WTF-- Gained 6 lbs in 4 days
tiabernagozzi
Posts: 18 Member
Hello all,
I'm so frusturated!! I have been trying really hard to eat low-sodium foods because I am super prone to water weight. I have been exercising at least 4x a week, usually 6, and drinking water like it's addictive. Today I step on the scale and I'm heavier than my original weight!! WTF?? I'm so discouraged and I feel like a mess. I weigh a lot of my food and I try to not underestimate caloric intake. My diary is open, please take a look... Encouragement would be helpful!!
I'm so frusturated!! I have been trying really hard to eat low-sodium foods because I am super prone to water weight. I have been exercising at least 4x a week, usually 6, and drinking water like it's addictive. Today I step on the scale and I'm heavier than my original weight!! WTF?? I'm so discouraged and I feel like a mess. I weigh a lot of my food and I try to not underestimate caloric intake. My diary is open, please take a look... Encouragement would be helpful!!
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Replies
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TOM/hormones, stress, lack of sleep can also lead to water weight. The good part is: water weight is temporary.11
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That time of the month coming up?2
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Good morning,
I'm no expert here, and I recently started here myself, but I can try to help. I think one of the first questions people will ask if it's your TOM. That definitely affects your weight.
Also, I don't have a lot of time to check your diary, but I looked at a couple days. You mentioned that you "weigh a lot of your food." You should make sure to measure or weigh everything. It could be that you're underestimating, even though you think you're doing the opposite.
Are you checking your numbers against the database food entries? Every single day, I see wrong entries, so definitely check that before blindly accepting one of them. The only time I will use one, no questions asked, is if I truly can't find the information somewhere. For example, last week, I was in meetings all day at work. Our food was catered from a company that didn't list their nutrition, so I took the closest thing I could find in the database. In fact, I took the entries with the highest numbers to be on the safe side.
I'm sure there are plenty of people coming behind me that will have more ideas and answers.
Good job on watching your sodium. This is definitely one of my downfalls.
My advice is to stick with it, and try to tighten up your numbers. In addition, make sure you're adding your exercise and eating some or most of those numbers back.
Good luck to you!3 -
I gained 6 pounds in water weight after I began a new exercise routine. It will come off- don't worry. Also, you really don't need to drink tons of water. Our bodies are pretty good at telling us what we need when we need it. Drink when you're thirsty, eat when you're hungry, try not to worry so much:)9
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Hormones/ high sodium/ more carbs than usual / new exercise / constipation / stress / lack of sleep / meds ....weight fluctuates for a number of reasons and that is perfectly normal.2
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Upping your exercise can also cause temporary water weight.
Why try and control water weight? It's like trying to control the weather.
You could weigh yourself every hour until the scale shows different but what's the point?5 -
You could just be retaining water from your exercise routine. Watch your exercise calculations. One day it had that you burned over 800 calories through exercise. While possible, I tend to underestimate calories burn from exercise.
Your calorie intake looks good, except for Saturday. I wonder if the fact that your day consisted of only donuts and kettle corn has something to do with your water weight. We've all been there, but maybe on days like that you could throw in a little protein/vegetables just to help you feel better.
My advice, keep going. This weight will flush away, especially if you log consistently and accurately.1 -
If water weight is a problem, you should keep drinking water and don't be afraid of sodium from electrolytes. Also, women can gain weight before that time of the month.3
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Just looking at your diary for yesterday, I can tell you are not logging correctly. Here are somethings you may want to try:
*Don't weigh solid food in cups, such as cereal. Measure it in grams.
*Don't go soley by nutritional info on packages, such as "1 patty - 230 calories" If 1 patty is supposed to be 140 grams, weigh it. It may end up being 148 grams, which would make it 243 calories.
*the only things that should be measured in cups is liquid. Spoons could be things like salad dressing and sauce (though I still measure them in grams because it makes it more precise).
*Don't use generic measures like "1 medium apple- 130 calories" How do you even know what "medium is? Weigh it out in grams and pick the appropriate entry.
So, you are probably eating more calories than you think. Just tighten up the logging and you'll take care of that in no time. Good luck!6 -
It's definitely not 6 pounds of fat. I always gain when I change my exercise routine and at different times around my cycle. In fact I gain a lot for ovulation, drop a bit but maintain a slightly higher weight than pre-ovulation for two weeks, gain even more before period, then drop the weight fast for two weeks. Your mileage may vary, but expect your hormones to play games with your water levels regardless of your sodium intake.
Weight fluctuations are normal and you just have to approach them logically. If you believe you have somehow eaten more than 7000 calories every day for the past 4 days then you may have reason to be concerned, I find that very VERY unlikely if you've been purposely dieting. If you ate that much you would most likely know it, regardless of the accuracy of your logging.2 -
I gain 3-8 lbs at time of month then it goes away. Also, possible your scale has low battery?
If you're doing all the right things, give it time.0 -
This is how it works. Up and down all the way to your goal. Your body is not a machine.1
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TOM....0
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unless you consumed 21,000 extra calories in the past four days, it is just water weight.
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Your diary is not open - so we can't help you. Happy to help further if you friend. But without looking at your diary I'd advise that you remember a) it's only calorie reducing that will lose weight and b) no amount of exercise will make a huge difference. Simply 30mins walking or cycling each day is all that's required for weight loss. Drinking water and limiting salt are both excellent additions to a healthy diet strategy.0
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It's water weight. It's impossible to gain 6 lbs that quick. Also, don't cut out salt. Salt is a part of our genetic makeup and you need it.0
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A couple of questions:
1. Do you know yet what your normal fluctuation range is? Everyone's weight fluctuates up and down from day to day, and women typically have monthly fluctuation cycles as well. It's totally normal, but it's not usually visible to most people until they start trying to lose weight, so lots of people freak out at first. If you're still new(er) to tracking your weight, you may not have a good idea of your normal range yet, so it may be hard to tell whether this gain is just within your normal or something out-of-the-ordinary.
2. Where do you keep your scale? Do you keep it out in one place or do you have to bring it out/put it away? Is it on a hard, flat surface or on carpet?
3. Are you using the same scale or different scales? If you're using the same scale, when is the last time you changed the batteries?2 -
OP
Low sodium with high water consumption is a recipe for disaster.0 -
Just wanted to reiterate what some posters have already mentioned - trying to control water weight fluctuations is a lot of stress and aggravation for absolutely no reason. You will experience water weight fluctuations, by as much as 10 lbs sometimes, every week for as long as you live. It's part of being alive.
In fact, going overboard trying to control water fluctuations can actually make them substantially worse.
Eat your calories and log your food using a food scale. Drink enough water so your pee is a light yellow, no more than that is necessary. Remember sodium is actually necessary for your body to function, so while it's fine to try not to overdo it, make sure you are getting enough.
And perhaps it might be better for you to only weigh yourself once per week, if you are going to get so caught up in normal weight fluctuations. You are looking for trends over time, like weeks and months.1 -
Thank you all. I decided not to weigh myself for a week. I will do my best to weigh everything, but it will take some getting used to. I doubt my scale is low on batteries, since it's brand new-- and I always weigh in my bathroom. I'm ovulating atm, maybe I gain during this time.1
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