How long does it take to see weight loss?
sarahlovesfood25
Posts: 408 Member
Been healthy eating/exercising for nearly 2weeks now and ive stepped on the scales but my weight has gone up??? Just wondering why? How long does it take to see weight loss? Any advice would be appreciated thank you
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Replies
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thanks to womens lovely hormones, it could be up to 4 weeks3
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It's all a myth. Change your food or eat less. Weight should drop from week 1. You need to create calorie deficit. Work out your BMR and eat 300 cals less3
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I've been at it since new year and have no weight loss. Maybe 2kg that only showed up on the 15th day but my scales seem to be broken so I can't even be sure of that. Sometimes it takes a few weeks to kick in2
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aliemailconnect wrote: »It's all a myth. Change your food or eat less. Weight should drop from week 1. You need to create calorie deficit. Work out your BMR and eat 300 cals less
OP ignore this. its completely wrong7 -
aliemailconnect wrote: »It's all a myth. Change your food or eat less. Weight should drop from week 1. You need to create calorie deficit. Work out your BMR and eat 300 cals less
Do not do this. Your BMR is the minimum number of calories your body needs to keep you alive if you were in a coma. Eating below your BMR should only be done under direct medical supervision, as doing so can lead to a whole host of health issues.
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aliemailconnect wrote: »It's all a myth. Change your food or eat less. Weight should drop from week 1. You need to create calorie deficit. Work out your BMR and eat 300 cals less
What? Water retention is absolutely not a myth!
OP, you started a new exercise regime, so your muscles will be healing and adapting, and will retain water. It's completely normal to seem to gain weight because of this, but it's temporary. Make sure your logging is as accurate as you can make it, and just keep going.5 -
It can take months to actively notice a change in the way you see yourself. I started out this time last year, I didn't weigh myself for the whole of January as I knew the scales wouldn't change and I didn't want to give up. I lost 35lbs last year, taking 6 months to get to my goal, but it was a couple of months before I could see things were heading in the right direction.2
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It's different for everybody and depends on a lot of factors like stress response from new routine, how much weight you have to lose, potentially losing fat at the same rate as building muscle, and how consistent/intense you are with nailing down your nutritional/exercise goals. Some people lose right away, and some people take some time before they see progress on the scale. Be sure to also be tracking body measurements. You can see a lot of improvements there with no change on the scale.1
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Thank u everyone for ur comments0
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Have a read of this - you may just have been unlucky with your weigh-in timings.
community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10359984/women-menstrual-cycle-weight-and-fitness-matters#latest
I know that my cycle makes a big difference to my weight and if I didn't weigh myself everyday so I could see the fluctuations. It could be discouraging sometimes if you weigh when you're in an "up" period. My weight drops just before my period arrives, then jumps back up heaps (2-4lbs), then drops again about 5-7 days later. It's a repeating pattern every month. The trend is down, but it's a jagged path. Don't be discouraged and give it a bit more time.1 -
When I'm consistent and honest with myself with what I'm doing it comes off right away. I usually put on a little weight from October through December and January is always kind of a reset and transitional period...it takes me a few weeks to get in the groove and tweak things out...I don't log, so it's more trial and error and then being more disciplined on weekends. Once I'm rolling though, I'm rolling.0
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For perspective, a gallon of water is 8.3 lbs. Maybe you were chronically dehydrated before deciding to lose weight. If you have really increased your activity level, you can also be putting on muscle mass faster than you're taking off fat mass. A very slight amount of the gain can also be from gaining bone density if you are lifting weights! There are so many variables, don't automatically assume things are bad if your gravitational attraction to the planet has increased.0
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aliemailconnect wrote: »It's all a myth. Change your food or eat less. Weight should drop from week 1. You need to create calorie deficit. Work out your BMR and eat 300 cals less
Nooooo.
1. I'm not sure what's a myth here - but there's a lot of misinformation in this comment.
2. It's not about magical foods - it is about the calories you eat
3. Not everyone loses in the first week
4. Okay calorie deficit is correct,
5. DO NOT eat below your BMR. Eat above your BMR but below TDEE.3 -
Don't starve yourself, keep up the exercise for 15 extra minutes past what you intended, and give your body enough time to respond. You didn't gain it all in one month. You won't lose it all in one month.
Personally, I don't plan to weight myself until my clothes begin to fit different ly. I want to be pleasantly surprised next time I step on a scale.
About eight years ago I decided to begin working out 5 days a week, ate healthfully, slept as best I could... I dropped 100 pounds in 12 months. I never weighed myself more than once a month, though. Sometimes the scale can sabotage you.1 -
Also, over the past seven years, I've gained back 76 pounds (funny how pregnancy gives me an excuse to stop good habits and eat garbage). So I'm starting over again. 76 pounds before my 40th birthday.... It's doable.0
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I apologise to Sarah for asking a question on her post. Tavistock Toad seems to be pretty switched on and clued up.
But why shouldn't you eat calories below your BMR?
I'm 52, 250lb and doing the Insanity Programme (well to my ability not Shaun's).
I'm burning anywhere between 450 -1100 calories daily exercising, but if my BMR is 2000 calories and I eat only 1300 calories some days, just don't feel hungry, especially after a high carb meal.
So is this a major issue and if you burn a load of Calories, let's say 2600 calories in a day and only intake say 1800 calories, is this actually harmful to you?0 -
I apologise to Sarah for asking a question on her post. Tavistock Toad seems to be pretty switched on and clued up.
But why shouldn't you eat calories below your BMR?
I'm 52, 250lb and doing the Insanity Programme (well to my ability not Shaun's).
I'm burning anywhere between 450 -1100 calories daily exercising, but if my BMR is 2000 calories and I eat only 1300 calories some days, just don't feel hungry, especially after a high carb meal.
So is this a major issue and if you burn a load of Calories, let's say 2600 calories in a day and only intake say 1800 calories, is this actually harmful to you?
Your BMR is the calories you burn merely existing...like you're in a coma all day...then you have your day to day stuff...and then exercise. Properly fueling your body is important. Underfeeding will ultimately lead to recovery issues and likely injury...not to mention your performance will suffer and your fitness gains will be hampered.
Beyond that, one should provide the body with enough energy (calories) to perform basic functions. There are so many posts here about people losing hair...hair turning brittle...nails turning brittle...females losing menstrual cycles, etc all because of consistent underfeeding. When the body doesn't receive adequate energy (calories) it will start slowing and/or shutting down "non essential" functions.
That said, how are you arriving at 1100 calorie burns? That's about 30 miles or so on the bike for me...which is something I do, but certainly not an every day occurrence.0
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