Feeling discouraged!!!!!!
gweneasley
Posts: 11 Member
I have been working out for two weeks and eating right and I haven't lost any weight. Do you think it's harder to lose weight over the age 40?
0
Replies
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Are you in a calorie deficit? That is going to be more crucial for weight loss than "eating right."4
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No. I haven't had any problem once I got the basics right. A food scale made all the difference. Weighing and logging my food, insuring that I was hitting my calorie goal was essential to my success.
@tacklewasher (I think I should add the chart... am I "addicted?")3 -
By eating right, do you weigh your food? Have you logged it accurately and been under your goal every day for the past two weeks? Did you have a cheat day or a cheat meal? Have you considered menstrual cycle or sodium intake?3
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It's been two weeks! Patience.3
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It takes time and weight loss is not a perfectly linear experience. Sometimes your weight will go up one week and down the other.
The best thing you can do to ensure success is:
1. Invest in a digital kitchen scale and track your calorie intake as accurately as possible every single day. That means measuring and weighing everything that goes into your body! And trying to find the most accurate calorie counts on MFP.
2. Properly track your calories burnt through exercise and only eat a portion of them back. Gym machines can be notoriously bad for giving inaccurate calorie values. Always err on the side of less - if the machine tells you you burnt 600 calories, only eat 300 calories back (if you're hungry).
3. Make sure your deficit is the right amount for your weight, height and age. Use a good TDEE calculator to determine this.
Be patient and keep at it!2 -
I feel the same way but im stuck @ 8.4lbs. I want give up neither should you gweneasley. I still have 32lbs left to meet my goal weight.0
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janejellyroll wrote: »Are you in a calorie deficit? That is going to be more crucial for weight loss than "eating right."
Wow, no I am not and you are absoutely right! Thank you0 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »No. I haven't had any problem once I got the basics right. A food scale made all the difference. Weighing and logging my food, insuring that I was hitting my calorie goal was essential to my success.
@tacklewasher (I think I should add the chart... am I "addicted?")
Thank you so much!!! I have a food scale but I don't use it... out of sight out of mind. Thank you for reminding me3 -
By eating right, do you weigh your food? Have you logged it accurately and been under your goal every day for the past two weeks? Did you have a cheat day or a cheat meal? Have you considered menstrual cycle or sodium intake?
No, I do not weight my food and I just rejoined MFP today. I'm definitely pulling the food scale back out today. I didn't have a cheat day... I am very mindful what I put in my mouth. Also, I no longer have menstrual cycle but I am questioning my sodium intake. Thank you for the reminder of the food scale.1 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »No. I haven't had any problem once I got the basics right. A food scale made all the difference. Weighing and logging my food, insuring that I was hitting my calorie goal was essential to my success.
@tacklewasher (I think I should add the chart... am I "addicted?")
I will definitely pull back out my food scale. What's the chart? Thank you0 -
It takes time and weight loss is not a perfectly linear experience. Sometimes your weight will go up one week and down the other.
The best thing you can do to ensure success is:
1. Invest in a digital kitchen scale and track your calorie intake as accurately as possible every single day. That means measuring and weighing everything that goes into your body! And trying to find the most accurate calorie counts on MFP.
2. Properly track your calories burnt through exercise and only eat a portion of them back. Gym machines can be notoriously bad for giving inaccurate calorie values. Always err on the side of less - if the machine tells you you burnt 600 calories, only eat 300 calories back (if you're hungry).
3. Make sure your deficit is the right amount for your weight, height and age. Use a good TDEE calculator to determine this.
Be patient and keep at it!
Thank you sooooooo much for this information!!!!1 -
I'm 39 turning 40 next month and I started last autumn, I took off 40lbs and have been maintaining for a month now. Once you get your balance right it's just science and math. If you're not losing weight, your numbers are off somewhere.1
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gamerbabe14 wrote: »It's been two weeks! Patience.
I will... thank you1 -
gweneasley wrote: »By eating right, do you weigh your food? Have you logged it accurately and been under your goal every day for the past two weeks? Did you have a cheat day or a cheat meal? Have you considered menstrual cycle or sodium intake?
No, I do not weight my food and I just rejoined MFP today. I'm definitely pulling the food scale back out today. I didn't have a cheat day... I am very mindful what I put in my mouth. Also, I no longer have menstrual cycle but I am questioning my sodium intake. Thank you for the reminder of the food scale.
Good plan!
I'm in my fifties, don't exercise and very definitely don't eat "healthy" all the time, and I'm losing just fine as long as I count my calories and weigh/log my food accurately. Getting older might mean we have a few less calories to play with, but it shouldn't be a barrier to losing weight.
Your best friends in this game will be your food scale and lots of patience!2 -
I was 49 when I started my endeavor. Jan 2, 2016 at 378 Lbs. I have so far lost 190 Lbs. It is possible, you just have to keep working. Try not to get discouraged and keep telling yourself every day that you are doing a great job!
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We all get discouraged at one point or another. Find your goals, define them, write them down where you will see them, establish steps of how you will get there. Any never be afraid to tweak your routine. Change takes time, and we all fall down on occasion. If it were easy Fitness would not be a Hundred Billion dollar industry. But the fact is, most of us did not gain the weight over-night, and we certainly are not going to lose it overnight either. You can do it!!!1
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gweneasley wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »No. I haven't had any problem once I got the basics right. A food scale made all the difference. Weighing and logging my food, insuring that I was hitting my calorie goal was essential to my success.
@tacklewasher (I think I should add the chart... am I "addicted?")
I will definitely pull back out my food scale. What's the chart? Thank you
Since you asked...
2 -
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Tacklewasher wrote: »
I think I may need a detox.0 -
MelanieCN77 wrote: »I'm 39 turning 40 next month and I started last autumn, I took off 40lbs and have been maintaining for a month now. Once you get your balance right it's just science and math. If you're not losing weight, your numbers are off somewhere.
Wow, welcome to the "40's" club!!! And you are right...0 -
gweneasley wrote: »By eating right, do you weigh your food? Have you logged it accurately and been under your goal every day for the past two weeks? Did you have a cheat day or a cheat meal? Have you considered menstrual cycle or sodium intake?
No, I do not weight my food and I just rejoined MFP today. I'm definitely pulling the food scale back out today. I didn't have a cheat day... I am very mindful what I put in my mouth. Also, I no longer have menstrual cycle but I am questioning my sodium intake. Thank you for the reminder of the food scale.
You can still have cycles of weight gain without your menstrual cycle, many post menopausal women still see a slight increase around every four weeks or so.0 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »
@tacklewasher (I think I should add the chart... am I "addicted?")
Yes, you are.0
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