Macros & calories
mariclaire87
Posts: 19 Member
ive been able to lose 55lbs but plateaued right now and it's driving me crazy. I have 20 lbs to go. My macros are at 25carb 30fat 45protein 1300 cals if I don't exercise and I eat back the calories I burn. I've juggled macros a few times open to any suggestions. i workout 3-5 days a week both cardio and strength usually at least 30 mins or more. Help I want these 20 lbs gone
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mariclaire87 wrote: »ive been able to lose 55lbs but plateaued right now and it's driving me crazy. I have 20 lbs to go. My macros are at 25carb 30fat 45protein 1300 cals if I don't exercise and I eat back the calories I burn. I've juggled macros a few times open to any suggestions. i workout 3-5 days a week both cardio and strength usually at least 30 mins or more. Help I want these 20 lbs gone
As you lose weight, your calorie need drops. To keep losing, you need to decrease your calorie intake. You'll also lose more slowly - this can periodically look like the scale isn't moving. But it is, as long as you have excess fat and really are eating at a deficit.
You need to eat less than you burn to lose weight, but if you eat too little, you'll get hungry. Smart wegihtloss is about finding that sweet spot where you lose weight, but feel fine. This spot is determined by your height, weight, sex and activity level. A good weightloss rate is up to 1% of your bodyweight per week - "up to" means that 1% is more realistic when you have a lot to lose.
No macro split will make you lose faster. But a good macro split can make eating at a deficit easier. Your current setting looks like it's difficult to translate into tasty and balanced meals. You will want tasty and balaced meals because you'll be doing this for a long time, and when you hit maintenance, you'll be doing mostly the same.
My suggestion would be to 1) set your calorie goal properly, 2) set protein and fat goals to 1 - 1.5 grams per kilo of bodyweight at normal BMI, 3) prepare meals you want to eat, and 4) eat, enjoy, exercise moderately, and lose weight at a steady and healthy pace.3 -
I have been at the same weight for 2 or 3 months not just a week or two. I don't have any issue with making the meals tasty or whatever that's fine. I just can't eat a lot of carb because I've had insulin resistance issues. If I eat much of them I gain weight unfortunately so I'm not able to eat more than 20-30% carb but some days I go over that. Setting my fat and protein levels the way you have described I could try but honestly math isnt a skill I have aquired so I don't know if I can calculate it myself. According to calculators for calories I should be losing still so I find all their estimations to be somewhat disheartening. I've used online ones as well as mfp. when you say set the calories goal properly what does that mean? I didn't just pull a number out of a hat. I've head steady and healthy weight loss for the last year and a half so I must have done something right. I feel like lowering my calories further is borderline starvation though.0
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Excess protein gets converted to glucose so you need to watch out for that if you have insulin resistance issues.
That would leave increasing your fat macro percentage as an option.0 -
If you haven't lost ANY weight for 2-3 months then you are eating at maintenance.
You need to eat less or move more.
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Oh I didn't know that good to know about protein maybe I will try lowering it a bit.0
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kommodevaran wrote: »mariclaire87 wrote: »ive been able to lose 55lbs but plateaued right now and it's driving me crazy. I have 20 lbs to go. My macros are at 25carb 30fat 45protein 1300 cals if I don't exercise and I eat back the calories I burn. I've juggled macros a few times open to any suggestions. i workout 3-5 days a week both cardio and strength usually at least 30 mins or more. Help I want these 20 lbs gone
As you lose weight, your calorie need drops. To keep losing, you need to decrease your calorie intake. You'll also lose more slowly - this can periodically look like the scale isn't moving. But it is, as long as you have excess fat and really are eating at a deficit.
You need to eat less than you burn to lose weight, but if you eat too little, you'll get hungry. Smart wegihtloss is about finding that sweet spot where you lose weight, but feel fine. This spot is determined by your height, weight, sex and activity level. A good weightloss rate is up to 1% of your bodyweight per week - "up to" means that 1% is more realistic when you have a lot to lose.
No macro split will make you lose faster. But a good macro split can make eating at a deficit easier. Your current setting looks like it's difficult to translate into tasty and balanced meals. You will want tasty and balaced meals because you'll be doing this for a long time, and when you hit maintenance, you'll be doing mostly the same.
My suggestion would be to 1) set your calorie goal properly, 2) set protein and fat goals to 1 - 1.5 grams per kilo of bodyweight at normal BMI, 3) prepare meals you want to eat, and 4) eat, enjoy, exercise moderately, and lose weight at a steady and healthy pace.
Bolded the points I especially like, but pretty much the whole post gets a +1 from me.
I'll aslo add that if you feel stuck, tighten up your logging. Make sure you are weighing/measuring what you eat, that you are logging everything you consume, and that you are doing those things consistently.1 -
Obviously everyone's body is different but for me I take a small break. I find that if I have been strictly eating at a deficit, good foods and exercising a lot that I need a break. Taking a week off from training heavy and eating at a deficit is almost like a reset for my body. Good luck and keep up the good work0
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How long have you been dieting? Do you use a food scale? Do you log daily?
Also, you probably aren't eating enough protein to cause issues. Its only 146g which is hardly excessive. Having said that, you likely can reduce protein a bit down to 35% and increase fats.0 -
can you open up your diary so ppl can take a look at it - they might be able to provide more tailored recommendations
settings>diary settings>click the public radio button1 -
mariclaire87 wrote: »I have been at the same weight for 2 or 3 months not just a week or two. I don't have any issue with making the meals tasty or whatever that's fine. I just can't eat a lot of carb because I've had insulin resistance issues. If I eat much of them I gain weight unfortunately so I'm not able to eat more than 20-30% carb but some days I go over that. Setting my fat and protein levels the way you have described I could try but honestly math isnt a skill I have aquired so I don't know if I can calculate it myself. According to calculators for calories I should be losing still so I find all their estimations to be somewhat disheartening. I've used online ones as well as mfp. when you say set the calories goal properly what does that mean? I didn't just pull a number out of a hat. I've head steady and healthy weight loss for the last year and a half so I must have done something right. I feel like lowering my calories further is borderline starvation though.
As PP said, too much protein is not good for insulin resistance, you have to raise fats. But the main issue will be calories and accurate logging. If you are sticking to estimations (what I called set calories properly), you should be losing, but if you go over, you aren't sticking to them, and then you won't lose. You have lost on what you have been eating because your body burnt more calories when you were heavier. That's your current maintenance level. You need to lower your calories. But if you balance them better, you won't feel like you're starving. Give us your stats (height, weight, age) and let's see if your calorie goal looks okay and suggest a better macro split?1 -
Thankyou for all the answers I do appreciate the advice. PsuLemon: I've been dieting for over 2 years (but 10 months of it was pregnancy so I wasn't trying to lose weight). I do have a scale. It's an old non digital one and I'm not entirely sure if it's accurate. Needless to say I don't use it. I do measure often if it's something by cups or eyeball it sometimes which I know could be pretty inaccurate. I do log daily.
I'm 5"5, 170lb and 29. I don't normally go over on calories but I always wonder how well MFP estimates exercise as well to me it seems like it's guessing.0 -
I would recommend picking up a digital. On amazon, most are around $15-$20. It's very easy to be inaccurate, even if you are a trained professional.
Also, it may be worth increasing calories to around maintenance for a few weeks since it's been awhile. Prolonged periods of suppression can decrease metabolic functions. Often diet breaks can help normalize it, give you a sanity break, and enable you to drop calories back down to a reasonable level and lose again.0 -
MFP exercise calories seem to be highly over-estimated - the general recommendation is to only eat back about 50% of them (to allow for that variation)3
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When I was trying to get my calorie level I would usually select that im moderate activity but sometimes I question if it should be light or moderate0
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mariclaire87 wrote: »When I was trying to get my calorie level I would usually select that im moderate activity but sometimes I question if it should be light or moderate
If you don't want to worry about exercise calories, and consistently exercise, I would switch to the TDEE method. This method allows you to eat the same amount of calories daily (it incorporate exercise over the week). And every 4-8 weeks, you assess your weight loss against your calorie to see if you need to make adjustments.
For example, I maintain at 3000 calories. If I want to lose 1 lb a week, I need to average around 2500. If I ate 2000, I would theoretically lose 2 lbs. But I am consistent with working out 5-6 hours a week. If I know I can't workout that much, I might drop calories for a few days to compensate.0 -
I will look into trying to log food more accurately and weigh if I can manage it
Deannafisher: thanks i didn't know that it may be over estimating exercise that could be part of the issue
psulemon: yeah Id be willing to try that method. So then you don't log any exercise? How do I know what to initially set my calories at0 -
l'll look up info on the tdee method. Thanks everyone for the tips0
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mariclaire87 wrote: »I will look into trying to log food more accurately and weigh if I can manage it
Deannafisher: thanks i didn't know that it may be over estimating exercise that could be part of the issue
psulemon: yeah Id be willing to try that method. So then you don't log any exercise? How do I know what to initially set my calories at
The reason I have used the method is because we have no way of measuring the follow unless you get testing and it only addresses the bold: Basal Metabolic Rate, Thermal Effect of Food (calories expended through digestion), Thermal Effect of Activity (exercise calories) and Non Exercise Activity Therogenesis (calories burned in daily activities outside of exercise). As stated, I am very consistent with my exercise (5-6 hours a week).
Initially, I used an only TDEE calculator, cut 20% below my maintenance, tracked calories with a food scale daily, and adjust every 4 to 8 weeks based on average calories. I would aim to get +/- 100 calories of my target to maximize consistency. From there, I was able to back into my average TDEE. The biggest problem people have is not using the feedback mechanism to set calories to appropriate levels. I actually had to increase calories 300 because I was losing faster than I needed/wanted to.1 -
Ok I think that is making sense. So i used an online calculator and put in my info, it says my TDEE is 2152, so minus 20% is 1722. In 4-8 weeks if I'm losing more than 2 lb per week or whatever my target is, I raise the calories by 100 is that what you mean? Just clarifying ...and thanks for the help1
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Unless you are exercising really hard multiple days a week I would recommend not eating back your exercise calories. I burn 250-400 calories/ day exercising 6 days/week but do not log them and only use an extra 100 if I feel hungry at the end of the day.1
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mariclaire87 wrote: »Ok I think that is making sense. So i used an online calculator and put in my info, it says my TDEE is 2152, so minus 20% is 1722. In 4-8 weeks if I'm losing more than 2 lb per week or whatever my target is, I raise the calories by 100 is that what you mean? Just clarifying ...and thanks for the help
With 20 lbs to lose, you should aim for about 1 lb per week. If you are losing 2 lbs, then you are pretty active and should up intake up to around 2200. But you could slowly increase calories by 100 per week until you only see 1 lb per week.0 -
mariclaire87 wrote: »Ok I think that is making sense. So i used an online calculator and put in my info, it says my TDEE is 2152, so minus 20% is 1722. In 4-8 weeks if I'm losing more than 2 lb per week or whatever my target is, I raise the calories by 100 is that what you mean? Just clarifying ...and thanks for the help
With 20 lbs to lose, you should aim for about 1 lb per week. If you are losing 2 lbs, then you are pretty active and should up intake up to around 2200. But you could slowly increase calories by 100 per week until you only see 1 lb per week.
There may be some other benefits in that "add 100 at a time and monitor" approach. For one, it's possibly psychologically reassuring if you're worried about regain - you can't actually gain much at that rate even if you temporarily go over maintenance by accident. Also, 1300 net seems fairly low for 5'5" at your age (I eat more at 5'5" and 61 y/o with a weight in the 120s, though I'm outlier-ish for my age - able to eat on the high side). I'm wondering if you might get some improvement in non-exercise activity (NEAT) along the way by moving up gradually, but that's purely speculative.
OP, definitely get the digital food scale. It'll make things easier and clearer. Many of us get some big surprises when we move from estimating or measuring in cups/spoons, to weighing.
Oh, and FWIW, at 5'5" and in a very slight calorie deficit, I'm shooting for 100g minimum protein daily (0.8g per pound of healthy goal weight, which is a bit higher than suggested above) and at least 45g fat minimum (0.35 per pound, also higher than above) but usually get 60-80g. That's for a goal weight of 120, though, which works for my body type (built like a 14-year-old boy!) but it sounds like you have a different frame than that so might want a bit more daily protein & fat, given your goal weight.
If your goal weight is 150, then the recommendations from someone else above (1-1.5g/kilo for both protein & fat ) would be 68-102g for 150 pounds.
The ratios I'm using for myself, translated to 150 pounds, would be 120g protein minimum, 53g fat minimum.
I'm not trying to push any of those ratio schemes on you, just trying to do the math (correctly, I hope - ya never know! ) so you can better understand what others are doing/saying, by seeing what it would mean applied to your stats.
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Oh yeah that makes sense to some degree im probably not going to worry about hitting a certain number of grams of fat or protein just cuz it seems complicated to me but thanks for the explanation of the calculations.
But I'll definitly change my calorie goal and see how it goes for a bit0 -
An absolute must IMO is accurately measuring everything you eat and always double checking that the measurement on MFP is accurate as well. If you look up Honeycrisp apples, one of my favourites, you get options for 2.5" diameter, 100g, 154g, 425g, large, medium etc. Since I weigh all of my food or measure it with a cup or spoon, I know that that the apples I buy are anywhere from 140 to 280 grams. If you don't weigh and just guess, you could be off by 100%. A digital scale is an absolute must for anyone counting calories.0
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