To my 50+ Women out there. Have you been able to lose weight?

dezireme2
dezireme2 Posts: 13 Member
edited November 13 in Success Stories
I am 52 years old and for the past few years have been having a hard time losing a significant amount of weight. Anytime I do lose weight, something will come up to mess up my efforts - like my Achilles tendon surgery for instance. Being off my feet for 2 months totally messed up any chance for weight loss, plus the holidays are here. I lost 17 pounds from doing Aqua Aerobics at the Y 2-3x a week. Its the one thing I've done that practically melted the pounds off. I gained all 17 pounds back now and am now at the end of my rope. I feel so bad about it. At my age it is so much harder to lose weight but I know it can be done. I need some serious encouragement right now. :'(

Replies

  • CMNVA
    CMNVA Posts: 733 Member
    I am also 52 (will be 53 at the end of the month). It is harder for me to lose weight now, but not impossible. I started back on MFP in late-September with a goal of losing only about 12 lbs. I was not exercising at the time and was too overwhelmed to start. I also have a very sedentary office job. I set my calories at 1200. For the first 2 weeks, I did my best to stick to them and I did for the most part. Oh, I went over here and there but nothing major. I believe in the first 2-3 weeks, I had shed 5-6 lbs. I realize that most of that was bloating/water weight from all my previous overeating. Then I was stalled for awhile. I increased my calories up to 1380 and start Couch to 5K (which is VERY minor exercise at first). My weight since then has taken a downward trend. As of today, I am down 14 lbs. It is coming off in "whooshes." For instance, I may go 3 weeks without losing anything and them, bam, 3 lbs are gone.

    Now that I've been doing this for almost 3 months, I don't feel that my weight loss is any slower than it was in my 40s. It just takes longer for my body to let go at first, then it seems to get back to normal weight loss.

    My biggest takeway is that most of the work/weight loss happens through diet with very little help from exercise.
  • SueSueDio
    SueSueDio Posts: 4,796 Member
    edited December 2016
    loha2328 wrote: »
    Of course, you can lose weight at 50+. It's just a matter of accurately recording your caloric intake using MFP and balancing that with your calories burned.

    This. I'm 51 and in peri-menopause, and have lost almost 50lbs since January with very little exercise. I haven't cut anything out, I just learned what a "reasonable portion" was and how many calories were in my favourite foods. It's not necessarily easy, but it is very simple and age has nothing to do with it.

    In all honesty, being laid up with an injury does not (generally speaking) prevent a person losing weight - it's ALL about the calories. Exercise can help to increase your deficit, or give you a few extra calories to eat, but other than that it's great for health and fitness but not a requirement for weight loss.

    You can do this, regardless of your age or fitness. You just need to be willing to take responsibility for it, and be completely honest about what food and drink goes in your mouth. :)

    Edit: To echo what @CMNVA said above, don't expect to lose the same amount every week. My weight loss has been similar, with weeks of bouncing around the same couple of pounds or so and then a couple of weeks of losing steadily, then repeat the cycle. The overall trend is downwards and that's all I really care about, although I admit it can feel a bit frustrating at times when you feel like you're doing everything right and the scale isn't cooperating! You just have to be accurate, trust the process, and have patience.
  • Lynzdee18
    Lynzdee18 Posts: 500 Member
    I'm 60. I lost 60 pounds in my late fifties and have kept it off for a year now. I was fearful that I couldn't lose weight again. This will be my last time. I am not going back to Chub City.

    I had leg surgery when I first began the loss, so my exercise was very limited. Walking became my friend for both strengthening my legs and dropping pounds. I still walk miles everyday either outside or on a treadmill or elliptical. And I enjoy it.

    So yes. You can lose later in life. You just need to want to and commit!
  • keodell1966
    keodell1966 Posts: 141 Member
    I'm 50 and I just lost 40 pounds( just over my 1 year anniversary) I think I look younger than I did, and feel great. That said I have exercised more and kept logging! MFP has really opened my eyes. Keep at it. If I can do it, anyone can!
  • pdxwine
    pdxwine Posts: 389 Member
    Yep, I put on a bunch of weight in my 40s. In the past two years, I have lost 104. Eight more pounds to goal, and my original weight. :)
  • cityjaneLondon
    cityjaneLondon Posts: 12,696 Member
    I am 67. I have lost 57 lbs. At the moment I am trying to lose the 2 lbs I have gained back in the 3 years I have been at maintenance. It originally took me 18 months to lose the weight. At the beginning it was relatively easy, but it got harder the nearer I got to goal.
    I do a lot of exercise first thing in the morning after breakfast. 600 calories worth. I always ate back nearly all my calories and that worked for me as I love my food. After 3 years I am now finding that I am having to cut a bit of that back to actually trim off the couple of pounds. So instead of 1800, I'm eating 1700 or so. I hope that will do it.
    I log every day and I weigh everything. I am incredibly happy with the way I look and feel and I really enjoy my healthy eating. I never feel deprived.
    If I couldn't exercise for whatever reason I would find it hard. I think I would increase the size of my already large pile of fresh vegetables with every meal to fill me up. It can be done, but I applaud anyone who can stick with 1200 calories.
  • anneknight1
    anneknight1 Posts: 1 Member
    I am 57 and have lost 15 pounds in the past 8 months. My weight hits a new range, and switches from high to low and back for several weeks or even months before a new chunk falls off. Working out and walking has been very helpful.
  • canadianlbs
    canadianlbs Posts: 5,199 Member
    edited December 2016
    i'm 51 and had lost 30 pounds by my 49th birthday, then regained 20 or so over the next year because a) i was lifting and wanted to eat more for that and b) i just got bored with logging and all the micro-management involved in all that.

    it's been coming back off over the course of this year. pretty slowly but i'm still lifting and have been making actual real progress there. so i haven't been trying especially hard to lose weight at the same time, which means the fact that it's come off even for me should be encouraging.
  • canadianlbs
    canadianlbs Posts: 5,199 Member
    ^^^ also, just wanted to add that the derailments are real. my activity levels fluctuate too, but ime the main thing is to be mindful of it and let your food intake fluctuate at the same time. i just had a week or ten days where i did pretty much bugger all, but it hasn't seemed to make much difference because i also ate more appropriately for someone who was doing pretty much bugger all.

    hang in there. and don't let specific things become a 'reason' why x or y can't happen because it is usually not.
  • janiversace
    janiversace Posts: 9 Member
    loha2328 wrote: »
    Of course, you can lose weight at 50+. It's just a matter of accurately recording your caloric intake using MFP and balancing that with your calories burned. I started in January of this year. I got a fitbit so I would know how many calories I was burning, a food scale to weigh my food for more precise input into MFP, and I just try to stay 500 calories under what I burn daily in order to lose about a pound a week. I've lost 58 lbs. so far. It's just Math. Feel free to add me as a friend.

    your soooooooooo right,its a case of use more cals than you eat,but many including me fall short of actually recording the wieghts and guess which is fatal as its always 10x more than you think.
  • janiversace
    janiversace Posts: 9 Member
    dezireme2 wrote: »
    I am 52 years old and for the past few years have been having a hard time losing a significant amount of weight. Anytime I do lose weight, something will come up to mess up my efforts - like my Achilles tendon surgery for instance. Being off my feet for 2 months totally messed up any chance for weight loss, plus the holidays are here. I lost 17 pounds from doing Aqua Aerobics at the Y 2-3x a week. Its the one thing I've done that practically melted the pounds off. I gained all 17 pounds back now and am now at the end of my rope. I feel so bad about it. At my age it is so much harder to lose weight but I know it can be done. I need some serious encouragement right now. :'(

    it is hard to lose wieght but even if you cant exercise if you stick to your calories and eat healthy you wont gain the wieght,easier said than done i know,but thats the crux of it all.else nobody would be fat,i stick pics on my food cupbords n fridge of slim women who i think look good,not always works but sometimes it does,,
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