Losing size but not weight. What's wrong??
krayzcan
Posts: 4 Member
Ok so I have lost 2 pant sizes but Im stuck at 160. I know I need to lose 20 lbs of fat but its not coming off. I've been doing cardio 4-5 days a week and lifting weights 3 days a week and eating clean for the last 2 months. My muscles are getting bigger...especially in my legs. Will the fat start coming off soon or should I add more cardio? I can't drop calories any lower. I eat between 1200 -1500 now. I'm getting obsessed and need help. Thanks.
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So the problem is that you lost 2 pants size and are noticeably leaner?
Wait, what's the problem again?11 -
I weigh 160 and I'm 5'6. That's still overweight.0
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Whatever your doing keep it up your looking good !!1
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lizzelspark wrote: »Whatever your doing keep it up your looking good !!
Thank you!! I've been working very hard. Its just I know I need to lose more fat and I'm not sure how to go about that.0 -
You are losing fat. You said it yourself, your muscles are getting bigger. Meaning they're growing. Muscle WEIGHS something too.
Muscle is more dense than fat...meaning a pound of muscle is around 82% the volume of pound of fat.7 -
Thank you!! I've been working very hard. Its just I know I need to lose more fat and I'm not sure how to go about that. [/quote]
More protein, less carbs. I`m not saying quit carbs, but don`t eat more than 20% carbs in your daily diet. That`s a sure way to lose fat.1 -
Judging from the pictures, the fat is definitely coming off. Keep up the good work. And check your weight on a different scale. You're doing fine.4
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You are losing fat. You said it yourself, your muscles are getting bigger. Meaning they're growing. Muscle WEIGHS something too.
Muscle is more dense than fat...meaning a pound of muscle is around 82% the volume of pound of fat.
OP You look good!!! I can see your hard work
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plami_9209 wrote: »
Thank you!! I've been working very hard. Its just I know I need to lose more fat and I'm not sure how to go about that.
More protein, less carbs. I`m not saying quit carbs, but don`t eat more than 20% carbs in your daily diet. That`s a sure way to lose fat.[/quote]
Here is some site to help calculate how many carbs daily person should eat when you on diet.
http://www.calculator.net/carbohydrate-calculator.html
Each one of us need carbs but in different demand. Some one who is very active, exercise a lot would be straggling with 20% of carbs. Carbs give you energy and to be successful with weight loss you need that energy. You shouldn't eat less then 130 grams of carbohydrates per day. 130g/ day is the average minimal usage of glucose that the brain uses on a daily basis. I love carbs and I eat from 240-300g a day and still I lost more then 100lbs. In my case carbs are my friend, sugar is enemy.
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Carbs don't matter. Calories matter - that's all.4
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I can see your point here and am in the smae situation. yes , got a little more muscle and things are tighter and firmer but not leaner. not sure what to do Ive been at this for a year and as you staying at on a low calorie diet , often low carb. makes no differnce what I do it seems. Ive noticed certian other peopel are like this , they look obese but are very athletic and eat healthy. I have had 2 friends now who have faced this problem after taking prednizone steriods. (though I havent) they did everything to try to lose weight ,vegan diet , no carb diet , liquid diet, walking miles everyday, eliptocal everything. if you find an answer I'd love to hear about it.its weird like once the fat is there its not leaving come hell or highwater. oh well atleast with high water the fat will help us float. I think my body is waiting for the next great flood haha1
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I did some googling to try and find answers to this. I know for me, I have chronic illness and a LOT of chronic stress also menopause. and sleep apnea and depravation issues due to pain. http://time.com/86287/11-reasons-why-youre-not-losing-belly-fat/
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That is an awesome result. Your question has already been answered above (muscle is denser so you weigh the same but get smaller - google 'body recomposition'). I just wanted to say congratulations and keep going.
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Maybe you're gaining muscles?2
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Here is some site to help calculate how many carbs daily person should eat when you on diet.
http://www.calculator.net/carbohydrate-calculator.html
Each one of us need carbs but in different demand. Some one who is very active, exercise a lot would be straggling with 20% of carbs. Carbs give you energy and to be successful with weight loss you need that energy. You shouldn't eat less then 130 grams of carbohydrates per day. 130g/ day is the average minimal usage of glucose that the brain uses on a daily basis. I love carbs and I eat from 240-300g a day and still I lost more then 100lbs. In my case carbs are my friend, sugar is enemy.
Thank you! Carbs are not evil. And fat, too, while we're on the subject. We need to eat fat in order to lose it. Funny how that works.
Studies are now showing that if you consume 1.5 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight while doing strength training, you'll maintain muscle mass, but cut fat. There's a great article in the June issue of FitnessRX for Women about it. (If you're not familiar with the magazine, it's a good one. Contributors all have PhDs in their fields. Science based, no fluff.)
With your strength training, what you want to do is cut your body fat % and increase your lean muscle mass. It's a slow process, but by eating enough protein it can be done.
Also, how tall are you? At just shy of 160 lbs, I'm betting your BMR (ie, how many calories you need if you were in a coma, doing absoloutely nothing) is higher than 1200. If you're not fueling your body properly you won't see a change. I've been eating 2000 calories a day coupled with strength training four days a week and the occasional run with my dog and have been consistently losing 3.5 pounds a month. I'm 5'3". I could go faster, yes, but I want to build muscle and lose fat. If I were to be more aggressive with my cut I'd lose muscle mass, and I don't want to do that.1 -
I am going to be a Debbie downer here, but it is unlikely you're gaining muscle if you are truly in a deficit. With that being said, unless you are weighing everything on a food scale, I have a feeling that your logging is not as accurate as you think. The good news is that it looks like a recomposition is happening when you eat at maintenance or just a tiny bit below and weight train. What you may be experiencing is newbie muscle gains, which will stop shortly. If you truly are in a deficit, muscle gain is incredibly difficult to nonexistent even for the trained body builder.
In regards to the weight, it is possible that water retention is masking your losses. Especially if you are weighing in on days after strength training. What I recommend is measuring yourself and use other methods of tracking health. Clearly something is working at the moment judging by the two pictures.6 -
Weight loss doesn't matter, fat loss does. Keep going, you are making progress.3
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I think that "weight" doesn't matter. So what if you are overweight? You are losing fat if your pant size is going down. I agree water retention could be masking your loss and recomposition could be happening. If you are losing inches, then I stick with it. If you stop losing inches or weight, then tighten up on your tracking and measuring and I would opt to try HIIT instead of steady state cardio.2
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Do you know what your body fat % is ? I would go by that for sure and not so much the scale muscle takes up less room then fat in our bodies so your definitely gaining the muscle and shrinking your fat which I think is the best way to get that perfect body .1
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You lost two pant sizes! I'd be ecstatic if I were you!3
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I don't see why you're concerned about how much you weigh. You're doing just fine!1
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I always find drinking "enough" water is a bit of a hidden formula. I never used to drink enough, despite thinking I did, and I always had weight stalls, 4-5 weeks of weight staying the same. I researched a lot and read up, I now make sure I drink 4-5 litres of water a day. It's amazing how much water the body stores when you're not drinking enough. Up to 8lbs.
Drink plenty of water and after 2-3 days that excess lbs flies off.0 -
loafer0303 wrote: »I always find drinking "enough" water is a bit of a hidden formula. I never used to drink enough, despite thinking I did, and I always had weight stalls, 4-5 weeks of weight staying the same. I researched a lot and read up, I now make sure I drink 4-5 litres of water a day. It's amazing how much water the body stores when you're not drinking enough. Up to 8lbs.
Drink plenty of water and after 2-3 days that excess lbs flies off.
I do. It drink enough water for sure. I'm just. It a drinker unless I'm working out. I'll up my water intake and see if that helps. I know it's not too many carbs or sugars because I cut all that out. Slowly adding some carbs back for energy. Thanks!!0 -
Nothing's wrong - you're making visible progress and buying new clothes - who cares what the silly scale number is?2
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AmyRhubarb wrote: »Nothing's wrong - you're making visible progress and buying new clothes - who cares what the silly scale number is?
Exactly, more people should do it this way: lose fat, not weight.
The weight will come down eventually, but until then you are maintaining the maximum amount of muscle, or maybe even building some... Makes it much more efficient in the long run.1 -
Start swimming more than anything, I saw my best friend become so lean right in front of my eyes.0
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I am 5'7" and I was stuck at 160/161 for what seemed like a super long time (at least 3 weeks). I just recently dropped down to 158 after being at 161 the day before.
I eat around 1400-1500 and work out. Just keep at it, and the weight will come off. Triple check that you are being strict and weighing everything if you're eating your workout calories back. I know after losing 20 or so lbs, I will feel "I know what I'm doing" and get lazy with weighing. It's important to check in and make sure you don't get overconfident and think you don't have to weigh/track every bite.0 -
I weigh 160 and I'm 5'6. That's still overweight.
Eventually the weight will follow. Give up now and you'll never see how far you could have gone. I was the same for 3 weeks, inches lost off my waist but not a pound lost. Now I'm down 5lbs this week, idk how much is water and how much is fat but I'm showing scale progress now. Had I gotten mad a week ago and changed things up I may have broken whatever plan my body had going on.
Give it time.0
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