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2 weeks haven't lost didly squat

charden875
Posts: 31 Member
In fact I think I even gained a pound, I run 5 days a week 1&1/2 to 3 miles a day and play basketball at least 3 times a week. Now before I started I didn't do anything, nothing, nada, I gained 40 lbs during my recovery from heart surgery (afib) I'm 44 year old male, I count my calories and log my meals. I don't think I'm doing anything wrong I'm just putting this out here. I just keep telling myself welcome to the suck and I'm sure over time as long as my outputs are bigger than my input I will lose eventually
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This might help figure out where the issue may lie.
Weighing all solid foods, even those grated and ground, with a kitchen scale helps a lot to make sure you are recording calories as accurately as you can.https://youtu.be/vjKPIcI51lU
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Thanks I figured I just need more time / and I'll save up for the scale1
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Yes, the food scale will help you determine how much you're eating. If you gained, that means you're overeating.
Going by package information can be tricky too. I had some frozen fries last night and if I went by the package '9 pcs' for 150 calories, I would have been over. The weight for 150 calories was 85g. 85g turned out to be about six pieces. Packaged food is allowed to be off by 20%.5 -
charden875 wrote: »Thanks I figured I just need more time / and I'll save up for the scale
It is possible. For some they lose a lot right away because they are retaining a lot of water. Others it takes a while to get going. If you are not gaining, at leas you are not losing ground. If after 3-4 weeks there is no loss at all, I would say try eating a little less.
A digital kitchen scale is not that expensive. A decent one can get purchase for $10-15
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by surgery for a fib, do you mean an ablation? because I had that and it took about a month until I felt well enough to resume all my activities. the ablation was in 2015 and it did not help as much as I thought it would. But sometimes it takes a couple of times.
I also started a new routine and have gained a lb since last week, I use a food scale. I bike 8-10 miles 5x a week and I suppose that means water retention in my muscles. Give it time.1 -
Colorscheme wrote: »by surgery for a fib, do you mean an ablation? because I had that and it took about a month until I felt well enough to resume all my activities. the ablation was in 2015 and it did not help as much as I thought it would. But sometimes it takes a couple of times.
I also started a new routine and have gained a lb since last week, I use a food scale. I bike 8-10 miles 5x a week and I suppose that means water retention in my muscles. Give it time.
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rileysowner wrote: »charden875 wrote: »Thanks I figured I just need more time / and I'll save up for the scale
It is possible. For some they lose a lot right away because they are retaining a lot of water. Others it takes a while to get going. If you are not gaining, at leas you are not losing ground. If after 3-4 weeks there is no loss at all, I would say try eating a little less.
A digital kitchen scale is not that expensive. A decent one can get purchase for $10-15
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Kitten;I guess is their word for bad words1
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charden875 wrote: »Colorscheme wrote: »by surgery for a fib, do you mean an ablation? because I had that and it took about a month until I felt well enough to resume all my activities. the ablation was in 2015 and it did not help as much as I thought it would. But sometimes it takes a couple of times.
I also started a new routine and have gained a lb since last week, I use a food scale. I bike 8-10 miles 5x a week and I suppose that means water retention in my muscles. Give it time.
Yeah, been there done that. I asked the anethesiologist to give me as much drugs as possible without me feeling anything. And I didn't until afterward. I had a month of utter faitgue and chest pain. I have AVNRT and unfortunately, it didn't stop it. My doc just burned enough that my hr couldn't go past 280 bpm anymore or else I'd need a pacemaker. I don't think I would go through it again, honesty.
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Colorscheme wrote: »charden875 wrote: »Colorscheme wrote: »by surgery for a fib, do you mean an ablation? because I had that and it took about a month until I felt well enough to resume all my activities. the ablation was in 2015 and it did not help as much as I thought it would. But sometimes it takes a couple of times.
I also started a new routine and have gained a lb since last week, I use a food scale. I bike 8-10 miles 5x a week and I suppose that means water retention in my muscles. Give it time.
Yeah, been there done that. I asked the anethesiologist to give me as much drugs as possible without me feeling anything. And I didn't until afterward. I had a month of utter faitgue and chest pain. I have AVNRT and unfortunately, it didn't stop it. My doc just burned enough that my hr couldn't go past 280 bpm anymore or else I'd need a pacemaker. I don't think I would go through it again, honesty.
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charden875 wrote: »Colorscheme wrote: »charden875 wrote: »Colorscheme wrote: »by surgery for a fib, do you mean an ablation? because I had that and it took about a month until I felt well enough to resume all my activities. the ablation was in 2015 and it did not help as much as I thought it would. But sometimes it takes a couple of times.
I also started a new routine and have gained a lb since last week, I use a food scale. I bike 8-10 miles 5x a week and I suppose that means water retention in my muscles. Give it time.
Yeah, been there done that. I asked the anethesiologist to give me as much drugs as possible without me feeling anything. And I didn't until afterward. I had a month of utter faitgue and chest pain. I have AVNRT and unfortunately, it didn't stop it. My doc just burned enough that my hr couldn't go past 280 bpm anymore or else I'd need a pacemaker. I don't think I would go through it again, honesty.
Thank you!
For me, I had to be awake. My EP told me that it is best to be awake because it is easier to manipulate heart rhythms. I also have an ICM implanted in my chest which is how I know the ablation did not work to eliminate the AVNRT, but it is what it is and I've learned to live with it. I also have a valve issue and dysautonomia, so I am not the typical EP patient.0 -
charden875 wrote: »I just keep telling myself welcome to the suck
You're my hero. I want this on my tombstone.0 -
PaulaWallaDingDong wrote: »charden875 wrote: »I just keep telling myself welcome to the suck
You're my hero. I want this on my tombstone.
It's a military saying, not mine. I served but no one was shooting at me personally. Go Navy1
This discussion has been closed.
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