Curiosity - maintaing your goal weight or dream size

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After reaching your goal weight or size , whats the best way to maintain it ? Isnt it easy to fall back into old habits ?
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  • tynapea3
    tynapea3 Posts: 37 Member
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    Figure out what your TDEE is, eat that. The same way you lost the weight, just a little more food.

    Okay but would you still have to keep.the same same amount of exercise?
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,876 Member
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    Part of this process should be developing new habits and a new normal...I don't do anything differently in maintenance than I do losing save for eat a handful more calories...my overall diet remains pretty much the same...exercise is the same, etc.
  • jessiferrrb
    jessiferrrb Posts: 1,758 Member
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    once you figure out what your maintenance calories are you should continue to factor in your exercise as you do when losing. that's going to affect your CO (calories out) in your CICO equation. the same principles apply in maintaining as in losing.
  • ashliedelgado
    ashliedelgado Posts: 814 Member
    edited January 2017
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    No, not if you didn't want to. Being active will help you keep the weight from coming back on.

    For me, I'm 5'4", and my goal is 145. At my current age, a sedentary activity level would mean that I can eat around 1720 and maintain without exercise.

    You would just need to figure out your numbers, and eat accordingly.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,876 Member
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    tynapea3 wrote: »
    Figure out what your TDEE is, eat that. The same way you lost the weight, just a little more food.

    Okay but would you still have to keep.the same same amount of exercise?

    More or less exercise is going to change your CO. I exercise regularly for fitness...the mentality that exercise is for weight loss is a falacy. My exercise varies throughout the year depending on whether I'm training for an event or just maintaining a base...I adjust my diet accordingly (except for October - December when my activity level drops significantly and I put on about 8-10 Lbs every year)
  • tynapea3
    tynapea3 Posts: 37 Member
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    So if someone was to drastically lose weight in a a couple months or so , 9 times out of 10 would it automatically come back quickly or would they be able to maintain it from coming back...from the key points you all have mentioned above ?
  • angel7472
    angel7472 Posts: 317 Member
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    If you do things drastically there is a good chance that you'll put the weight back on again. This is from experience. I like to eat so therefore for me to personally maintain I need to exercise on a regular basis and eat a set amount on a daily basis. Otherwise I WILL gain. But in theory everything is CICO. As long as calories in is equal to calories out you should be able to maintain.
  • NEOHgirl
    NEOHgirl Posts: 237 Member
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    It never automatically comes back quickly. Both getting to and maintaining a healthy weight are a permanent process; there really isn't an end to it. Usually if someone gains it back, it's because they get complacent and stop doing what lost them the weight in the first place. They start slacking with tracking and measuring/weighing their food. They start loosening up on their food choices, because hey, more calories now, forgetting that they get an extra 300-500 per day, not an extra 1000 per day. If you lose the weight, and during maintenance actually keep doing the things that got you to goal weight, you shouldn't gain it back.
  • cfritchley26
    cfritchley26 Posts: 47 Member
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    tynapea3 wrote: »
    So if someone was to drastically lose weight in a a couple months or so , 9 times out of 10 would it automatically come back quickly or would they be able to maintain it from coming back...from the key points you all have mentioned above ?

    As someone who has lost a lot of weight in a short time frame in the past, it is not something I would recommend. It came back, and when it did it came back pretty fast & with friends (more weight than I lost). I had deprived myself for so long that when I feel off the wagon I fell hard...on either end I had a very unhealthy relationship with food.

    Now I am learning to look at it as a lifestyle change...and for a healthy future, not just a number on a scale. It's how I feel I can sustain that for a lifetime.
  • californiagirl2012
    californiagirl2012 Posts: 2,625 Member
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    Once you learn your maintenance calories (it will ebb and flow, but it's mostly according to your height and gender), then you just manage it like a checkbook. If you spend more than maintenance one day, you have to save a little another day. If you go way over (easy to do) it takes more than a day to make up for it. People who lose their awareness of food intake (easy to do) will rebound. I know many who have rebounded, and in fact most people do, until they want to keep it bad enough that they stop the yo-yo's and make the little cycles tighter and tighter. Maintaining will have some fluctuations, like maybe a little up over the holidays, and a little knuckling down in January, etc.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
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    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    Part of this process should be developing new habits and a new normal...I don't do anything differently in maintenance than I do losing save for eat a handful more calories...my overall diet remains pretty much the same...exercise is the same, etc.

    Agree with this.
  • crzycatlady1
    crzycatlady1 Posts: 1,930 Member
    edited January 2017
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    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    Part of this process should be developing new habits and a new normal...I don't do anything differently in maintenance than I do losing save for eat a handful more calories...my overall diet remains pretty much the same...exercise is the same, etc.

    This. My maintenance plan is pretty similar to what my weight loss plan was-I track my calorie intake and make sure I hit my calorie target (with a focus on weekly totals). I eat pretty similar to what I did during my weight loss phase (which is pretty much everything I like lol), and I didn't exercise during my weight loss phase/don't exercise now, so things are pretty much same old, same old-just with a bit more calories added in now :)
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 24,840 Member
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    I've been slender and active most of my life. So losing weight, and then maintaining it, has been a matter of returning to my normal eating and activity levels.

    I gained weight because my activity level dropped significantly because of health issues and several moves including one from Canada to Australia ... and then there was this 8-month round the world trip my husband and I did ... and let me tell you, there's a lot of great food out there. :grin:

    But things are more stable now ... so my eating and activity has returned to normal. :)

  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 24,840 Member
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    tynapea3 wrote: »
    Figure out what your TDEE is, eat that. The same way you lost the weight, just a little more food.

    Okay but would you still have to keep.the same same amount of exercise?

    I do more exercise when I'm slender ... because I can! :)
  • jennifer_417
    jennifer_417 Posts: 12,344 Member
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    That's why a calorie deficit is the best way to lose weight. You can eat exactly the same as your "old ways," just not in the same amounts. That's also why most diet plans fail-because people don't learn the habits they need to keep the weight off once they lose it
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,372 Member
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    tynapea3 wrote: »
    Figure out what your TDEE is, eat that. The same way you lost the weight, just a little more food.

    Okay but would you still have to keep.the same same amount of exercise?

    You don't. Just use MFP to track your calories adjusting to your activity level.

    But I've been this weight for 2.5 years and there's a 1000 calorie difference between my lazy and active days, so believe me, I'm not giving up exercise anytime soon, because I love eating.
  • JDixon852019
    JDixon852019 Posts: 312 Member
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    I hit my scale weight goal in August. I have been working on maintenance and recently switched over to Marcos and weight lifting to build muscle.

    March-November I will do at least one physical activity for fun (outside of my regular workout routine). I am plan to do 4X 5ks, a 5mile fun run, 10k, join a kickball team, take a Rick climbing class, take an silks class, and try paddle boarding.