Why I Can't Lose Weight?
intaniaadinda
Posts: 1 Member
i've been on my diet for 2 month, i eat healthy,all i eat is oats,fruits,protein like eggs,meats, all healthy meal,i'm doing exercise too, but i don't see any change in my body and my weight,someone can give me advice?
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Replies
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Eat less calories.
If you aren't losing then you are eating at maintenance, drop your calories by 250 and see how you get on.11 -
Eating healthy is irrelevant to losing weight. How many calories are you eating?10
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Are you logging all your food and drinks on the site? Everything that goes in your mouth? Are you weighing the foods accurately? If not, that's why.
It would be easier to help you if you gave some information like, how much you weigh, your height and how man calories you eat and burn. If you don't know those things then there's a good chance you're eating too much.
There was a lady who was morbidly obese eating a healthy vegan diet on a british TV show years ago... It doesn't matter what you eat, if you eat too many calories you will gain.5 -
Try switching up your macro percentages (Fats, Proteins, Carbs). A lot of people have success on a low carb diet - ie under 100g of Carbs. Some have had success being off grains, dairy, and/or sugar. Lots of things can affect weight loss. The main thing is to keep with healthy habits and try different things until you find what works for your body. Also make sure you're getting plenty of rest and water. Good luck!1
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I was having a similar problem, eating heslthy but scale didn't move for a month and a half. Bought a kitchen scale and realized I was eating twice as much as I thought. Now I'm at about 2 lbs a week.23
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lovelifehealth wrote: »Try switching up your macro percentages (Fats, Proteins, Carbs). A lot of people have success on a low carb diet - ie under 100g of Carbs. Some have had success being off grains, dairy, and/or sugar. Lots of things can affect weight loss. The main thing is to keep with healthy habits and try different things until you find what works for your body. Also make sure you're getting plenty of rest and water. Good luck!
Switching up macro percentages will do nothing if it isn't in a calorie deficit, op is eating too much, that is the problem.11 -
What dietvanillacoke said. Are you logging, and are you being as accurate as possible?1
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Healthy foods are great but, you can still max out on calories eating 'healthy'. Also, fruit is great but, sugar is sugar no matter where it comes from. You need to track and track accurately - I've had many a mini heart attack when logging food 'How many calories..?' Also - eyeballing food is no good - weighing food is the only way tbh. Good luck4
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RuNaRoUnDaFiEld wrote: »
Why is it relevant to the topic? The OP is getting too many calories. Sugar isn't going to hinder him if he is in a deficit, so not sure why he mentioned it.1 -
lovelifehealth wrote: »Try switching up your macro percentages (Fats, Proteins, Carbs). A lot of people have success on a low carb diet - ie under 100g of Carbs. Some have had success being off grains, dairy, and/or sugar. Lots of things can affect weight loss. The main thing is to keep with healthy habits and try different things until you find what works for your body. Also make sure you're getting plenty of rest and water. Good luck!
no...none of this matters if he/she isn't in a calorie deficit!6 -
intaniaadinda wrote: »i've been on my diet for 2 month, i eat healthy,all i eat is oats,fruits,protein like eggs,meats, all healthy meal,i'm doing exercise too, but i don't see any change in my body and my weight,someone can give me advice?
Most likely is you are not eating at a deficit. Are you tracking your calories, or simply have you changed the types of foods you eat?
But some other questions. What was your weight 2 months ago? What is it now? Has it changed at all?1 -
Do you take other measurements than just weight? You may be losing inches. Get a tape measure and a body fat caliper and measure allthethings. I went through a period where I didn't lose a pound for almost 6 months, but I was losing inches everywhere. It helped keep me on track having more things I was measuring, because when the scale doesn't move but you lose an inch at your hips, it keeps you going.2
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I was having a similar problem, eating heslthy but scale didn't move for a month and a half. Bought a kitchen scale and realized I was eating twice as much as I thought. Now I'm at about 2 lbs a week.
I agree! It took me years to use a food scale consistently. Silly me. Oh well, I can't get that time back, but I can use it now. I've been having great success since I started using it!3 -
I agree with the scale! For example, yesterday I weighed a teaspoon of butter, which I've been counting as 30 calories, and it weighed eight grams, which was 55 calories! Not a lot for one day but with multiple items this will add up over time.2
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Are you using a food scale? I think you're eating more calories than you think as well. If you're truly eating at a deficit you'll lose weight.1
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Hi this is my two cents. Reduce fruits and replace with veggies. Fruits tend to be full of sugars and carbs. They are great in moderation. So try to replace fruits with veggies (you know the ones you'd rather not).0
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I eat really healthy and exercise regularly as well...I do this in maintenance as well as a cut...it comes down to the calories coming in vs calories being expended...if I eat healthy and exercise regularly and eat a maintenance number of calories, I will maintain my weight...if I want to lose weight, I have to cut calories.2
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This is the big issue with people "eating healthy". You have to weigh and measure all your food no matter what it is. It doesn't matter if it's great veggies or snickers. If you don't know how much you are eating you probably eat to much. The secret isn't that you change everything you eat or don't eat certain foods. Find out what your total calorie burn is and get in a deficit.1
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You don't make any mention of the most important thing for weight loss - CALORIES. Eat in a calorie deficit to lose weight. "Healthy" is great but if you're not in a calorie deficit you're not going to lose weight.2
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natashab61 wrote: »Hi this is my two cents. Reduce fruits and replace with veggies. Fruits tend to be full of sugars and carbs. They are great in moderation. So try to replace fruits with veggies (you know the ones you'd rather not).
Sugars and carbs are not responsible for not losing weight, too many calories are.
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Are you weighing/measuring everything you eat accurately? It's very easy to overeat if you aren't. Like others have said, the most important thing is calories in vs calories out, so work out what you're putting in first of all and go from there1
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Congratulations on changing your diet to include healthy choices. Great first step! Now, as other posters have said, invest in a digital food scale and use it religiously to count the calories you are eating. The nice thing is you can always exercise more to offset extra calories. Use the website the way it was intended and you will see results. Eventually the food scale use becomes a habit and only takes a few seconds out of your meal prep time.
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Seriously, the food scale has changed the way I eat completely. It adds no real time to my food prep and my weight loss is consistent when I do it.
I've had a pretty healthy diet since I had kids but its really easy to overeat even a healthy diet. Two servings of a healthy entree is still two servings.
If you just log an apple without weighing it, you don't REALLY know how much you ate. Little things like that are no big deal on their own but a little more apple than you thought here, a bit more peanut butter there, a larger piece of chicken than you thought, etc adds up and can quickly wipe out any deficit you think you have.4 -
Are you stressed or depressed? Mental issues are sometimes as powerful as physical ones. Our bodies produce some powerful chemicals in response to stress that can also effect weight loss efforts. I find meditation, yoga and walking outside to be powerful methods of combating my stress.0
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OP, you are eating too many calories or you would be losing weight. Healthy =/= lower calorie a lot of the time.1
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intaniaadinda wrote: »i've been on my diet for 2 month, i eat healthy,all i eat is oats,fruits,protein like eggs,meats, all healthy meal,i'm doing exercise too, but i don't see any change in my body and my weight,someone can give me advice?
@intaniaadinda Hi! Welcome to MFP, glad you're here! I'm sorry you haven't seen any results yet on the scale, there could several reasons why. Have you measured yourself using a tape measure? That's a great way to start out as well. If the scale doesn't move at times you can see changes using the tape measure. You can do it yourself or have a friend help you but always do it in the same place and be consistent.
When you share the types of food you're eating, how do you measure them? Do you just pick out an apple or do you put it on a food scale to see how much it weighs and then look it up to see what to put on your food diary? How about oats, meats, any solid foods are more accurate when weighed on a food scale. Liquid can be measured using liquid measuring cups. I live in the US so typically we use ounces and grams, I'm not sure of your location but you would use what's common to you for weighing and measuring. .
You're welcome to PM me if you need some more help or ask anyone on the thread. Members on MFP really do want to help new people understand how this all works. It's pretty simple once you get the hang of it, but weighing food and using the other MFP tools really does work to drop the weight and help build the confidence.
Check out the Success stories, they are so inspiring, you'll be amazed!0 -
bethannien wrote: »Seriously, the food scale has changed the way I eat completely. It adds no real time to my food prep and my weight loss is consistent when I do it.
I've had a pretty healthy diet since I had kids but its really easy to overeat even a healthy diet. Two servings of a healthy entree is still two servings.
If you just log an apple without weighing it, you don't REALLY know how much you ate. Little things like that are no big deal on their own but a little more apple than you thought here, a bit more peanut butter there, a larger piece of chicken than you thought, etc adds up and can quickly wipe out any deficit you think you have.
Great points, apples are a great example! I always try to buy the smallest apples in a bag. Even the small ones vary so much, some are the same size but vary by how solid they are. I can't always guess by looking at one or even holding it and comparing.
I enjoy using the food scale, building salads etc. Crazy, I know but I do enjoy building meals on it. :laugh:0 -
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