Exercising intensely - Retaining water help
VanessaLins90
Posts: 22 Member
exercising intensely makes you retain a lot of water?
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Replies
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Yes.0
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Why?0
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If it is a new exercise for you, or you have just started. Your body adapts after a few days and sheds the water weight retained by the muscles.
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Intense exercise increase cortisol levels and this makes you retain some extra water. You will go back to normal once your cortisol level gets normal again. To minimize this you can pay attention to your sodium and potassium intake and curiously drink more water. Your body needs to know that water will be available for rehydration. Apparently eating a huge plate after exercising also helps because it's supposed to reduce your cortisol levels... it would be interesting to know if somebody had that experience.0
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how many pounds of water can you retain right after exercising?0
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VanessaLins90 wrote: »how many pounds of water can you retain right after exercising?
Four.
JK - everyone is different.5 -
VanessaLins90 wrote: »how many pounds of water can you retain right after exercising?
Impossible to say, especially since you could sweat a lot (water loss) and you should be hydrating (water gain). My weight can fluctuate as much as 6 lbs over the course of a day. Just weigh yourself in the morning and watch the trend over time and water weight fluctuations will average out.0 -
VanessaLins90 wrote: »how many pounds of water can you retain right after exercising?
I'm not sure how to ask this without it potentially (probably) sounding snarky, but that isn't my intent.
Why does it matter? It happens, you now know it happens, so just roll with it. As long as your overall weight loss is going down, I wouldn't worry about it.
A better question, IMO, would be to ask how long does water retention last. The answer is highly variable, but typically only a few weeks - which is one reason of a number why I disagree with "changing your routine every few weeks." Every time you change something - especially major changes such as routines - you're likely to retain more water. Again, since it's a few weeks, look to see how your weight is doing in a month. Adjust Calorie intake, as necessary.4 -
Yes but it's not indefinite and it's just... weight, not fat. Is there a reason you're concerned?1
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It's your body's way of healing the muscles. Not permanant. Keep working out, you will drop the retained water weight, for sure.0
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The seven pound spike in late Oct/early Nov was from when I started weight lifting again. As you can see, it took a few days to achieve and to go away. (It went away a little faster than normal because I was sick.) The other spikes are generally from when I ovulated and was premenstrual.
Weight fluctuations are normal, especially for women with a menstrual cycle. It's the overall trend that's important.
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Its just because, some people say you shouldn't take the scale seriously.. Specially when you are not only doing Cardio but also lifting since you gain muscles and all the water retained....
So I was wondering how long it takes to really see the results regardless the water retain, and muscles gain....
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If you are looking for aesthetic results then ignore the scale. Take pictures and measurements. They speak volumes over the scale.0
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VanessaLins90 wrote: »Its just because, some people say you shouldn't take the scale seriously.. Specially when you are not only doing Cardio but also lifting since you gain muscles and all the water retained....
So I was wondering how long it takes to really see the results regardless the water retain, and muscles gain....
Take meassurements every month. Judge by how your clothes are fitting.0 -
measurements are so helpful when the scale is being a little *kitten*2
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VanessaLins90 wrote: »Its just because, some people say you shouldn't take the scale seriously.. Specially when you are not only doing Cardio but also lifting since you gain muscles and all the water retained....
So I was wondering how long it takes to really see the results regardless the water retain, and muscles gain....
Muscle gains are hard and not going to really show that much on the scale, and that is consider that you are following a progressive overload lifting program.
In general, I carry 2 lbs of fluid retention. Nothing I can do about it, except i track weight loss over extended periods of time (4-6 weeks or longer).0 -
VanessaLins90 wrote: »Its just because, some people say you shouldn't take the scale seriously.. Specially when you are not only doing Cardio but also lifting since you gain muscles and all the water retained....
So I was wondering how long it takes to really see the results regardless the water retain, and muscles gain....
Muscle gains are hard and not going to really show that much on the scale, and that is consider that you are following a progressive overload lifting program.
This. It's more likely to show in how you look. And while I'm on that subject, take some progress pictures to compare. It takes a few months before it starts becoming noticable.
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