Please help me....In desperate need of expert advice
Replies
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courtneyfabulous wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Are you taking any meds. that cause weight gain? I know if I just count calories, it will take me forever to lose just 1 lb. I have to exercise hard to really lose weight. It's always been that way. Being in pain isn't helping you either cuz you are limited as to what you do. Can you bike? Running has been the best thing for me, but I'm thinking that's out of the question for you. How about looking into getting a personal trainer? Maybe they could help you out a bit.
Have to have a B12 injection every 10 weeks for the rest of my life because of that deficiency.
I take a very strong prescription VitD supplement to try to counteract that deficiency.
Pain killers when the pain is literally unbearable.
Apart from that no other meds, I try not to take anything if I can help it.
Can't afford a bike but when I join the gym in March I can use theirs and they will have personal trainers there
Hi. What D supplement are you taking? Many people complain that prescription D2 makes them gain weight. Switch to D3 (which is OTC, cheaper and much more easily absorbed by the body).
Many Dr's just prescribe D2 because of $. I had a deficiency that I fixed entirely through taking OTC D3
I'm on Fultium D3 800u capsules. So all good on that one
800? That's not enough to cure a severe deficiency. I had to take 4000iu daily plus increase my intake of D- rich foods like full fat dairy to bring it back up.
Who is telling you to take these amounts and what were your levels? I also have had a B12 defiency which again I rectified by taking 5000mcg each day. I was told my 2 doctors that it's more effective to take it daily rather than be injected because your body can only absorb a certain amount at a time.
Sorry for all the questions but it's no wonder you're exhausted if you really have a D deficiency and are trying to rectify it with such a low amount.
Yeah I take 5000 IU
And it's over the counter, not prescription (but it was recommended by my doctor)
I take it with combined K, helps better absorption.2 -
sunshine12870 wrote: ».....still begs the question why a woman my size hasn't been dropping weight for quite some time now.
New batteries for your bathroom scale? Is it possible that your body weight measurement is what is causing the disconnect?0 -
Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Are you taking any meds. that cause weight gain? I know if I just count calories, it will take me forever to lose just 1 lb. I have to exercise hard to really lose weight. It's always been that way. Being in pain isn't helping you either cuz you are limited as to what you do. Can you bike? Running has been the best thing for me, but I'm thinking that's out of the question for you. How about looking into getting a personal trainer? Maybe they could help you out a bit.
Have to have a B12 injection every 10 weeks for the rest of my life because of that deficiency.
I take a very strong prescription VitD supplement to try to counteract that deficiency.
Pain killers when the pain is literally unbearable.
Apart from that no other meds, I try not to take anything if I can help it.
Can't afford a bike but when I join the gym in March I can use theirs and they will have personal trainers there
Hi. What D supplement are you taking? Many people complain that prescription D2 makes them gain weight. Switch to D3 (which is OTC, cheaper and much more easily absorbed by the body).
Many Dr's just prescribe D2 because of $. I had a deficiency that I fixed entirely through taking OTC D3
I'm on Fultium D3 800u capsules. So all good on that one
800? That's not enough to cure a severe deficiency. I had to take 4000iu daily plus increase my intake of D- rich foods like full fat dairy to bring it back up.
Who is telling you to take these amounts and what were your levels? I also have had a B12 defiency which again I rectified by taking 5000mcg each day. I was told my 2 doctors that it's more effective to take it daily rather than be injected because your body can only absorb a certain amount at a time.
Sorry for all the questions but it's no wonder you're exhausted if you really have a D deficiency and are trying to rectify it with such a low amount.
Ya, I was only mildly deficient in D when I started taking 2,000 IU as recommended by my doctor.0 -
I would focus on the number of macro nutrients first and then the number of calories you are consuming. Try to make sure 40% of your diet is protein, 30% carbs, 30% fats. If possible I would try to cut out dairy and any simple carbs. These are tips I've received in the past from a nutritionist and they have helped me.0
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kshama2001 wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Are you taking any meds. that cause weight gain? I know if I just count calories, it will take me forever to lose just 1 lb. I have to exercise hard to really lose weight. It's always been that way. Being in pain isn't helping you either cuz you are limited as to what you do. Can you bike? Running has been the best thing for me, but I'm thinking that's out of the question for you. How about looking into getting a personal trainer? Maybe they could help you out a bit.
Have to have a B12 injection every 10 weeks for the rest of my life because of that deficiency.
I take a very strong prescription VitD supplement to try to counteract that deficiency.
Pain killers when the pain is literally unbearable.
Apart from that no other meds, I try not to take anything if I can help it.
Can't afford a bike but when I join the gym in March I can use theirs and they will have personal trainers there
Hi. What D supplement are you taking? Many people complain that prescription D2 makes them gain weight. Switch to D3 (which is OTC, cheaper and much more easily absorbed by the body).
Many Dr's just prescribe D2 because of $. I had a deficiency that I fixed entirely through taking OTC D3
I'm on Fultium D3 800u capsules. So all good on that one
800? That's not enough to cure a severe deficiency. I had to take 4000iu daily plus increase my intake of D- rich foods like full fat dairy to bring it back up.
Who is telling you to take these amounts and what were your levels? I also have had a B12 defiency which again I rectified by taking 5000mcg each day. I was told my 2 doctors that it's more effective to take it daily rather than be injected because your body can only absorb a certain amount at a time.
Sorry for all the questions but it's no wonder you're exhausted if you really have a D deficiency and are trying to rectify it with such a low amount.
Ya, I was only mildly deficient in D when I started taking 2,000 IU as recommended by my doctor.
Right? I took a multi vitamin for years with 800 IU in it and it did nothing to stop me having a bad deficiency.
I also don't understand why anyone would need a prescription for such a low dose of D3? I bought 6 months supply of 4000 IU tablets OTC for $6.0 -
courtneyfabulous wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Heartisalonelyhunter wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Are you taking any meds. that cause weight gain? I know if I just count calories, it will take me forever to lose just 1 lb. I have to exercise hard to really lose weight. It's always been that way. Being in pain isn't helping you either cuz you are limited as to what you do. Can you bike? Running has been the best thing for me, but I'm thinking that's out of the question for you. How about looking into getting a personal trainer? Maybe they could help you out a bit.
Have to have a B12 injection every 10 weeks for the rest of my life because of that deficiency.
I take a very strong prescription VitD supplement to try to counteract that deficiency.
Pain killers when the pain is literally unbearable.
Apart from that no other meds, I try not to take anything if I can help it.
Can't afford a bike but when I join the gym in March I can use theirs and they will have personal trainers there
Hi. What D supplement are you taking? Many people complain that prescription D2 makes them gain weight. Switch to D3 (which is OTC, cheaper and much more easily absorbed by the body).
Many Dr's just prescribe D2 because of $. I had a deficiency that I fixed entirely through taking OTC D3
I'm on Fultium D3 800u capsules. So all good on that one
800? That's not enough to cure a severe deficiency. I had to take 4000iu daily plus increase my intake of D- rich foods like full fat dairy to bring it back up.
Who is telling you to take these amounts and what were your levels? I also have had a B12 defiency which again I rectified by taking 5000mcg each day. I was told my 2 doctors that it's more effective to take it daily rather than be injected because your body can only absorb a certain amount at a time.
Sorry for all the questions but it's no wonder you're exhausted if you really have a D deficiency and are trying to rectify it with such a low amount.
Yeah I take 5000 IU
And it's over the counter, not prescription (but it was recommended by my doctor)
I was VERY deficient in D (it was 19 when we discovered it) and I've been taking 10,000iu's a day for 5yrs. I'm just barely over 50 now (my doctor wants to see 70). 800iu's isn't even going to scratch the surface. Maybe double check this with your doc?
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With regards to the VitD...Maybe this explains why I'm still struggling so much and still tired, weak, no energy, my bones/muscles/body aches from top to bottom. I struggle from day to day.
The B12 I've never been offered anything else other than an injection every 10 weeks, I wasn't aware there was any other options.
I've screen shot what you have all said and I'm going to show my doctor at the end of this month when my levels have been re-checked .
I will update back here .
I will also update back here about my weight at end of March as I'm going to give it another 6 weeks from now.1 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »With regards to the VitD...Maybe this explains why I'm still struggling so much and still tired, weak, no energy, my bones/muscles/body aches from top to bottom. I struggle from day to day.
The B12 I've never been offered anything else other than an injection every 10 weeks, I wasn't aware there was any other options.
I've screen shot what you have all said and I'm going to show my doctor at the end of this month when my levels have been re-checked .
I will update back here .
I will also update back here about my weight at end of March as I'm going to give it another 6 weeks from now.
This is often a sign of pernicious anemia. Did your Dr run other tests?
I don't know what dose your injections are but these are the B12 tablets I was advised to get (from Costco if you have one near you)
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Yeah how are your iron levels? I had vitamin D deficiency in conjunction with severe anemia. And anemia is no joke, I don't care how common it is, it means your red blood cells are malformed and can't bring oxygen to your body properly. By the time my doctor found it I had the lowest counts they'd ever seen a person still be able to walk around and function with (iron count of literally 1 where over 50 is preferred for that test, hemoglobin of 6 when 12 is considered anemic and 15 or more is normal). And I had to specifically ask for the test too, my doctor didn't run it as part of their normal testing!! Funny thing is they were already treating me for menorrhagia... you'd think they would have checked for anemia before I almost died... ugh.0
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courtneyfabulous wrote: »Yeah how are your iron levels? I had vitamin D deficiency in conjunction with severe anemia. And anemia is no joke, I don't care how common it is, it means your red blood cells are malformed and can't bring oxygen to your body properly. By the time my doctor found it I had the lowest counts they'd ever seen a person still be able to walk around and function with (iron count of literally 1 where over 50 is preferred for that test, hemoglobin of 6 when 12 is considered anemic and 15 or more is normal). And I had to specifically ask for the test too, my doctor didn't run it as part of their normal testing!! Funny thing is they were already treating me for menorrhagia... you'd think they would have checked for anemia before I almost died... ugh.
Wow I'm glad they caught it, anemia is no joke!
It's worth adding that pernicious anemia has nothing to do with iron. It's to do with the body's inability to absorb B12. But regardless of type, the OP definitely seems to need follow up bloodwork.1 -
With regard to the b12 injections- I'm sure how much you're getting matters but I know when my teenage daughter was getting them she had to get them weekly. So once every ten weeks sounds like not enough (again, dosage matters). I would also ask about frequency of these shots because low b12 will also make you feel like crap.1
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Thank you everyone for telling me (and showing me) higher doses of B12 + D, this may well be why I am struggling every single day, everything is a real effort and I do mean everything.
I will be taking all this information to my Doctor and hopefully getting me sorted.
Can I just ask tho....those of you who have spoke tonight about stronger doses of both and more regular injections....are you from UK ??? As I'm worried maybe it's different in different countries.0 -
I'm in the US.0
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I'm in Ireland so have similar regulations to the UK and you can get vit d at 1000iu strength otc. I know that I've had docs who prescribe me things that are available otc and it's only when you chat to the chemist they mention that it's actually cheaper otc than getting the item on prescription.
Personally I'd have a chat with your local pharmacist and then armed with that knowledge have a chat with your go.1 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »BrunetteRunner87 wrote: »I don't believe in starvation mode, but it still doesn't sound like you're eating enough calories. I don't know your age but your BMR would be somewhere around 1800. I couldn't imagine eating 400-600 calories below my BMR, I would have no energy. It may or may not be related to you not losing weight, but I'd imagine that eating 1200-1400 calories would not be sustainable for you in the long run, especially if you are going to start going to a gym and doing more strenuous exercise, you can't exercise at your full potential if you have no energy.
Sorry keep leaving info out...
I'm 46
Well you see this is what I thought, so when people were saying 1200 calories is no where near enough and leaving no room to manoeuvre as your weight drops, I thought they were probably right, hence why I started upping it, but now I'm gaining weight it's starting to worry me and just left me really confused.
It sounds like you are eating at the surplus, that would be a good reason to gain. I would not walk so much if it brings you too much pain. Find an exercise that isn't causing pain. And keep in mind, you actually don't need to exercise to lose. I had a few months of excruciating pain, couldn't exercise at all, but eat at the deficit and lost 70 lbs. Now things are better, and I'm exercising again, but for fitness reasons, plus i can eat more, of course.1 -
courtneyfabulous wrote: »Yeah how are your iron levels? I had vitamin D deficiency in conjunction with severe anemia. And anemia is no joke, I don't care how common it is, it means your red blood cells are malformed and can't bring oxygen to your body properly. By the time my doctor found it I had the lowest counts they'd ever seen a person still be able to walk around and function with (iron count of literally 1 where over 50 is preferred for that test, hemoglobin of 6 when 12 is considered anemic and 15 or more is normal). And I had to specifically ask for the test too, my doctor didn't run it as part of their normal testing!! Funny thing is they were already treating me for menorrhagia... you'd think they would have checked for anemia before I almost died... ugh.
Doctor put her on a series of transfusions with Iron in them.
Although both markers were a TWO she wasn't anywhere near "almost" dying.
It definitely affected her energy levels and made her feel miserable.
I do not mean to minimize your very real health issues but the hyperbolic nature of your statement is just feeding the fire for people here looking to make excuses with unsubstantiated ones.
My wife has another follow-up in April (IIRC) to make sure her blood work is still in order.
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sunshine12870 wrote: ».....still begs the question why a woman my size hasn't been dropping weight for quite some time now.
You just made a error in logic and seem to be OK with it.
Please read up on Formal Logic before "begging the question": petitio principii
You should NOT be "begging the question"; begging the question is a Logical Fallacy.
You have "made a conclusion based on a premise that lacks support. It can be a premise that's independent from the conclusion or in a simpler form, a premise that’s just a restatement of the conclusion itself."
In other words you have decided you SHOULD be losing weight with what you are doing, even though several people here have told you that you are doing the wrong things.
By your own admission, the advice of people here who agree with you that you "should be" losing weight because you are "larger" is not working.
Therefore, if you start taking the advice of people who are not "agreeing" with you THEN you can start to wonder why you have not "been dropping weight for quite some time".
Blaming it on a vitamin deficiency is another rationalization.
Implying it is a medical cause without confirmation from a doctor is just making excuses.5 -
sunshine12870 wrote: ».....still begs the question why a woman my size hasn't been dropping weight for quite some time now.
You just made a error in logic and seem to be OK with it.
Please read up on Formal Logic before "begging the question": petitio principii
You should NOT be "begging the question"; begging the question is a Logical Fallacy.
You have "made a conclusion based on a premise that lacks support. It can be a premise that's independent from the conclusion or in a simpler form, a premise that’s just a restatement of the conclusion itself."
In other words you have decided you SHOULD be losing weight with what you are doing, even though several people here have told you that you are doing the wrong things.
By your own admission, the advice of people here who agree with you that you "should be" losing weight because you are "larger" is not working.
Therefore, if you start taking the advice of people who are not "agreeing" with you THEN you can start to wonder why you have not "been dropping weight for quite some time".
Blaming it on a vitamin deficiency is another rationalization.
Implying it is a medical cause without confirmation from a doctor is just making excuses.
Sorry you've lost me now.
I have read everything you've had to say and tried to take it all on board, and have made some changes. Diary is definitely much tighter and more accurate now.
But....
What excuses am I supposedly making and what am I blaming.
I make no excuses for anything and the only thing I've blamed for my B12 + D deficiency on are my aches and pains, tiredness, weakness etc.
I'm not sure how much knowledge you have on these deficiencies and the effects they have on the body.
But excuses...No, I'm a fighter in every sense of the word, I've had to fight bigger and much tougher battles in my life than my weight, and just like I didn't let them beat me, I sure as hell ain't about to let my weight beat me either!.
I came on here hoping to find out how many calories a woman at 240lbs should be having a day to enable her to lose weight, and as much as I'm grateful for all the advice and have acted upon it.....I didn't get an answer to that question.
So since you seem to have a lot of knowledge in this area (that's not meant horribly).....let me pick your brains.....
How many calories should I be having a day ?, should it be a certain quantity of certain foods, and what should I be doing with regards to exercise, what, when, how often.
If you want to add me/send me a private message rather than keep coming back on here, I'm happy to speak to you about what you do know, and maybe by getting to know me you will see I'm make of tough stuff, just a little lost right now that's all and need help to get on the right path.
Donna2 -
courtneyfabulous wrote: »Yeah how are your iron levels? I had vitamin D deficiency in conjunction with severe anemia. And anemia is no joke, I don't care how common it is, it means your red blood cells are malformed and can't bring oxygen to your body properly. By the time my doctor found it I had the lowest counts they'd ever seen a person still be able to walk around and function with (iron count of literally 1 where over 50 is preferred for that test, hemoglobin of 6 when 12 is considered anemic and 15 or more is normal). And I had to specifically ask for the test too, my doctor didn't run it as part of their normal testing!! Funny thing is they were already treating me for menorrhagia... you'd think they would have checked for anemia before I almost died... ugh.
Ya, I first tested anemic 30 years ago and you'd think they'd run the test for iron/ferritin with my routine bloodwork but I have to ask for it.
@sunshine12870 have you been tested for anemia?
@cqbkaju the OP is talking about deficiencies regarding not feeling well, not as an excuse to not lose weight.1 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »I came on here hoping to find out how many calories a woman at 240lbs should be having a day to enable her to lose weight, and as much as I'm grateful for all the advice and have acted upon it.....I didn't get an answer to that question.
Sorry, I do not mean to appear snippy but there is so much lazy thinking and misinformation in this thread that it gets tiresome.
My statements on rationalizing and excuses are warnings to you; DON'T fall into those traps.
You are not a special snowflake.
Everyone faces the same problems when it comes to diet and exercise. It is merely a matter of degrees.
You might need 500 calories a day less than 1 person, but 250 calories more than another person.
The issue is that you are looking for absolutes when it comes to biological processes like diet, TDEE, BMR, exercise and such.
There is no method to come up with an absolute number to lose weight! The person who comes up with it will surely win the Nobel prize.
You must track EVERYTHING you eat so you can adjust your estimates from there.
It comes down to Calories In (CI = what you eat) and Calories Out (CO = metabolic processes AND exercise).
CICO is simple. If your CI is less than your CO then you will lose weight.
If your CI is MORE than your CO you will GAIN weight.
If they are close to even then your weight will stay about the same.
The problem is manifold:
You don't know with a high degree of certainty about how much you are really eating (few people do)
You don't know how much you really need to be eating (few people do)
You are having trouble exercising so your metabolic rate is unpredictable at best.
Several well-meaning people here are giving you encouragement and advice but it is not going to help you as much as educating yourself on proper diet, nutrition and exercise.
All you can do is track everything to determine your CICO requirements and adjust your estimates every 3 weeks or so if you don't see the changes you want.
Weight changes, gaining muscle and the like change your CICO requirements. It is not a static number.
Exercise increases your CO so you will lose "weight" faster".
The more muscle you have, the higher your CO will be.
If you ONLY worry about losing "weight" then you will lose fat AND muscle.
Losing muscle means your CO will be LOWERED and it will be HARDER to lose more "weight" or keep the weight off.
If you are not seeing the changes you want (say the loss of 1 or 2 lbs) after 3 or 4 weeks then your CICO is WRONG.
Adjust it by about 250 calories and adjust it again in another few weeks if necessary.
A realistic LONG-TERM goal is to lose 1 to 2 lbs per week.
The faster you try to "lose weight" the more likely you are to LOSE MUSCLE in the process, especially if you are not lifting weights.
Weight loss is not linear, you must be tracking longer term trends of a few weeks at a time.
Weighing yourself every day does far more harm than good.
Weigh yourself the same day each week, first thing in the morning after you go to the bathroom.
By the way, your "weight" does not really dictate your calorie requirements in the first place.
You need to know your body fat percentage if you want a more accurate estimate of your calorie requirements.
Your calorie requirements at 240 lbs and 50% body fat vs (a hypothetical) 240 lbs and 20% body fat would be different.
Muscle requires extra calories just to maintain it, fat does not.
That is why some people keep telling you that you should exercise, even though several well-meaning people are saying you don't need to. "Need"? Try SHOULD.
If you do not exercise properly then you will lose muscle and your CO will be LOWER.
Again, I recommend "Thinner Leaner Stronger" or something similar to educate yourself properly.5 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »Thank you everyone for telling me (and showing me) higher doses of B12 + D, this may well be why I am struggling every single day, everything is a real effort and I do mean everything.
I will be taking all this information to my Doctor and hopefully getting me sorted.
Can I just ask tho....those of you who have spoke tonight about stronger doses of both and more regular injections....are you from UK ??? As I'm worried maybe it's different in different countries.
I'm in the UK and on the same dose as you for what they said was a severe Vit D deficiency. I was on a ridiculously high dose for 6 weeks to start with then on to this so maintenance dose perhaps? Either way I feel a hell of a lot better than I did before starting it so if you're not doing it may well be worth speaking to your GP about it.0 -
I took a look at your diary again. It seems you are weighing your food but choosing inaccurate entries. First thing i saw from today's food .You logged a medium banana 127 grams. I assume you weighed it. You logged it as 97 calories . According to the usda data a 127 gram banana is actually 113 calories. That was one item from today. I don't know about the rest, but it is really a matter of inaccurate logging as far as i can tell. The only other thing that could be affecting your weight loss would be hypothyroidism which has been left untreated. You can ask your doc. for the blood tests and exclude that.But you just have to put in the work to see results. Weigh everything you eat, fresh or prepackaged. Make sure the entry you find is accurate. If not, find one that is, or fix the wrong entry. When you cook, use the recipe builder.
As the previous poster said, tdee and bmr calculators are based on averages.It is going to be accurate for most of the people, but not for all.
Those calculators don't work for me. I have pcos, hypothyroidism and on top of that i'm very short. I did not follow the calculators' suggestions because i would not have lost weight if i did. It's a bit of trial and error. If medically everything's alright, then your food diary is where you must start.0 -
jennypapage wrote: »I took a look at your diary again. It seems you are weighing your food but choosing inaccurate entries. First thing i saw from today's food .You logged a medium banana 127 grams. I assume you weighed it. You logged it as 97 calories . According to the usda data a 127 gram banana is actually 113 calories. That was one item from today. I don't know about the rest, but it is really a matter of inaccurate logging as far as i can tell. The only other thing that could be affecting your weight loss would be hypothyroidism which has been left untreated. You can ask your doc. for the blood tests and exclude that.But you just have to put in the work to see results. Weigh everything you eat, fresh or prepackaged. Make sure the entry you find is accurate. If not, find one that is, or fix the wrong entry. When you cook, use the recipe builder.
As the previous poster said, tdee and bmr calculators are based on averages.It is going to be accurate for most of the people, but not for all.
Those calculators don't work for me. I have pcos, hypothyroidism and on top of that i'm very short. I did not follow the calculators' suggestions because i would not have lost weight if i did. It's a bit of trial and error. If medically everything's alright, then your food diary is where you must start.
OMG.....REALLY!!!!
So yet again I think I'm getting on top of things and still it isn't right.
I took that calorie total from MFP data Base!....(which yeah has all different calories totals), so how on earth do you actually 100% know what one is right???, how does anyone know for sure what one is actually right, even Google gives a different calorie total.
The packaging here in the UK gives a different total as well.
It's getting beyond a joke now. Back to going round in circles again.
It ain't going to make much difference to me today as I'm struggling to get up to my calories.
But...If anyone knows where to get the 100% correct calories totals for all different foods here in the "UK" can you let me know please.
I tell you what has been the biggest shock over last few days now that I'm putting in grams instead of slice etc......on most foods I've actually been under not over! and when I went back in my diary and worked out totals for certain days I wasn't even reaching 1100 never mind going over 1200.
I dare say there will be things I will come across that I was under estimating by not putting exact grams, but haven't found them as yet.
Now it's about finding out correct calorie totals of foods0 -
SarahMacphail1 wrote: »sunshine12870 wrote: »Thank you everyone for telling me (and showing me) higher doses of B12 + D, this may well be why I am struggling every single day, everything is a real effort and I do mean everything.
I will be taking all this information to my Doctor and hopefully getting me sorted.
Can I just ask tho....those of you who have spoke tonight about stronger doses of both and more regular injections....are you from UK ??? As I'm worried maybe it's different in different countries.
I'm in the UK and on the same dose as you for what they said was a severe Vit D deficiency. I was on a ridiculously high dose for 6 weeks to start with then on to this so maintenance dose perhaps? Either way I feel a hell of a lot better than I did before starting it so if you're not doing it may well be worth speaking to your GP about it.
Yes same here...I had to take these disgusting oil caplet things, think they were 20,000iu, once a week for 6 weeks, then a week after taking the last one start on these 800iu tablets, which yes is what they consider a long term maintenance, but my levels just keep dropping again.
Anyway...will see what happens after next check up on them at end of this month.0 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »But...If anyone knows where to get the 100% correct calories totals for all different foods here in the "UK" can you let me know please.
The real world is not black and white. All of the numbers are estimates.
If you had your own team of biologists and chemists working in a lab to prepare and test samples of all of your food then maybe you could come up with something more accurate but that is not practical to say the least.
The reality is that a 16 calorie difference for a single banana is not the problem here.
The problem is that there could be a dozen little inaccuracies a day like that: 12 different food entries * 16 calories extra each = 192 calories extra per day.
Doing 200 calories of exercise would make up for that, of course.
Or just start by using the food entries with the HIGHEST calorie totals instead...
If you want to "lose weight" then you should usually estimate high on your CI (food/In) and low on your CO (exercise/Out).
There are no shortcuts.
I think many people (subconsciously?) pick food entries with the lowest totals when they are trying to "lose weight."0 -
Get on-line and find a site that tells you how many calories you need to be ingesting for your age, height, weight, in order to lose weight. There are many out there. The other culprit might be your salt intake. Keep track of that. Try and keep it at 2000mg (you may want to check with your physician in regards to the exact amount) or less, each day. If you use salt to cook/bake with, it may be that your body is retaining fluids. I find with myself that if I don't eat the right combinations of food that I don't lose weight. I also found that when I decreased the salt to that mentioned above, I started to see results. If you have been doing this for some time your body may need a shake up, be it the food or the workouts. Our bodies like status quo, they don't like the weight loss thing. Sometimes it is just tweeking a small thing before our bodies start their weight loss again. Keep up the good work. You've got this.0
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I would focus on the number of macro nutrients first and then the number of calories you are consuming. Try to make sure 40% of your diet is protein, 30% carbs, 30% fats. If possible I would try to cut out dairy and any simple carbs. These are tips I've received in the past from a nutritionist and they have helped me.
Macronutrients splits are personal and have no bearing in weight loss. Calories first then macros. I'm glad the macro split has helped you, though.
And no need to cut out dairy or simple carbs, either. Also, nutritionists don't have proper nutrition training like Dietitians do; some nutrition courses are merely weekend courses, whereas Dietitians go to university for a few years.2 -
sunshine12870 wrote: »But...If anyone knows where to get the 100% correct calories totals for all different foods here in the "UK" can you let me know please.
The real world is not black and white. All of the numbers are estimates.
If you had your own team of biologists and chemists working in a lab to prepare and test samples of all of your food then maybe you could come up with something more accurate but that is not practical to say the least.
The reality is that a 16 calorie difference for a single banana is not the problem here.
The problem is that there could be a dozen little inaccuracies a day like that: 12 different food entries * 16 calories extra each = 192 calories extra per day.
Doing 200 calories of exercise would make up for that, of course.
However...at your CW, if you're anywhere in the ballpark of 1200 +/- 200 calories, you'd be losing weight. Those 16 extra banana calories aren't your problem.
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i think that a lot of muscle soreness is not uncommon with new exercise and may continue longer than necessary if you don't get adequate rest. this is something i'm guilty of as well. i'm afraid that rest will slow my momentum and it does more harm than good to over train, even if it's just walking. also, DOMS and water retention are linked and can mask fat loss.0
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jessiferrrb wrote: »i think that a lot of muscle soreness is not uncommon with new exercise and may continue longer than necessary if you don't get adequate rest. this is something i'm guilty of as well. i'm afraid that rest will slow my momentum and it does more harm than good to over train, even if it's just walking. also, DOMS and water retention are linked and can mask fat loss.
DOMS is not an indicator of how hard you exercised and it definitely does not mean than you should not be exercising the same muscles, unless recovery is otherwise incomplete.
Usually 48 hours is more than enough time to exercise the same muscle groups again in the majority of the population.
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