About to finish losing weight, need some advice
bardd1995
Posts: 17 Member
Hello everyone,
I've been working on my weight for four months now. Based on my progress so far, by this time next week I will reach my goal weight, and I'm starting to prepare for "what's to come". I have a couple questions.
1. How do you keep track? My idea currently is weekly weigh-ins, and a week of calorie deficit if I gain weight and feel like it's not because of fluctuations (e.g. gaining weight a couple of weeks in a row)
2. How do you raise your calorie intake? I'm going to need to raise my calorie intake by about 500 calories, but I'm not sure what to add to my diet to do that. Do you just eat larger quantities of whatever you ate before?
3. Once I finish, I'll have the right size but the wrong shape. I plan to do two long runs a week (currently 4.5 miles) and two strength workouts. How do you take that into account? Really any tips on shaping up will be appreciated.
4. I really miss bagged snacks (pringles, doritos etc.), how do you maintain your weight while not abstaining snacks? Of course, I won't eat one a day, but now that I can afford more calories a day I do plan to get one once in a while.
Thanks everyone for your help!
I've been working on my weight for four months now. Based on my progress so far, by this time next week I will reach my goal weight, and I'm starting to prepare for "what's to come". I have a couple questions.
1. How do you keep track? My idea currently is weekly weigh-ins, and a week of calorie deficit if I gain weight and feel like it's not because of fluctuations (e.g. gaining weight a couple of weeks in a row)
2. How do you raise your calorie intake? I'm going to need to raise my calorie intake by about 500 calories, but I'm not sure what to add to my diet to do that. Do you just eat larger quantities of whatever you ate before?
3. Once I finish, I'll have the right size but the wrong shape. I plan to do two long runs a week (currently 4.5 miles) and two strength workouts. How do you take that into account? Really any tips on shaping up will be appreciated.
4. I really miss bagged snacks (pringles, doritos etc.), how do you maintain your weight while not abstaining snacks? Of course, I won't eat one a day, but now that I can afford more calories a day I do plan to get one once in a while.
Thanks everyone for your help!
1
Replies
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A few tips:
I have had trouble keeping on track without using MyFitnessPal or another tracker, I'll admit. I've lost weight and kept it off for a year or two, but it sneaks back on when I wean off trackers. So, advice: keep MyFitnessPal up to keep yourself honest, at least until you have a sense of your new eating requirements. You'll find it is pretty easy to add 500 calories back into your diet, through a combination of portions and treats, within reason. There's your bagged snacks right there! --again, though, keep tracking for a considerable amount of time after you reach your weight goal.
Not clear what your question is about the runs and strength. You can enter those into your tracker and get your desired caloric load easily that way, just as you presumably do now.
Best of luck!
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I'd rather not get the calories back through snacks, tempting as it is... I want to eat right.
About the exercise, I mean do you eat more on days when you exercise? Do you eat the same? Just change the composition of your food?0 -
Keep up the cardio.....0
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How do you keep track? My idea currently is weekly weigh-ins, and a week of calorie deficit if I gain weight and feel like it's not because of fluctuations (e.g. gaining weight a couple of weeks in a row)
I've always, as an adult, weighed daily, just part of my routine and the number is just data. I don't record or trend my data but am casually aware of developing upwards trends. I have an upper intervention weight which triggers action if needed. Many people prefer a maintenance range but losing weight unintentionally has never happed to me!
How do you raise your calorie intake? I'm going to need to raise my calorie intake by about 500 calories, but I'm not sure what to add to my diet to do that. Do you just eat larger quantities of whatever you ate before?
My food choices were never a problem so I simply ate more of the foods I like. At first I continued to track calories and macros but over time learned I don't need to. Some people like to work their calories up steadily, I prefer to jump straight to my maintenance calories and fine tune if required.
Once I finish, I'll have the right size but the wrong shape. I plan to do two long runs a week (currently 4.5 miles) and two strength workouts. How do you take that into account? Really any tips on shaping up will be appreciated.
If your routine is consistent then you could follow the TDEE method (average exercise calories daily) or the MFP eat back exercise calories on the day method - both should end up at the same weekly spot. Nice balance of cardio and strength but it's primarily the strength work that will reshape you. If you are a beginner then picking a proven beginner program that fits your schedule makes a lot of sense.
I really miss bagged snacks (pringles, doritos etc.), how do you maintain your weight while not abstaining snacks? Of course, I won't eat one a day, but now that I can afford more calories a day I do plan to get one once in a while.
I'm a savoury snacker too, I have a snack every day whether I'm losing, gaining or maintaining. It's just a small part of my overall calories and remember snacks have nutrition too. "Eating right" means your diet in it's entirety and not focussing so much on individual components of that overall diet.
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1. I've been on maintenance calories of ~1800+- since mid February (~9 months). I continue to log regularly, and I weigh once a week. If I'm up a pound or two, I will go back to my "reduction" calories (~1400 - 1500) for about three days.
2. I added calories by both increasing portion sizes and by adding a few more snacks while keeping under the target sugar and fat goals. For me this has mostly meant increasing my consumption of nuts, cheese, and fruit, but occasionally salty snacks (see #4 below)
3. Yeah. Shape. Well, I'm a 55-year old post menopausal woman, so we probably have different shape issues :-) But I've tried to accept the shape I have, and dress appropriately. The cut of a shirt or jacket can REALLY make a difference. And This girl don't wear Spandex-- that's all I'm sayin'!
4. An increase in snackage is one of the things I've added to my calorie intake, but I read lots of labels and have tried to branch out from the standard Lay's collection. I like "hippie" snacks like Flamous Falafel chips, Snap pea Crisps, Harvest Lentil Snaps. I don't mind spending a bit more on these because I don't eat a whole lot of them and it really feels more like a treat.1 -
1: I weigh daily and plug it into the HappyScale app to get a weighted average.
2: I'd add 100 kcal per week until weight stabilizes.
3: i lift three times per week when cutting, four times when maintaining, and seven+ when bulking. It's just something you have to watch in measurements, body composition, and the scale.
4: I started making my own "snacks", and will never go back. Seriously, I can't stand premade crap anymore. Why would I buy ice cream when I can make sludge and put it in the freezer? Why would I buy chips when I can mix together a few types of cheese and bake it until crispy? I do still occasionally buy protein bars, but that's because I haven't perfected those just yet.1 -
There really is no end date to calorie counting - when you get to goal you need to keep doing the things you have been to lose but you just get to add a few hundred more calories on - depends on your weekly loss as to what those calories to add will be.
So its up to you what foods you add, they can be whatever the heck you fancy
Frequent weigh ins are a must imo. Trend your weight on an app so you can see the overall trend is staying within say a 5lb range. In the beginning when you increase to maintenance cals people can panic as they see a hike on the scales. This is perfectly normal and will settle down in a few weeks when you body gets used to the extra calories.
And keeping active if you don't already do so is also a great plan.0
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