Auggghhhhhhh!!!!! So frustrated!!!!!

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Replies

  • Cheerios0392
    Cheerios0392 Posts: 46 Member
    I've been trying to lose my last 10 pounds for over a year. All I do is lose some, put some back on.. lose again, gain again. Best I have done is maintain. I'm STILL trying to lose 10 pounds but sometimes I wonder why I am bothering.
  • courtneyfabulous
    courtneyfabulous Posts: 1,863 Member
    Implement refeed days or take a diet break. Also do less cardio. Your metabolism could just be tanked.
  • Kurzweil
    Kurzweil Posts: 14 Member
    Raising my goal weight by 10 lbs and declaring myself officially at goal, shifting into maintenance, was one of the best things I've done. It took me time to emotionally accept it and recognize it wasn't a failure to change my goal, and it isn't permanent if I decide to lose more later, I can. I was putting so much pressure on stress on myself as I got into that last 10-15 lbs that it was really sabotaging me.

    I dropped 5 more pounds pretty easily as I shifted into maintenance slowwwwwwly - pounds I was struggling with when I perceived myself in losing mode.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    It wasn't until I shifted from "active weight loss" into "maintenance" that I finally relaxed also, Kurzweil. The stress and frustration lifted inmediately. It was a real break for me physically and mentally.
  • Unknown
    edited October 2016
    This content has been removed.
  • CattOfTheGarage
    CattOfTheGarage Posts: 2,745 Member
    That up-down weight pattern is normal. When you're losing fast, it looks like fast weeks and slow weeks. Then as your loss slows, it looks like some weeks you lose and others you stall. Then as your loss slows further, it looks like some weeks you lose and others you gain. But it's just the water fluctuating and has nothing to do with fat loss. You need to let go of the day-to-day scale readings and get at the underlying trend. I strongly recommend using a trend app.
  • JoeCWV
    JoeCWV Posts: 213 Member
    Stop exercising for two or three days while continuing your calorie deficit. It will come off. You are exercising a lot which means your body is in a constant state of repair which means you are likely retaining water. Taking a few days off from the gym will allow your body to repair itself and release the retained water.

    If this does not work, then you are not eating at a deficit.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,972 Member
    edited October 2016
    I don't eat back exercise calories. I eat 1350 solid. I count EVERYTHING, obsessively. If my 2 year old feeds me 4 goldfish crackers, I log it. I burn nearly 100 cals a mile when I run -
    Sunday - ran 10 miles =1000 exercise
    Monday - Jillian Michaels 30 day shred (level 3)
    Tuesday - ran 6 miles and did JM level 3
    Wednesday rested
    Thursday - ran 6 miles and did JM level 3
    Friday - ran 3 miles and did JM level 3
    Saturday - resting so I can run 12 miles tomorrow.
    I've lost 29 lbs before hitting this insane slow down. It was a steady 1lb a week before... Now it's 1lb a month for the past 4 mos and it's making me feel crazy. I want to give up the dieting side and just eat to maintain. I'm sick of working this hard to "earn" a number on the scale.
    I feel so frustrated when I am with people - and they're eating food, and I'm eating like a rabbit. If I work out like I do, I wonder if I should just give up the restricted calories for a while and just eat back my exercise cals. I'd LOVE to eat 2000 on a day I run 10+ miles.
    Undereating has caught up with you. Your body is now reacting by leveling off metabolic rate, also known as homeostasis. It will utilize the calories afforded to it by lowering metabolic rate at rest, which is where you burn the most body fat.
    When this happens with clients, especially after a few months of solid calorie deficit, I have then eat maintenance calories (including exercise calories) for a week or so. And guess what? Weight loss restarts.
    Also, don't under eat. Realize that if you're not getting in enough calories, you may be compromising losing more lean tissue which lowers your resting metabolic rate even more.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

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  • mengqiz86
    mengqiz86 Posts: 176 Member
    Regarding running calories... I started at 130lb/5'6" and per my heart rate monitor I burn only 75kcal/mile running. 100/mile may be an overestimate?

    That said, I was living your life. wanted to lose 5lb and for 7 months, nothing. Over the 6 weeks I stopped weighing my food and myself, and focused on mindful eating. I never let my "diet" go, but I stopped sweating every oz of food. I dropped an inch on my waist/thighs. I didn't bother weighing myself, but I feel good about the new approach it's not driving me crazy and I find it sustainable. At this point you are probably better off finding a sustainable approach to food that you don't mind sticking to - for life.