WORKED OUT HARD AND ATE CLEAN ALL WEEK AND DIDN'T LOSE A LB!!!
Options
simply_bubbz
Posts: 245 Member
Someone please tell me what is going on! I have been doing intense workouts 5 days this week Mon through Friday ate clean except I had a cheat meal last sat n Sunday but the calories were at maintenance so why didn't I lose this week?????? It's that time of the month but idk If that's affecting or not! I know I shouldn't be discouraged and shouldn't let the scale have this big of impact on me but it does!!!! What do y'all assume is going on? I didn't drink as much water this week, could that be a factor? I only had a BM once this week too could that have an effect?** I know weight lost isn't linear so please don't mention that lol I'm just looking to c what could be a factor for the scale because I definitely should have lost something
0
Replies
-
Weight loss isn't linear21
-
You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.2
-
simply_bubbz wrote: »Someone please tell me what is going on! I have been doing intense workouts 5 days this week Mon through Friday ate clean except I had a cheat meal last sat n Sunday but the calories were at maintenance so why didn't I lose this week?????? It's that time of the month but idk If that's affecting or not! I know I shouldn't be discouraged and shouldn't let the scale have this big of impact on me but it does!!!! What do y'all assume is going on? I didn't drink as much water this week, could that be a factor? I only had a BM once this week too could that have an effect?
Odds are good the bolded statements are the issue.
And if the infrequent bowel movements are unusual for you, you might want to consider seeing a doctor. In the meantime, make sure you're getting enough fat and liquids in your diet, and enough fiber (but increase fiber gradually, since sudden increases, especially without adequate fat and liquid, can have a short-term constipating effect).
Edited to fix a typo.7 -
Cheat days, intense or increased workouts, and time of the month can all lead to a slight water weight gain. It's just one bad weigh-in. Don't worry about it.10
-
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
My thighs feel like they are toning up but I wasn't sure if it would make a difference on the scale that fast..0 -
diannethegeek wrote: »Cheat days, intense or increased workouts, and time of the month can all lead to a slight water weight gain. It's just one bad weigh-in. Don't worry about it.
My cheat days were almost a week ago so I didn't know if I was still paying the consequences of retaining water or not lol guess I am0 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »simply_bubbz wrote: »Someone please tell me what is going on! I have been doing intense workouts 5 days this week Mon through Friday ate clean except I had a cheat meal last sat n Sunday but the calories were at maintenance so why didn't I lose this week?????? It's that time of the month but idk If that's affecting or not! I know I shouldn't be discouraged and shouldn't let the scale have this big of impact on me but it does!!!! What do y'all assume is going on? I didn't drink as much water this week, could that be a factor? I only had a BM once this week too could that have an effect?
Odds are good the bolded statements are the issue.
And if the infrequent bowel movements are unusual for you, you might want to consider seeing a doctor. In the meantime, make sure you're getting enough fat and liquids in your diet, and enough fiber (but increase fiber gradually, since sudden increases, especially without adequate fat and liquid, can have a short-term constipating effect).
Edited to fix a typo.
yeah I'm going to increase my fiber this week and c how it goes0 -
-exercise can cause temporary water retention
-tom can cause temporary water retention
-'clean' eating is a completely arbitrary term and has nothing to do with weight loss
-weight loss is not linear, especially during times of water retention (see a. and b.)
-you need the correct calorie deficit for your goals, in order to lose weight. Make sure you're accurately measuring your intake (food scale), and also accurately measuring your output (don't overestimate calories burned during exercise, which is a very common mistake people make).
11 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Women gain at MOST 1/4 of a pound of muscle in a week, and that's under optimal conditions (calorie surplus+adequate protein intake+progressive lifting program).
OP, you said it's TOM. There's your answer as to why you didn't lose.9 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Gaining muscle in one week for a woman in a deficit isn't going to happen.
It's possibly water weight from the workouts or TOM.7 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Muscle gains while in a deficit is not going to be happening.
5 -
simply_bubbz wrote: »SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
My thighs feel like they are toning up but I wasn't sure if it would make a difference on the scale that fast..
You would not see any noticeable gain in muscle weight in one week.
Were those five workouts cardio or strength-training, or a mix? If they included strength-training, did you alternate muscle groups, or only do the strength-training every other day. Muscles are (re)built on rest days. On training days, you tear your muscles down.
And on your original question, I've been assuming that when you saidI had a cheat meal last sat n Sunday but the calories were at maintenance
you meant that you ate at maintenance on Saturday and Sunday but maintained a deficit the other five days. Is that correct?0 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »simply_bubbz wrote: »SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
My thighs feel like they are toning up but I wasn't sure if it would make a difference on the scale that fast..
You would not see any noticeable gain in muscle weight in one week.
Were those five workouts cardio or strength-training, or a mix? If they included strength-training, did you alternate muscle groups, or only do the strength-training every other day. Muscles are (re)built on rest days. On training days, you tear your muscles down.
And on your original question, I've been assuming that when you saidI had a cheat meal last sat n Sunday but the calories were at maintenance
you meant that you ate at maintenance on Saturday and Sunday but maintained a deficit the other five days. Is that correct?
Yes that is exactly correct0 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Gaining muscle in one week for a woman in a deficit isn't going to happen.
It's possibly water weight from the workouts or TOM.
So even if I haven't been drinking nearly as much water as I should I still could have the water weight?2 -
simply_bubbz wrote: »SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Gaining muscle in one week for a woman in a deficit isn't going to happen.
It's possibly water weight from the workouts or TOM.
So even if I haven't been drinking nearly as much water as I should I still could have the water weight?
There's a weird paradox that trips people up with water weight: we need to drink more water to get rid of water retention. Since your fluid intake was down this week it might be a small part of why you're seeing more retention.
BUT I think it's important that even if we pick this scenario to death and list every possible reason for it, it's still going to happen from time to time no matter how perfect you are with your diet. You need to come to terms with the idea that sometimes your body just holds onto water because it needs it right now. Give it time and it will release it again.11 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
Muscle gain? In 5 days? Highly unlikely.
What is likely is:
-water retention from TotM, excess sodium and increasing/starting exercise.
-impatient. Expecting too much too soon. A plateau is no losses for 6+ weeks.
-Innacurate logging (if OP has been at weight loss for a little while). This could be using cups/spoons for solid food instead of a scale, not logging everything, and/or not choosing correct database entries.3 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
lol. no.3 -
SarahFromWalthamForest wrote: »You could have lost fat-weight but gained muscle-weight, that could be why the scale hasn't changed even though you've been working out.
12 -
This is why I log daily, then look at the averages. If you are weighing weekly the same idea applies but over a longer time span and requires patience and consistency.
0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 391.5K Introduce Yourself
- 43.5K Getting Started
- 259.7K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.6K Food and Nutrition
- 47.3K Recipes
- 232.3K Fitness and Exercise
- 391 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.4K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.7K Motivation and Support
- 7.8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.2K MyFitnessPal Information
- 22 News and Announcements
- 925 Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.3K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions