How much water weight can an obese person have?

JonMacFit
JonMacFit Posts: 41 Member
edited November 19 in Health and Weight Loss
Hi All,

I have recently decided to do something serious about my weight after getting to my heaviest ever at 322lbs on my 6ft 1" body.

After only 2 weeks of reducing carbs, fat, calories and increasing protein, I have lost 27lbs.

I know I cannot be losing fat that quickly so have put it down to water weight to begin with. The question is, how much more water weight could I expect to lose before I start seeing how much fat I am losing on a weekly basis and truly how effective my diet is being.

Any thoughts are appreciated.

Thanks,

Jon
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Replies

  • JonMacFit
    JonMacFit Posts: 41 Member
    Not many lifestyle changes as I have 2 young children so always being kept active unless at work where I sit on my *kitten* most of the day.
    My target weight is 210 and MFP says I should be doing around 2000 calories per day to lose 2 lbs per week. However I have been consuming around 1500 recently as my new diet has left me feeling satisfied at this point and not by trying to go this low.
  • JonMacFit
    JonMacFit Posts: 41 Member
    Thanks for the advice. Any advice on things I can have to increase the calories without too much additional fat/carbs?
  • Muscleflex79
    Muscleflex79 Posts: 1,917 Member
    Thanks for the advice. Any advice on things I can have to increase the calories without too much additional fat/carbs?

    protein? (but as stanmann said, nothing wrong with fat or carbs)
  • 150poundsofme
    150poundsofme Posts: 523 Member
    Whenever I start a diet, the first week I can around 8 pounds. But I do think your smaller intake of food you are losing fat, especially your 2nd week. You are doing great. For me, I can't eat a lot of carbs (pasta, bread, rice, junk food, cereal etc.) when I am trying to lose. If I watch my carbs, maybe 1 or the most 2 a day, everything else, all the other food groups, just fall into place.
  • KirbySmith46
    KirbySmith46 Posts: 198 Member
    Thanks for the advice. Any advice on things I can have to increase the calories without too much additional fat/carbs?

    There's nothing wrong with fat or carbs.

    While this statement is true, some people are more carb tolerant than others. If I eat more than 100 grams a day, I don't lose weight. Some people can eat 350 a day and lose. Unfortunately, I'm not one of those people.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    everything on here is so smart and stuff I wish I had known the last billion times I was dieting lol. That said, take your weight, divide it by 2, and that's the amount of water you should ideally have in a day (according to a personal trainer I saw a few times)
  • Muscleflex79
    Muscleflex79 Posts: 1,917 Member
    Thanks for the advice. Any advice on things I can have to increase the calories without too much additional fat/carbs?

    There's nothing wrong with fat or carbs.

    While this statement is true, some people are more carb tolerant than others. If I eat more than 100 grams a day, I don't lose weight. Some people can eat 350 a day and lose. Unfortunately, I'm not one of those people.

    weight loss comes from overall calorie deficit...so you are saying if you ate 101 carbs in a day and nothing else (for argument sake) you wouldn't lose weight???
  • FreyasRebirth
    FreyasRebirth Posts: 514 Member
    I find fat really filling, while carbs make me feel hungry quicker. There is a whole category of food (nuts and seeds) that are high fat and high in minerals like magnesium and calcium.
  • SLLeask
    SLLeask Posts: 489 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    everything on here is so smart and stuff I wish I had known the last billion times I was dieting lol. That said, take your weight, divide it by 2, and that's the amount of water you should ideally have in a day (according to a personal trainer I saw a few times)

    I hope I've misunderstood you... I'm currently 74kgs, are you telling me I should be drinking 37 kilos (so 37 litres!) of water a DAY?! Haha, I'd never leave the bathroom...!
  • ashliedelgado
    ashliedelgado Posts: 814 Member
    SLLeask wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    everything on here is so smart and stuff I wish I had known the last billion times I was dieting lol. That said, take your weight, divide it by 2, and that's the amount of water you should ideally have in a day (according to a personal trainer I saw a few times)

    I hope I've misunderstood you... I'm currently 74kgs, are you telling me I should be drinking 37 kilos (so 37 litres!) of water a DAY?! Haha, I'd never leave the bathroom...!

    It's half your body weight (pounds) in ounces that is being thrown around these days. So for a 74kg person, it'd be about 81.5 oz of water. If you buy into it.
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    SLLeask wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    everything on here is so smart and stuff I wish I had known the last billion times I was dieting lol. That said, take your weight, divide it by 2, and that's the amount of water you should ideally have in a day (according to a personal trainer I saw a few times)

    I hope I've misunderstood you... I'm currently 74kgs, are you telling me I should be drinking 37 kilos (so 37 litres!) of water a DAY?! Haha, I'd never leave the bathroom...!


    Haha that would be bad. I think she's referring to pounds to ounces. So for you it would be like 2.4 liters would give you the same calculation.
  • stanmann571
    stanmann571 Posts: 5,727 Member
    SLLeask wrote: »
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    everything on here is so smart and stuff I wish I had known the last billion times I was dieting lol. That said, take your weight, divide it by 2, and that's the amount of water you should ideally have in a day (according to a personal trainer I saw a few times)

    I hope I've misunderstood you... I'm currently 74kgs, are you telling me I should be drinking 37 kilos (so 37 litres!) of water a DAY?! Haha, I'd never leave the bathroom...!

    LOL... Yeah, the caveat is the weight has to be in pounds... and the water in oz... meaning you should be getting around 70 oz, or 3.3 liters of water a day.
  • HeidiCooksSupper
    HeidiCooksSupper Posts: 3,839 Member
    There's not much reliable science behind any recommendation of how much water to drink. One ought to stay properly hydrated. The source of the water consumed (e.g. a glass of water or a cucumber) makes no difference to hydration. For more info: https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-drinks/
  • SLLeask
    SLLeask Posts: 489 Member
    Phew, thanks to those that clarified that then! I get at least 2 litres of straight plain water and then a couple of coffees, herbal teas etc. Think I'll be just fine...! ;)
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    You know how Americans are, we assume everyone's in America. Sorry for that. pounds to ounces so if you weight 200 lbs you should drink 100 oz a day. according to this one woman.
  • snickerscharlie
    snickerscharlie Posts: 8,578 Member
    Meh on the whole water thing.

    Drink adequately to remain hydrated. Remember that beverages other than water count as water because, well, they're mostly water. Don't be one of those people that carries around a big bottle with you all day long as if you're somehow going to get morphed to the Sahara, or gets one of those bottles that beeps at you if you don't drink every five seconds.

    No need to be that person. ;)
  • Tacklewasher
    Tacklewasher Posts: 7,122 Member
    Meh on the whole water thing.

    Drink adequately to remain hydrated. Remember that beverages other than water count as water because, well, they're mostly water. Don't be one of those people that carries around a big bottle with you all day long as if you're somehow going to get morphed to the Sahara, or gets one of those bottles that beeps at you if you don't drink every five seconds.

    No need to be that person. ;)

    ^^This. Drink if your thirsty. Drink if you know you are going to be active or out in the sun. Don't drink based on some set of "rules" or some gadget.
  • Lynnara
    Lynnara Posts: 152 Member
    Meh on the whole water thing.

    Drink adequately to remain hydrated. Remember that beverages other than water count as water because, well, they're mostly water. Don't be one of those people that carries around a big bottle with you all day long as if you're somehow going to get morphed to the Sahara, or gets one of those bottles that beeps at you if you don't drink every five seconds.

    No need to be that person. ;)

    ^^This. Drink if your thirsty. Drink if you know you are going to be active or out in the sun. Don't drink based on some set of "rules" or some gadget.

    Family neurosurgeon told me to listen to my body and drink when I'm thirsty, and to forget about that "you must drink xxx amount of water" each day. Drinking too much is harmful, too.
  • MJ2victory
    MJ2victory Posts: 97 Member
    Lynnara wrote: »
    Meh on the whole water thing.

    Drink adequately to remain hydrated. Remember that beverages other than water count as water because, well, they're mostly water. Don't be one of those people that carries around a big bottle with you all day long as if you're somehow going to get morphed to the Sahara, or gets one of those bottles that beeps at you if you don't drink every five seconds.

    No need to be that person. ;)

    ^^This. Drink if your thirsty. Drink if you know you are going to be active or out in the sun. Don't drink based on some set of "rules" or some gadget.

    Family neurosurgeon told me to listen to my body and drink when I'm thirsty, and to forget about that "you must drink xxx amount of water" each day. Drinking too much is harmful, too.

    This doesn't work for me personally. Not to be the negative nelly. I personally don't feel thirsty until I'm dehydrated to a point that it severely negatively impacts my day. To each his or her own but drinking around 80-100 ounces a day has me feeling my best.
  • laurenebargar
    laurenebargar Posts: 3,081 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    Lynnara wrote: »
    Meh on the whole water thing.

    Drink adequately to remain hydrated. Remember that beverages other than water count as water because, well, they're mostly water. Don't be one of those people that carries around a big bottle with you all day long as if you're somehow going to get morphed to the Sahara, or gets one of those bottles that beeps at you if you don't drink every five seconds.

    No need to be that person. ;)

    ^^This. Drink if your thirsty. Drink if you know you are going to be active or out in the sun. Don't drink based on some set of "rules" or some gadget.

    Family neurosurgeon told me to listen to my body and drink when I'm thirsty, and to forget about that "you must drink xxx amount of water" each day. Drinking too much is harmful, too.

    This doesn't work for me personally. Not to be the negative nelly. I personally don't feel thirsty until I'm dehydrated to a point that it severely negatively impacts my day. To each his or her own but drinking around 80-100 ounces a day has me feeling my best.

    I agree 100% this past two weeks Ive just been drinking to thirst and ive been dehydrated, i gave it two weeks to see if I could handle just listening to my body, its not working, I started back up today drinking the right amount of water and feel so much better!
  • fbchick51
    fbchick51 Posts: 240 Member
    MJ2victory wrote: »
    This doesn't work for me personally. Not to be the negative nelly. I personally don't feel thirsty until I'm dehydrated to a point that it severely negatively impacts my day. To each his or her own but drinking around 80-100 ounces a day has me feeling my best.

    I third this. While I also don't agree on drinking half your weight, I do fin if I actively maintain 80-100 oz a day works wonders for me too. Not only for hydration and feeling better (that seems to kick in around 60 oz), but it also goes a long way in helping me control cravings.

    As to the "Too much water is unhealthy"... the unhealthy mark for water consumption is around 7 GALLONS a day. 100 oz (even 200 oz) is far from that level. Though there is risk of water toxicity if you drink more then a liter per hour, so just don't chug.


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