Gaining Weight on 1,000 Calories
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TimothyWashington1 wrote: »INTERMITTENT FASTING
Two days out of the week till dinner time. This helps regulate blood sugar and jump starts metabolism. remember to lower carbs to 30% of your intake. And cardio cardio cardio!!!
This information is incorrect4 -
If my daughters school made this a rule, I'd be reporting them! Way to set up young girls for an eating disorder! :mad:2
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You are either underweight or have a damaged metabolism... because there's no way you can be gaining weight at 95 lbs at 5'1" and eating only 1000 calories. General maintenance for that height is approximately 1400-1500 calories and you're not even close within that range and are still gaining weight?1
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ramosjocelyn wrote: »How do you know you need to be 90 lbs to be considered for a solo? If it's written down somewhere, that's a Title IX claim waiting to happen. If it's something that other girls in the team told you, understand that this so-called "requirement" may come from their own insecurities rather than actual fact.
In either case, please reconsider whether getting to dance a solo is worth damaging your health by becoming even more painfully thin. You're already underweight according to the BMI chart. If you decide it's worth it, do at least consider seeing a doctor before attempting to lose more weight.
I am actually not underweight just close to it.
Yes, you are underweight by BMI, which means your total health risk is higher at this weight than a few pounds heavier. I don't think you are by any means dangerously underweight, or that you should worry about it or try to gain. But there is zero possibility that you would be healthier by losing weight. The ONLY health (and performance) outcome to dropping lower is negative, you are going in the wrong direction, like someone fat getting fatter - you are past the line where that happens. You aren't going to lose fat once you are down to essential fat, you will only lose muscle, heart, bone, brain.
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you are only .4 bmi points above the anorexia diagnostic bmi so yes you are underweight1
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You are NOT eating enough!!! Your body is in starvation mode and holding on to everything it gets.0
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You are NOT eating enough!!! Your body is in starvation mode and holding on to everything it gets.
NO! Starvation mode in this sense does not exist.
I can't believe people are giving advice to help someone who is underweight to lose more.
OP, is this an actual written expectation that you be that far underweight? You are underweight now, and there are long-term health repercussions for remaining so, never mind going lower. Is this actual school policy? Or is it an unwritten belief? If it's an actual policy, the impact on the health and the physical and psychological wellbeing of the students need to be reviewed by the college.6 -
singingflutelady wrote: »you are only .4 bmi points above the anorexia diagnostic bmi so yes you are underweight
And her goal puts her at .5 below that.1 -
MultipleHigh5s wrote: »How can a college have a weight requirement to get on a dance team that is so incredibly wrong!
It could be the special troll squad.4 -
BMI charts for adults are for those ages 21 and up. I am 19. I am also at the 6th percentile, which puts me just above the underweight threshold. The reason we have a weight requirement like we do is because they buy sets of costumes every year. In order to be guaranteed a solo, you must fit into a costume. The sizes they have left are XXS, which I will fit into if I lose those five pounds.0
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ramosjocelyn wrote: »BMI charts for adults are for those ages 21 and up. I am 19. I am also at the 6th percentile, which puts me just above the underweight threshold. The reason we have a weight requirement like we do is because they buy sets of costumes every year. In order to be guaranteed a solo, you must fit into a costume. The sizes they have left are XXS, which I will fit into if I lose those five pounds.
It's not worth it. I hope one day you come to realize this. You don't do this to fit into a leftover costume.7 -
OP, it's sad that you'd risk your health for a solo and a clothes size.
The people in here giving OP advice on how to lose need a slap upside the head.10 -
5 pounds is a LOT of weight for you. How well will you even be able to perform losing more weight? I can't believe you can't alter that costume just a little to fit into it.3
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OP--I'd like to add something. I was a dancer until I had a catastrophic knee injury. I know the mentality. That is why I'm very worried about you. If you really feel like it's a good idea to lose more weight, please have a discussion with a doctor. A good one.1
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I want to thank all of you. I've decided to not worry about the solo and focus on my health. My new goal is to maintain my weight due to lots of hard college classes and dance making it hard to gain weight. I will focus on gaining now and over the summer but I will make no promises as to gaining weight once fall comes around.9
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ramosjocelyn wrote: »I want to thank all of you. I've decided to not worry about the solo and focus on my health. My new goal is to maintain my weight due to lots of hard college classes and dance making it hard to gain weight. I will focus on gaining now and over the summer but I will make no promises as to gaining weight once fall comes around.
I think the focusing on your health is the right choice. You only get one body, abusing it now can have life-long consequences. Eating properly with the stress of school is challenging, but you can do it.1 -
I was going to post supporting the advice against Jocelyn trying to lose more weight but I see you have come to this conclusion yourself. I think it is worth pointing out that while "starvation mode does not exist" is reasonable advice for most overweight dieters metabolic adaptation is something that exists in underweight people on very low calorie diets, which is exactly this situation! Good on you OP for deciding to focus on your health. You will be a better dancer if you are putting the right things into your body.1
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This whole thread has made me sad2
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shortcdngirl wrote: »This whole thread has made me sad
Nah, it got good near the end when OP listened and took on board the good information and decided to take care of her health1 -
ramosjocelyn wrote: »I want to thank all of you. I've decided to not worry about the solo and focus on my health. My new goal is to maintain my weight due to lots of hard college classes and dance making it hard to gain weight. I will focus on gaining now and over the summer but I will make no promises as to gaining weight once fall comes around.
This brings tears to my eyes. Seriously.1 -
Where is this child's parents and support system? College or not someone should have her back. She has to be told by a public Internet forum not to lose anymore weight at 95lbs. Good luck OP!0
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can someone explain how you gain weight on 1000 calories0
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can someone explain how you gain weight on 1000 calories
You don't. A two year old child needs 1200 calories a day to gain weight. An adult female can't gain on 1000 cal unless there is some serious godawful rare (if such a thing even exists, and I'm not sure it does at her stats) medical stuff going on. It simply isn't physically possible unless you're the size of an average American toddler.
The likelihood is that the 1000 calories in the log aren't 1000 calories in real life. Trained professionals are known to underestimate. And we're all just folk. What does that tell you?1 -
My friend once weighed a healthy 120 lbs...then 100...then 95....and now she still thinks she needs to lose weight....Stop now before it gets outta hand!0
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You know what? Here's a secret I learned back in college when I was starving myself for performance dance...
The solos? Go to the girl who is willing to sleep with the producer, not to the skinniest girl, or the best dancer. They go to the girl who goes the extra mile, not on the dance floor but in the back room after rehearsal. It's NOT WORTH IT! Be you, dance the best you can, and take the best care you can of your body.
Also, another tiny something I learned in those days... If you're eating at a severe calorie deficit and working out constantly, and, you say, fall and break your foot? It won't heal. Bones need a caloric surplus to heal properly. The cartilage in your joints needs proper nutrition to heal. Ask dancers who are now in their 40's and 50's what working so hard for those solos cost us in terms of our bodies and ask if it was worth it.2 -
You're already underweight....0
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