be the perfect diet for me. I've done the weight watchers thing and I have lost a lot weight. But I was so absolutely hungry all the time with the hunger getting worse and worse the longer I staid on the diet. And my finger nails got dry and brittle and I never had any energy. I finally gave up weight watchers and went back to smoking and eating one meal a day.

    I don't want to ever pick up a cigarette again. Please, let me know if what I'm experiencing is to be expected considering how badly I treated my body with the smoking, caloric restrictions and fasting, or if you think I should change something.
    I think if you follow the advice above and lower your carbs down a bit, and up your fat, you will see one of the great benefits of this way of eating, which is a much reduced appetite! You will end up naturally limiting your calories anyway. Eat within your percentages when you get hungry, stop before you are too full, and you should be okay.

    And as for the exercise you are getting everyday, once you are better adapted to burning fat, you should have plenty of energy to get the jobs done.

    I think your body may be trying to heal itself so it may take some time for it to trust that you are going to feed it enough of the nutrients (good fats, adequate protein) it needs...then hopefully you'll see your weight start to move.

    Thanks for the advice. I'm going to try it for another 4 weeks but after that, if I don't lose weight, I'll go to counting calories again.

    Why, when you are getting the benefits you mentioned above, would you give those up and go back to being hungry on a SAD diet?

    Low carb doesn't mean calories don't count. But, people say that because you naturally eat less when you eat real food with a good amount of fat. If you're going to switch to counting calories anyway in 4 weeks if you don't get the result you want, just do it low carb. I count, but I did it initially because I couldn't trust my broken hunger signals. In the last 9 months, I've learned what it feels like to actually be hungry as opposed to cravings induced by sneaky carbs and artificial sweeteners. I really think if I didn't count anymore that I would naturally eat the right amount now.
    Your body has a lot of fixing to do by your own admission. Cut it some slack if the weight doesn't come right off. It's definitely more important to be healthy and pain free than thin. Losing weight will come in time.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    edited March 2016
    OH YA. Ketostix are silly. I bought them and stopped using them. Also, I used to smoke as well. I recommend swimming to cure you of any desire to go back. It's just not worth the step backwards.

    Thanks for the info. Another poster said the sticks were not very useful too.

    I really don't want to go back to smoking. (I think I wont be able to to tell you honestly. The last time I smoked it really hurt my throat.)

    I do eat an awful lot of calories they are in the 1600 to 1700. But I have to usually cut back to 1200 to lose any weight.

    I also went through a period where I could not get enough nuts, cashews, peanuts, mixed nuts, almonds even sunflower seeds. It was like I could not get enough and then suddenly (after about 2 weeks) my cravings stopped. I think it was because my husband is on a renal diet and he can't eat nuts, peanut butter or seeds so I just did not keep them around.

    That amount might actually be too little, depending on exactly what it is that you do on the farm. According to http://keto-calculator.ankerl.com/, you can probably get away with as much as about 1800 (very active setting) if your farm work is a lot, and possibly even more if there's more than what the calculator accounts for. So I doubt you're eating too much, even if it does seem like a lot.

    Like @Sunny_Bunny_ said, your body has a lot of healing to do, and you've already started to see the effects of that healing. It's entirely possible that you need to put on a little scale weight to fix the damage. You're only a month into it, give it time. You've already seen other health benefits, why throw the baby out with the bathwater?

    Also, have a read of this, it's what I'm referring to -- http://myzerocarblife.jamesdhogan.com/wp/2015/03/when-lowering-carbs-causes-weight-gain/
  • ogmomma2012
    ogmomma2012 Posts: 1,520 Member
    When did calories NOT matter? o.o It matters a lot to people who haven't learned intuitive eating. You can do it. ^_^
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    Please, please, please read that last link Dragonwolf posted. When we ask people to be patient, we don't need for a couple weeks. Measure yourself, are your measurements going up? You could be healing. You could be increasing bone strength. You could be building muscle. Don't let a number on the scale get to you.

    I say that, even when I know I got a bit frustrated to see an increase on the scale this week. Then I did my measurements and see a decrease in my estimated body fat percentage. So, the estimated amount of body fat I am carrying is actually down. Still, it bugs me a little, because I would like the scale weight to be a little lower. I know, in my mind, that things are going in the right direction. But, it doesn't always determine my emotional reaction.

    With that in mind, do your best to accept that the scale does not measure health. Trust that you're getting healthier and eventually the scale will change to reflect what you understand to be healthy. Weight is often one of the last things your body really needs to fix on the road to getting well.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
    I don't know if I missed the point in the above link.. Other than the body "healing" itself. But she gained weight because she ate 4000ish calories, and lost it when she came back down to eating at a deficit.
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    edited March 2016
    I don't know if I missed the point in the above link.. Other than the body "healing" itself. But she gained weight because she ate 4000ish calories, and lost it when she came back down to eating at a deficit.

    The thing is that she trusted her body to know what was best and not force things along when the body wasn't ready. She ate 4,000 calories when her body asked for 4,000 calories, even though it meant that she was gaining and not losing like she wanted. She ate less when her body asked for less. In the long run, she ended up right where she wanted to be but was much healthier because she allowed her body to take the detour and handle important issues under the surface first.

    Edit: You can't starve yourself into good health. You can't demand success by denying your body the fuel it needs. You can force weight loss, no one denies that. But, weighing less on the scale while your health has not improved really shouldn't be your goal.
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    edited March 2016
    I'll leave this link here, incase you are using measuring cups/spoons. If so, watch the video

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10346234/not-losing-tips-suggestions-help-please#latest

    Clicked on the link and watched the video. It's really a bit frustrating that people really think they can have this measure of control. As if you can know your TDEE (calories out), each day, to a significance of 300 calories. Like it is the rounded cups that ruin everything. Honestly, if someone insists on counting calories, they should be tracking their weight accurately enough to know their projected deficit from their rate of loss, and that deficit will be based on the amount they are actually eating--even if they are using cups and not food scales.

    Let it go. Let the calories go. Find a way to control your weight without that sort of need for control. If you can't stop counting without regaining, it's because your body knows better than you and there's a need that you're denying. I know no one listens to me, but I will continue to say this whenever it comes up. If you give your body the right combination of fuel, time to heal, and the permission to do what it thinks best then you're going to have a much better time.
  • macchiatto
    macchiatto Posts: 2,890 Member
    Wow, dragonwolf's link is really interesting. Challenges my way of thinking ... FIT_Goat, that's good food for thought. (No pun intended. :tongue )
  • Sunny_Bunny_
    Sunny_Bunny_ Posts: 7,140 Member
    Omg! It's not about the scale! It's about health
    Wreck your body for years and expect the scale to go down when you decide you're ready to try?
    Really? Do you want health or a swimsuit body?
    If you've punished your body for years on low calorie low fat diets, it has a lot of catching up to do
    Please, please allow it to heal it hormones and vascular system and to spend some tryglycerides and give it the benefit of adjusting to the new life you've decided to live the last few weeks.

    Geez! It's about the rest of your life! Not what the scale says on weigh in day!
  • SamandaIndia
    SamandaIndia Posts: 1,577 Member
    edited March 2016
    @cedarsidefarm I hear your frustration and wish you success. You certainly have shown the discipline to do it (giving up smoking). Could be a choice to believe us on faith that results will come so you can have a lack of hunger and inflammation plus weight loss with lchf or go back to what you have tried before and felt worked sufficiently for you.

    For me I have been the same weight since end January despite doing everything "right". I think bodies do take time to heal so I am aiming at longer term sustainable weight loss. Personally I feel so much healthier I am willing to wait for results.

    I think the answer to your guestion is yes you can put on weight at first (see link) or have a masdive woosh weight loss or anything in between. Good luck with whichever choice you make
  • KarlaYP
    KarlaYP Posts: 4,436 Member
    Patience is a virtue in all things in life, and when on a Keto woe it is ultra important! Gains on the scale will happen. Know that, and accept it. The body is busy healing itself during these times, and won't take the time to lose scale weight! It's not fun, but as long as you know that what you're putting in your mouth is on plan your body will catch up! I've had so many increases on the scale that happen for no logical reason I could have given up many times. But it was how good I felt, and the control over food, that made me hang in there! I'm so glad I did because I've created a healthy body to live with that has a healthy relationship with food!!

    Don't allow the scale to be your only motivation! It will let you down!
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