Does maintaining weight get easier after a year?

Hi, new here, just joined today :) with everything in the news I got pretty depressed. But then I found this article and wanted to get it straight from the horses mouth. Do you guys find that maintaining is easier after a year? Or is it always super hard like they say in the NYT article?

http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2016/04/14/Study-suggests-method-to-maintain-stable-weight-loss/3191460643328/
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Replies

  • annareeves12609
    annareeves12609 Posts: 2 Member
    Hi there I have found at times I need to step up my exercise to continue to loose weight.
  • tmwonline
    tmwonline Posts: 12 Member
    thanks! so you maintain but sometimes creep up and then just need to step up the exercise?
  • Floreadsalot
    Floreadsalot Posts: 12 Member
    Imo i think it gets harder. I got complacent and begin falling back into post wls bad eating habits and no exercise, busy life, more fast food, etc. Im 3yrs in and just saw a weight gain. Its a combination i think of eating the right foods and working out.
  • tmwonline
    tmwonline Posts: 12 Member
    Thanks for your reply!
  • Stanley1903
    Stanley1903 Posts: 73 Member
    I'm not there yet, but it's gotten harder to stay committed to losing. I would imagine it gets harder with time. However, having MFP makes it a habit for me. It's easier. I hope this will make maintenance easier. I plan to continue for the foreseeable future.
  • middlehaitch
    middlehaitch Posts: 8,486 Member
    I did a slow weight loss of a year, then continued counting for a good ~6 months to make sure my maintenance was good.
    6+ year on - maintaining is a subtle portion control and the very occasional few weeks logging.

    My exercise has always been what I know I can continue long term, and I have always eaten no less than 50% of my exercise calories back.

    It is not difficult but it does take a certain amount of self awareness.

    Cheers, h.
  • mimigingerbread
    mimigingerbread Posts: 43 Member
    Thanks for the article link. Nice to read after the NYT one which seemed depressing! I'm at 7 months so far maintaining my 50 lb loss so hoping after a year it will be better.
  • Mentiri
    Mentiri Posts: 1,356 Member
    I lost 100 pounds over 3 years, losing 60 pounds in the last year with MFP. I've been in maintenance for 6 months, and my biggest problem has been not losing more weight! Once I found a sustainable activity level and began accurately tracking my calorie intake weight loss was ridiculously easy. As a vegetarian, I tend to eat less calorie dense foods, so I get to eat a volume of food that ensures I'm never hungry. I'm still logging daily, but I find that is also just a manageable part of my routine. I keep waiting for the hard part to begin, but so far it's smooth sailing!
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    This article is better than the other one, but I don't buy the conclusions. It's the brain/habits/attitudes and not the body/hormones that needs to be trained/changed. Maintenance gets harder AND easier as time goes by - we learn new habits, but we get bored; a new routine can feel uplifting and motivating, but we can keep up stressful regimens only for so long; we get used to our "new" bodies, and we become complacent. We have to be vigilant, but we also need to make our "new lifestyle" fun. It's all about balance.
  • brenn24179
    brenn24179 Posts: 2,144 Member
    hate to tell you but it never gets easy but it is worth it, 4 years and still have to log
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    No it doesn't get easier. Someone posted the same article last week, btw. And I already answered that apparently my hormones didn't get the memo.
  • ReaderGirl3
    ReaderGirl3 Posts: 868 Member
    tmwonline wrote: »
    Hi, new here, just joined today :) with everything in the news I got pretty depressed. But then I found this article and wanted to get it straight from the horses mouth. Do you guys find that maintaining is easier after a year? Or is it always super hard like they say in the NYT article?

    http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2016/04/14/Study-suggests-method-to-maintain-stable-weight-loss/3191460643328/

    Nope, it's still a pain in the butt 3 years into it :p For me it's mostly a mental struggle/challenge though, and not a physical one.
  • Marycycles
    Marycycles Posts: 48 Member
    I lost 105lbs in 8 months kept it off for 2yrs then got depressed after my mother died and started binge eating. Now I gained 60 lbs back, which is depressing in it's self! But the losing was super easy when motives! Emotions are key for me. I have battled thru anorexia and bulimia since high school I am now 49 and still dealing with emotional eating. I love MFP I've used it 5years and always, always eat those exercise calories!!! Trust me your body needs them and you will lose weight faster!
  • JoeCWV
    JoeCWV Posts: 213 Member
    I did not find losing 70 pounds particularly difficult. Nor is maintenance. I continue to track on MFP and keep on keeping on. I think the deciding factor is your mental outlook.

    Like others have said: losing weight is hard. Being fat is hard. Pick your hard.

    I, after years of picking fat, decided to try normal weight for a while. Been maintaining for about 3 years. It's all in the attitude you bring to the effort.
  • jlahorn
    jlahorn Posts: 377 Member
    I lost a bunch of weight in my early 20s and kept it off for about 6 years, but it was a struggle the whole time.
    I lost a bunch of weight again about 3 years ago. I've maintained, but it's much worse in my 40s. I have Hashi's now, I'm older and get more frequent injuries from exercise that never used to bother me, etc.

    Being fat is hard, being fit is hard, etc. is very true. Thinking about it the other way, there are fun things about working hard and being fit, and there are fun things about being relaxed and overweight. What's more fun? :)
  • Gamliela
    Gamliela Posts: 2,468 Member
    edited May 2016
    Yes, choose ur difficulty and stick with it everyday, day in day out. I maintained for 5 years. It got more and more difficult. I chose to eat freely after those 5 years and gained the weight back plus some. I concluded I would rather be at a low weight and the difficulties of maintnance than have the health problems I began to have to face being overweight.
  • tmwonline
    tmwonline Posts: 12 Member
    really really appreciate everyone's responses. Good to know that many people are doing it successfully and just another thing to get used to. So happy to have found mfp :smile:
  • GYATagain
    GYATagain Posts: 141 Member
    3+ years now in the process. I call it "process" because it is and always will be a process working through maintenance. As we age - and we all do, hopefully - things shift, change, health changes, hormones go haywire, and it is a constant endeavor to meet those changes and roll with the punches, so to speak. Weight may bounce back up a few pounds (or 10) and I know it is time to figure out what I'm doing different and make the changes. Things that did not bother me before, I have to work harder to meet. Easier? Yes, in a way. Because I can actually move more, breathe easier, bend over and tie my shoes, walk up the stairs without wheezing, and one of the biggest components of all this healthy eating and exercising stuff - I have not been sick with a cold or flu in the last 3 years -- well, there I went and jinxed it! I better get ready for a cold!
  • UpEarly
    UpEarly Posts: 2,555 Member
    NO! I've been on maintenance since spring of 2012. It takes ongoing mindfulness and practice.
  • OrionSlayer
    OrionSlayer Posts: 29 Member
    Thanks for asking this question! The answers you received are very helpful for when I start maintenance. Seems like I will need to 1) Learn what level of eating/exercising will maintain my weight, 2) Find an effective way to monitor my weight to not allow it to cascade out of my goal weight, 3) Watch for potential eating triggers (ex. vacations, stressful events, injury), 4) Relax and enjoy life