I'm not losing weight
jomajoo
Posts: 23 Member
I am 5'4" and 130 lbs. I have a personal trainer 3x per week for 1 hr each which is intensive weight training and cardio at least 2 x per week (30 mins). For the past 3 weeks I've been on a VERY clean meal plan of 1100-1200 calories with macros of 40-50g carb, 40-60g fat and 120-140g protein.
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
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Replies
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A number of possible reasons:
-you're at a healthy weight and don't have much to lose, so it's going to take time (about half a pound a week)
-if you've just started working with a trainer, your body is likely holding on to water as your muscles repair
-you may be eating more than you think14 -
amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
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A number of possible reasons:
-you're at a healthy weight and don't have much to lose, so it's going to take time (about half a pound a week)
-if you've just started working with a trainer, your body is likely holding on to water as your muscles repair
-you may be eating more than you think
I think it's water retention then especially with my muscle repair. I weigh and prepare 90% of my food myself.0 -
I'm 5'4". It takes me about forever to lose a pound within a healthy weight range.10
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amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?13 -
amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
Water retention isn't necessarily a problem. Your body has other important jobs to do regardless of the number you want to see on the scale.8 -
Sounds like you might be in starvation mode. Eat a bit more. You'll be surprised. Good luck0
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CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »
Still need to make sure you are fueling your body though.
What about switching over to recomping OP?1 -
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CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »
Still need to make sure you are fueling your body though.
What about switching over to recomping OP?
Sorry what is recomping?0 -
I believe that 3 weeks is too less a time to see any major changes.
Give your body sometime to get used to the workouts & new lifestyle changes/habits.
It could take you about 6-8 weeks to start seeing the desired results SUSTAIN.
Initially the results will be slightly haywire, over a period of time they will become consistent.
Enjoy the journey & keep going !!!!
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lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
Simply because I want clothes to fit better than tight or snug. That and because my PT who is one of the best in the city wants to see a little weight progress...not a lot, but at least some...0 -
I am 5'4" and 130 lbs. I have a personal trainer 3x per week for 1 hr each which is intensive weight training and cardio at least 2 x per week (30 mins). For the past 3 weeks I've been on a VERY clean meal plan of 1100-1200 calories with macros of 40-50g carb, 40-60g fat and 120-140g protein.
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
not sure what 'pts' is, but are you saying you think you put on 5lbs of muscle in 3 weeks?? or is 'pts' something else?4 -
Muscleflex79 wrote: »I am 5'4" and 130 lbs. I have a personal trainer 3x per week for 1 hr each which is intensive weight training and cardio at least 2 x per week (30 mins). For the past 3 weeks I've been on a VERY clean meal plan of 1100-1200 calories with macros of 40-50g carb, 40-60g fat and 120-140g protein.
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
not sure what 'pts' is, but are you saying you think you put on 5lbs of muscle in 3 weeks?? or is 'pts' something else?
Ditto. There is no way you've added five pounds of muscle in three weeks, much less when eating 1100-1200 calories.7 -
I'm not too sure what the "pts" are either, though I'm guessing it's some kind of scale of measurement associated with whatever device/method is being used to give estimates of muscle and fat in the OPs body.
Regardless of this, a gain in muscle (+5pts) along with a loss in body fat (-5pts) sounds totally reasonable when combining a calorie restricted diet with muscle-building exercise.
Just so happens that in the three week period so far, the loss in physical weight from fat loss has been cancelled out by weight gain in muscle.
However, as others have pointed out, if this is a new exercise plan, some of the weight gain so far will be due to increased water retention in the body.
But this is a positive thing, not a negative thing, and will stable out in a little more time, after which the OP will most likely start to see an overall loss in weight.
Continuing what has been started and changing nothing yet is what I'd advise.
Also, as several other posters have stated, there is no such thing as starvation mode.
No matter how many people talk about it, they cannot wish it into existence.
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You are at a healthy weight for your height so any loss will be slow (0.5lbs a week is plenty). Right now you are doing everything right by the sound of it and any loss is being masked by other factors...give it time, the loss will show up eventually.1
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lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
Simply because I want clothes to fit better than tight or snug. That and because my PT who is one of the best in the city wants to see a little weight progress...not a lot, but at least some...
What does your PT think you should weigh?0 -
Don't go for diuretics to get rid of water weight just to get a false read on the scale, your body needs to retain water at the moment to repair your muscles if you're logging correctly you'll be losing fat, 3 weeks is not enough time give it a couple of months since you're already in the middle of your healthy weight range it's going to be slow going. Just keep it up, make sure you're logging is tight and don't sweat it. x4
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MontyMuttland wrote: »I'm not too sure what the "pts" are either, though I'm guessing it's some kind of scale of measurement associated with whatever device/method is being used to give estimates of muscle and fat in the OPs body.
Regardless of this, a gain in muscle (+5pts) along with a loss in body fat (-5pts) sounds totally reasonable when combining a calorie restricted diet with muscle-building exercise.
Just so happens that in the three week period so far, the loss in physical weight from fat loss has been cancelled out by weight gain in muscle.
However, as others have pointed out, if this is a new exercise plan, some of the weight gain so far will be due to increased water retention in the body.
But this is a positive thing, not a negative thing, and will stable out in a little more time, after which the OP will most likely start to see an overall loss in weight.
Continuing what has been started and changing nothing yet is what I'd advise.
Also, as several other posters have stated, there is no such thing as starvation mode.
No matter how many people talk about it, they cannot wish it into existence.
Thank you very much for a solid reply1 -
Muscleflex79 wrote: »I am 5'4" and 130 lbs. I have a personal trainer 3x per week for 1 hr each which is intensive weight training and cardio at least 2 x per week (30 mins). For the past 3 weeks I've been on a VERY clean meal plan of 1100-1200 calories with macros of 40-50g carb, 40-60g fat and 120-140g protein.
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
not sure what 'pts' is, but are you saying you think you put on 5lbs of muscle in 3 weeks?? or is 'pts' something else?
Pts meaning points, which I think means percentage. She is using a fat caliper thing and that's what she has measured so far.0 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
So legit question then, why would someone want to hang on to water weight?0 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
So legit question then, why would someone want to hang on to water weight?
You've gotta be on a wind up? that was in the response. Now bolded.0 -
MontyMuttland wrote: »I'm not too sure what the "pts" are either, though I'm guessing it's some kind of scale of measurement associated with whatever device/method is being used to give estimates of muscle and fat in the OPs body.
Regardless of this, a gain in muscle (+5pts) along with a loss in body fat (-5pts) sounds totally reasonable when combining a calorie restricted diet with muscle-building exercise.
Just so happens that in the three week period so far, the loss in physical weight from fat loss has been cancelled out by weight gain in muscle.
However, as others have pointed out, if this is a new exercise plan, some of the weight gain so far will be due to increased water retention in the body.
But this is a positive thing, not a negative thing, and will stable out in a little more time, after which the OP will most likely start to see an overall loss in weight.
Continuing what has been started and changing nothing yet is what I'd advise.
Also, as several other posters have stated, there is no such thing as starvation mode.
No matter how many people talk about it, they cannot wish it into existence.
a woman is very, very unlikely to be gaining muscle at a pace that would cancel out fat loss - especially on a 1100 calorie diet.6 -
Muscleflex79 wrote: »I am 5'4" and 130 lbs. I have a personal trainer 3x per week for 1 hr each which is intensive weight training and cardio at least 2 x per week (30 mins). For the past 3 weeks I've been on a VERY clean meal plan of 1100-1200 calories with macros of 40-50g carb, 40-60g fat and 120-140g protein.
What's your thought on why I'm not losing weight? I've gained about 5pts muscle mass and lost 5pts body fat but I think I should still lose about 1kg per week...
not sure what 'pts' is, but are you saying you think you put on 5lbs of muscle in 3 weeks?? or is 'pts' something else?
Ditto. There is no way you've added five pounds of muscle in three weeks, much less when eating 1100-1200 calories.
There's no way you gain muscle in such a calorie deficit. Your body would be failing to maintain it's muscle and fat levels.
If you want less 'snug' clothes you need to burn fat.
Weight is not the problem, Fat is.
If your PT is genuinely one of the best in your city they should know these facts.
There is no measure of pts in fitness. You're adding and losing either lbs, grams or percent.
I think your PT is taking piss personally.
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lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
So legit question then, why would someone want to hang on to water weight?
The point of strength training is to build muscle. But you don't actually build the muscle during your workout. You break the muscle down during your workout and then the muscle rebuilds itself even stronger over the next 24 hrs or so. This rebuilding is how you build muscle. Your muscles need water in order to rebuild, that's why you retain a little water and may even seem like the muscles you worked "pumped up". Once the muscles have done the repair, they will release the water.
Using some remedies to shed water weight while strength training can hamper your ability to build muscle. Why would you want to put effort into strength training and then sabotage it by forcing off water weight?
If your trainer is qualified they should know all this stuff and be taking into consideration water weight fluctuations affected by the workouts they are putting you through.
You are also at a healthy weight, so you shouldn't be trying to lose more than half-a-pound per week, again to protect the muscle you are working to build. Be patient and let your body do what it needs to do.10 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
So legit question then, why would someone want to hang on to water weight?
because your body is 90% water and it is a natural phenomenon.
Legit question - if it is water weight, why would any PT worth their salt want you to lose a "few pounds?"5 -
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CharlieBeansmomTracey wrote: »
why was I flagged?1 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »amyrebeccah wrote: »If your food weighing and logging is dead on, then my thought is a combination of unrealistic expectations and water retention.
Yeah I'm thinking water retention as well..will try a few remedies I've found online.
If it's water retention associated with muscle repair, there's nothing to "remedy." Your body needs the water for muscle repair. Why would you want to try to get rid of it?
So legit question then, why would someone want to hang on to water weight?
The point of strength training is to build muscle. But you don't actually build the muscle during your workout. You break the muscle down during your workout and then the muscle rebuilds itself even stronger over the next 24 hrs or so. This rebuilding is how you build muscle. Your muscles need water in order to rebuild, that's why you retain a little water and may even seem like the muscles you worked "pumped up". Once the muscles have done the repair, they will release the water.
Using some remedies to shed water weight while strength training can hamper your ability to build muscle. Why would you want to put effort into strength training and then sabotage it by forcing off water weight?
If your trainer is qualified they should know all this stuff and be taking into consideration water weight fluctuations affected by the workouts they are putting you through.
You are also at a healthy weight, so you shouldn't be trying to lose more than half-a-pound per week, again to protect the muscle you are working to build. Be patient and let your body do what it needs to do.
yes thats how muscle building works but not on so little of calories. you wont build mass eating so little.The point of strength training when in a deficit is to retain and lean muscle mass you already have because some of it can be lost while dieting,so without weight training and enough protein you will lose some of it. you can get stronger lifting while in a bigger deficit, but stronger doesnt = gains. Im willing to bet that the person is also eating below their BMR too.1
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