Don't relax it will sneak back up on you

I'm WEAK!!!!! Thought I had it down and didn't need to log everything. Ugh gained back almost 20 pounds. Be careful it starts out with a simple desert while out for dinner with friends then turns into ice cream at 2am.
Quess it's better to restart at 255 than back at 310.
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Replies

  • brenn24179
    brenn24179 Posts: 2,144 Member
    you better believe it is. I lost 40 lbs and before you knew it gained back 15 lbs, depressing. I tell you it is a struggle staying on top of it, I did get it off and I now weigh every week.
  • kg5388
    kg5388 Posts: 6 Member
    Now back to weighing every Monday, Wednesday and Friday and logging every day.

    I Had fell of the bandwagon and quit weighing or logging and it didn't take long to put it back on. It was fast just under 4 months. Knew I had put on a FEW pounds that would be easy to lose but did t realize it was that much.
  • HamsterManV2
    HamsterManV2 Posts: 449 Member
    No such thing as diet - it is a lifestyle change. Have an occasional cheat meal, no problem, but always be cognisant of your diet even if you don't count calories daily.
  • kschramm7
    kschramm7 Posts: 72 Member
    I'm TERRIFIED of letting my guard down and gaining! I weigh daily, track daily, and go to WW meetings and weigh in once a month for the accountability. I've only been at goal for 10 months now, and it's HARD!!
  • Brelynn
    Brelynn Posts: 105 Member
    This has happening to me as well. The sooner the better to get back on track. Weigh yourself regularly, track and keep all challenging foods out of the house. It is unbelievable how fast that weight can come back!
  • nvpixie
    nvpixie Posts: 483 Member
    Happened to me too. This time, I'm going to keep logging well past meeting my goal. I was so excited to get to maintenance last time, I told myself I'd NEVER revert to my old bad habits so I didn't need to log anymore. Unfortunately, I ended up gaining back almost all of it.
  • FitPhillygirl
    FitPhillygirl Posts: 7,124 Member
    edited August 2016
    Everyone is different. I've been maintaining for 5 years now and have been relaxed for about 2 years now. Haven't gained any weight back and even lost an additional few pounds. I workout 6 days a week and have a very active job, though, which helps.
    OP, it's good that you caught the weight gain early and are doing something about it now.
  • Michele7091
    Michele7091 Posts: 256 Member
    Oh my gosh...so true! I first started my journey on here 12/27/11 and I was 173.8lbs. I worked hard and got down to 150.8 by 10/8/12 and was SO ecstatic! I felt great!!

    And then I got comfortable...translation; lazy...and before I realized it, I had crept back up to 160. Then slowly made my way back to my original weight. And then :'( I surpassed my starting weight by 1.2 pounds and here I am basically starting over again.

    I am trying not to get discouraged but every time I see that 150.8 pounds on my weight progress chart and see my 175 now, I just want to cry.
  • Megs052
    Megs052 Posts: 3 Member
    Agh spent the past 10 years loosing and gaining!
  • B4Rachael
    B4Rachael Posts: 155 Member
    I am using the app "happy scale" because it shows your weight trends. (I am currently using it to lose weight) I will still be using it when I go into maintenance so that I can make sure I am staying on track. I weigh myself daily and input it into the app. It has a setting for lose, gain & maintain weight.
  • toofatnomore
    toofatnomore Posts: 206 Member
    I am with you...I logged everyday for a year...Lost 55 lbs. Damn near goal. Then stopped logging. I thought I had it all figured out. Gained 25 back fast. Guess what I am doing again? Oh, side bar...I also have about 1800 miles on my road bike this year...I was SURE that I drop pounds doing THAT...Uh no....It's ALL food control.
  • gothchiq
    gothchiq Posts: 4,590 Member
    That's exactly right. Never relax that vigilance!
  • scrittrice
    scrittrice Posts: 345 Member
    I've realized that I have a broken feedback mechanism for telling me when to eat or stop eating, and I'm always going to have to use external tools to manage that. I like how The Hacker's Diet puts it:

    "Let's try to understand why so many people fail to keep weight off after struggling to lose it. The rubber bag tells us that weight gain stems from a very simple cause: eating more food than the body burns. Feedback explains why: people prone to overweight lack a built-in feedback system to balance the calories they eat against what they burn; their appetite doesn't tell them to stop eating when enough calories have gone in.

    A person with a broken feedback system will always tend to gain or lose weight. In chapter [Ref] we've seen how Oscar and Buster, victims of incorrect feedback, gain weight simply by heeding the deceptive message of appetite. When Oscar or Buster go on a diet, the diet tells them what to eat and when. And, for reasons we now understand, it works! As long as they follow the diet and don't cheat, they lose weight as rapidly as promised and arrive at the end of the diet thin, happy, and feeling in command of their weight.

    Then they put the diet away and rely, once again, on their built-in feedback system to tell them how much to eat. But it's still broken! Sure enough, their weight starts to creep upward and before long all the progress of the diet is erased. People with a tendency to gain weight need continual guidance about how much to eat. Withdrawing this guidance at the end of a diet, or couching the need for ongoing feedback in a manner that implies, ``You're a fatty, and to be slim you'll have to spend the rest of your life on a diet'' is as deplorable as lending a pair of glasses to a nearsighted person for six weeks, then removing them and saying, ``OK. You're on your own.''

    If your eyes don't focus, you need optical correction to live a normal life, and you need it all life long. The fix that lets you see as well as a person born with perfect vision needn't be obtrusive nor prevent you from doing anything you wish, but you have to continue using it. If you happen, instead, to lack a built-in eat watch, you shouldn't feel any more guilty about technologically overcoming that limitation than your friends do about wearing glasses. Gotta problem? Quit whining, fix it, and get on with yer' life!"

    Hacker's Diet (free!): https://www.fourmilab.ch/hackdiet/

    I love this, and (as someone who has worn glasses since age 6) I'd come up with the same analogy to eyeglasses on my own. I'd love to stop logging, and maybe someday I'll be able to, but so far each time I've tried to stop even one day a week, the slow creep has begun.
  • Derpy_Hooves
    Derpy_Hooves Posts: 234 Member
    Yes same here, not a huge amount, but still well over the margin that I had set myself.
    So back to logging again. :|

    I'm going to Italy in exactly 5 weeks for a girly weekend away, so that's my motivation to stay firmly back on track.
  • Derpy_Hooves
    Derpy_Hooves Posts: 234 Member
    A while back, NIH did a 2 year study of the 5 most popular weight loss programs, including WW. What they found was that after 2 years, more than 95% of people who had lost weight had gained it all back, or more. Losing weight isn't the hard part. Keeping the weight off is. You have to be committed and attentive. MFP is a great way to do that.

    Such uplifting and confidence boosting statistics lol

    I for one, am determined to be the other 5%


    And, to make it more uplifting... :D
    Statistically I am the other 5%, as I did keep it off for more than 2 years. It was after 5 years that I've started sliding again. It's okay, I'll get back to it. but really, it's proof for me that this is for life.
  • neldabg
    neldabg Posts: 1,452 Member
    I've realized that I have a broken feedback mechanism for telling me when to eat or stop eating, and I'm always going to have to use external tools to manage that. I like how The Hacker's Diet puts it:

    "Let's try to understand why so many people fail to keep weight off after struggling to lose it. The rubber bag tells us that weight gain stems from a very simple cause: eating more food than the body burns. Feedback explains why: people prone to overweight lack a built-in feedback system to balance the calories they eat against what they burn; their appetite doesn't tell them to stop eating when enough calories have gone in.

    A person with a broken feedback system will always tend to gain or lose weight. In chapter [Ref] we've seen how Oscar and Buster, victims of incorrect feedback, gain weight simply by heeding the deceptive message of appetite. When Oscar or Buster go on a diet, the diet tells them what to eat and when. And, for reasons we now understand, it works! As long as they follow the diet and don't cheat, they lose weight as rapidly as promised and arrive at the end of the diet thin, happy, and feeling in command of their weight.

    Then they put the diet away and rely, once again, on their built-in feedback system to tell them how much to eat. But it's still broken! Sure enough, their weight starts to creep upward and before long all the progress of the diet is erased. People with a tendency to gain weight need continual guidance about how much to eat. Withdrawing this guidance at the end of a diet, or couching the need for ongoing feedback in a manner that implies, ``You're a fatty, and to be slim you'll have to spend the rest of your life on a diet'' is as deplorable as lending a pair of glasses to a nearsighted person for six weeks, then removing them and saying, ``OK. You're on your own.''

    If your eyes don't focus, you need optical correction to live a normal life, and you need it all life long. The fix that lets you see as well as a person born with perfect vision needn't be obtrusive nor prevent you from doing anything you wish, but you have to continue using it. If you happen, instead, to lack a built-in eat watch, you shouldn't feel any more guilty about technologically overcoming that limitation than your friends do about wearing glasses. Gotta problem? Quit whining, fix it, and get on with yer' life!"

    Hacker's Diet (free!): https://www.fourmilab.ch/hackdiet/

    I like this. A lot. Thanks for sharing! ^_^